State Ex Rel. Shennonhouse v. Withers

28 S.E. 522, 121 N.C. 376
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedSeptember 5, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 28 S.E. 522 (State Ex Rel. Shennonhouse v. Withers) 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. Shennonhouse v. Withers, 28 S.E. 522, 121 N.C. 376 (N.C. 1897).

Opinion

Montgomery, J.:.

The first Section of Chapter 30 of the Private Laws of 1885, provides for the election of a cotton weigher for the City of Charlotte in the following language: “That the Mayor and Board of Aldermen of the City of Charlotte, and the County Commissioners for the County of Mecklenburg in joint session, and presided over by the Mayor of the City, on the first Monday in September, one thousand eight hundred and eighty four, and every year thereafter, shall elect one cottoix weigher for the City of Charlotte . . .” At eleven o’clock a. m. on the 1st Monday in September of the present year eleven of the twelve members of the Board of Aldermen met with the Mayor in *379 the City Hall, in the Hall of the Board of Aldermen, and the Mayor sent and had delivered to the Chairman of the .Board of Commissioners, composed of three members, that Board being in regular session, a communication and notice to the effect that the Board of Aldermen were then in session, in the City Hall, in pursuance of the Statute of 1885 for the purpose of electing a cotton weigher for the City of Charlotte. It was further stated in the communication that the joint meetings of the two bodies for the election of a cotton weigher had heretofore been held in the City Hall, but that if the Board of Commissioners should prefer, the Board of Aldermen would meet with them at any place tire Commissioners might indicate. The Commissioners in reply sent a verbal message to the Mayor and Aldermen declining to meet them, alleging as a reason for the declination “that one of the twelve Aldermen wa-s absent from the City of Charlotte and that there was no regular or called meeting of the Mayor and Board of Aldermen then in session, and suggesting that the two Boards should have a joint meeting for the purpose of electing a cotton weigher on the 20th day of September at an hour and place to be designated and agreed upon.” Upon receiving the message from the Board of County Commissioners, the Mayor and eleven Aldermen proceeded to the election of a cotton weigher, in which election seven of the Aldermen voted for the plaintiff and four of them for the defendant for that place, and the Mayor declared the plaintiff elected. The plaintiff at the proper time executed and tendered to the Board of Commissioners a bond in proper form and with sufficient sureties, which which was declined without examination or inspection, the members of the Board stating that they had been advised that the plaintiff had not been legally elected cotton weigher.

There was one of the Aldermen absent from the town at the time of the election. The plaintiff, before he brought *380 this action, made no demand on the defendant, the present incumbent, for the place and had taken no oath of office, .and at the commencement of the action did not have the ■consent of the Attorney General to bring the action but has since obtained from that officer a paper writing ratifying and .approving the bringing of the action.

His Honor charged the jury that they should find the first issue, “Is the relator of plaintiff of right entitled to the office of cotton weigher in the City of Charlotte?” No; and the second issue, “Have the Board of Commissioners wrongfully refused to take bond of relator of plaintiff as cotton weigher and to induct him into his office?” No. The defendant's objection that the action was brought without the consent of the Attorney General is without force, since it appears that the consent of that officer was obtained before the trial of the action. The application to the Attorney General to bring such an action, could not have been refused, .and no harm has been done in this case, for the plaintiff has given satisfactory security to indemnify the State against all cost and expenses which may accrue in consequence of bringing the action. The plaintiff's action in this respect is .analagous to that of a suitor who should procure a summons to be issued by the Clerk without giving the bond required by Section 209 of The Code, and who afterwards and before trial filed the bond required by the Statute. Russell v. Saunders, 48 N. C., 432; McMillan v. Baker, 92 N. C., 110.

The objection by the defendant that the day on which the" Mayor and Board of Aldermen met was not a regular meeting of the Board, is of no consequence. The Act of 1885 made the first day of September the day for the ■election of cotton weighers of Charlotte, and it was the duty of the Mayor to convene the Board of Aldermen in special session for that purpose. That day, too, doubtless was named by the General Assembly for the convenience of the *381 Commissioners, it being their regular monthly meeting day.

Nor is there any more force in the objection that one member of a Board of Aldermen, out of twelve, was out of place. The law surely does not contemplate that the failure of one member’ of a Board consisting of twelve, to attend a business meeting would be fatal to its action.

Another objection on the part of the defendant was that the plaintiff made no demand upon the defendant for the office. No demand was necessary. In the language of the' opinion in Heath v. Morgan, 117 N. C., 504, “the reason why a demand in any case is required is that the defendant may surrender the property without the trouble and cost of a suit, and when it appears as in this action that defendant still claims the right to hold the property, no demand is-necessary.”

The main question in the case is whether it was necessary to the validity of the plaintiff’s election that the Board of Commissioners as an organized body should have participated in the meeting of the first of September, when the seven Aldermen cast their ballot for him. It was conceded by the counsel of the plaintiff in the argument here that-under’ the law as it is in England the presence of the Board of Commissioners at some stage of the proceedings would have been necessary. But they contended that such ought not to be the rule here, on general principles, and that it has also been displaced by a statutory one. Code, Section 3765, sub Sec. 2. That section is in the following language: “All words purporting to give a joint authority to three or more public officers or other persons shall be construed as giving such authorit}'-to a majority of such officers or other persons, unless it shall be otherwise expressly declared in the law giving the authority.”

We have arrived at the conclusion that the English rule-on this question should not prevail in North Carolina, as being inconsistent with the genius of our institutions. The *382 English adjudications are based on that people’s idea of the nature and character of their municipal corporations, and was adopted bjr them in imitation of their form of government. It is well said in Whitehead v. People, 26 Wend. 643, that “The loyal subjects of the British Crown (in their view of corporations) discover a government within a government, and amuse themselves by drawing analogies between their' constitution and that of their own boasted Empire.

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Bluebook (online)
28 S.E. 522, 121 N.C. 376, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-shennonhouse-v-withers-nc-1897.