State Ex Rel. Herring v. Pugh

36 S.E. 287, 126 N.C. 852
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJune 7, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 36 S.E. 287 (State Ex Rel. Herring v. Pugh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Herring v. Pugh, 36 S.E. 287, 126 N.C. 852 (N.C. 1900).

Opinions

This was a proceeding in contempt, heard before Bryan, J., at New Bern, on 25 July, 1899.

The respondents, A. R. Herring, R. A. Ingram, and W. J. Faircloth, (853) were elected in 1897 members of the board of education of Sampson County for a term of three years. W. J. Pugh, W. A. Pugh, W. A. Bissell and L. L. Mathis were appointed by the General Assembly of 1899 members of the County board of school directors, to enter upon the duties of their office immediately upon their qualification. The new board (the board of school directors) were in charge of affairs after their qualification on 20 April, 1899, when the respondents in this proceeding brought an action for themselves in the name of the State against Pugh, Bissell, and Mathis, for the recovery of their office. The case was heard before Judge Timberlake, at May Term, 1899, of the Superior Court, a jury trial having been waived, and the court being authorized to find the facts and all the issues involved therein. It was adjudged by the court that the relators in that action, the respondents here, Herring, Ingram and Faircloth, recover of the defendants the office of County board of school directors, together with all the books and papers in the custody of the defendants or within their power belonging to the office. The defendants appealed from this judgment. Afterwards, and while the appeal was pending in the Supreme Court, and while the defendants were still in possession of the office and exercising the duties thereof, the relators in that action, the respondents here, got possession of the room in which the sessions of the board were held, and also of the books and papers of the office, and of the key of the room, against the consent of the defendants, and without legal process. The defendants, then, by a motion in the original cause, based upon affidavits, procured an order from the Honorable O. H. Allen, resident judge of the Sixth Judicial District, in which the relators, Herring, Ingram, and Faircloth, were restrained from exercising any function or power, or from performing any duty as members of the board (854) of school directors, or of the board of education of Sampson County. The relators were also ordered to appear before Judge *Page 551 Bryan, presiding judge of the Sixth Judicial District at New Bern, on 25 July, 1899, to show cause, if any they had, why the order should not be continued until the final determination of the action. Afterwards, another order upon affidavits was procured from Judge Allen in which it was recited that, while the plaintiff relators were not actively exercising the functions of the office, they still had the key, and books and papers in their possession, and were obstructing the proper administration of the public school affairs of the county, and the relators were ordered to forthwith deliver the room, key, books and papers, and reports to the defendants. And the relators were further ordered to appear before Judge Bryan, at the same time and place, there to show cause, if any they had, why the order should not be continued until the final hearing of the case, as mentioned in the first order. The relators filed a paper in the cause, in which they declined to obey the order to deliver the papers and books and key to the new board. That fact having been made known to Judge Allen, a motion was made by the defendants' counsel for a rule upon the relators for contempt in declining to obey the order of Judge Allen commanding them to deliver the books and papers to the defendants. It was ordered that the relators appear before a judge of the Superior Court, and show cause, if any they have, why they should not be held guilty of contempt, and punished therefor, for a willful disobedience of Judge Allen's order, in which they were commanded to deliver the books and papers to the new board, and the order was made returnable before Judge Bryan at the same time and place mentioned in the former orders — at New Bern on 25 July, 1899. The relators appeared and answered the rule, declining and refusing to obey the order of Judge Allen to deliver the books and papers and key. (855) Whereupon Judge Bryan, in a judgment in which the facts were found, inflicted upon the relators the extreme penalty of the law — a fine in the sum of $250 each, and imprisonment in the common jail of Sampson County until they complied with the order of Judge Allen, that is, until they should deliver the books, papers, etc., to the defendants, or be otherwise discharged according to law.

It appeared in the proceedings that the relators had received a circular letter from C. H. Mebane, Superintendent of Public Instruction, addressed to the county superintendent of schools, in which the following language was used: "I have frequent inquiries as to effect of the recent decision ofJudge Timberlake in the case of the Sampson County School Board, and also inquiries as to the effect this will have as to the county boards throughout the state, if said decision is sustained by the Supreme Court. I write this letter to say in reply to the first inquiry that the decision of the Sampson County case does not affect any county board *Page 552 of education except the county board of education in Sampson County. I recognize the old county board of education of Sampson County because the Superior Court of said county has so ordered, and I obey this order until it is passed upon or otherwise ordered by the Supreme Court." And that the relators has also seen a letter, written after JudgeTimberlake's judgment, from the Attorney-General directed to Street Brewer, Superintendent of Public Schools, which letter was in the following words: "In reply to your letter of recent date, I will say that it is your duty to recognize the de facto school officers. An officer de facto is one who is in actual possession of the office in the exercise of its functions and discharge of its duties. From the facts stated by you, I am (856) of the opinion that the old school board are the rightful officers until the Supreme Court shall decide otherwise, and should be recognized by you. 8 A. E. Enc., 786."

From the judgment of Judge Bryan the relators appealed to the Supreme Court and assigned the following errors:

1. For that the court had no jurisdiction to entertain a motion in the cause after final judgment.

2. For that the court had no jurisdiction to issue any restraining order after final judgment, and the perfecting of the appeal to the Supreme Court, and any order made therein is absolutely void.

3. For that the court had no power to issue a restraining order to compel the plaintiffs, without notice before a hearing, to deliver the room, books and papers to defendants, and such order was void because it was contrary to Article I, section 17, of the Constitution of North Carolina, and of Article XIV, of the Constitution of the United States, in that it deprived the plaintiffs of their private property without due process of law.

4. For that it appears from the facts found that the first and second restraining order, upon which the motion for contempt is based, has not been served upon the plaintiffs, and it was error in the court to grant the rule to show cause for contempt.

5. For that the matters involved in their motion were res judicata.

6. For that his Honor, Henry R. Bryan

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Bluebook (online)
36 S.E. 287, 126 N.C. 852, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-herring-v-pugh-nc-1900.