State v. Wheeler.

53 S.E. 358, 141 N.C. 773, 1906 N.C. LEXIS 160
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedMarch 20, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 53 S.E. 358 (State v. Wheeler.) 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 v. Wheeler., 53 S.E. 358, 141 N.C. 773, 1906 N.C. LEXIS 160 (N.C. 1906).

Opinion

Clark, C. J.

The defendant appeals from a conviction and sentence for failing to work the public roads of Wake County, as required by chapter 667, Laws 1905, amendatory of chapter 551, Laws 1903. The appeal rests upon the alleged unconstitutionality of the statute. The defendant contends:

1. Time is money. Labor is a man’s property and therefore to exact his labor and time to work the roads is to levy a tax on property and such is unconstitutional unless ad valorem.
2. That if working the road is a poll tax, the act is unconstitutional because it exacts this labor only of “able-bodied male persons between the ages of 21 and 45,” and excepts “residents in incorporated cities and towns and such as are by law exempted or excused,” whereas the poll tax (Const., Art. V, sec. 1,) is to be laid on “every male inhabitant between the ages of 21 and 50.”
3. That the requirement to work the roads is not placed upon those living in incorporated towns and cities, and therefore there is a denial of the equal protection of the laws required by the fourteenth amendment to the Constitution of the United States.
4. That inasmuch as the roads are now worked partly by taxation, supplemented by labor exacted by the statute, and the latter 'is a property tax (a man’s labor being his property), therefore 'this is double taxation.

These points have been repeatedly passed upon adversely to the contentions of the defendant. State v. Sharp, 125 N. C., 628, which has been cited and approved in State v. Covington, 125 N. C., 641; State v. Carter, 129 N. C., 560; Brooks v. Tripp, 135 N. C., 161; State v. Holloman, 139 *775 N. C., 648. But counsel ask us to reconsider them, and we have given the matter full deliberation.

Eor near two hundred and fifty years the roads of this State.were worked solely by the conscription of labor. It may have been inequitable, but it was never thought by any one to be unconstitutional, nor has the idea been advanced heretofore that to work the roads by labor was to work them by taxation. The validity of working the roads by labor is sustained in State v. Halifax, 15 N. C., 345, and has been recognized in countless trials for failure to work the roads. Under this statute, Wake County works ’its roads partly by labor supplemented by funds raised by taxation and other funds and the work of its convicts. If the exaction of the labor of residents of the locality is, as counsel contend, a tax upon property, then we simply have a higher tax, but not double taxation. The tax does not seem to be more than enough to keep the roads in good order, but if it should so prove, the people themselves,, acting through their elected representatives in the General Assembly, and the board of county commissioners, will reduce it. The tendency of the times is to require better roads, which necessarily demands higher taxes for road purposes, which is more than offset, it is claimed, by the benefits derived from better roads. But that is a matter of legislation and administration. The courts cannot meddle with it. Nor is there any constitutional prohibition against double taxation. Commissioners v. Tobacco Co., 116 N. C., 448; Cooley Const. Lim., 738 (7 Ed.), and cases there cited. It exists in many instances that will readily occur to any one, as the taxation of mortgages and indebtedness in the hands of a creditor, and taxation at the same time- of mortgaged property, and of the real and personal property of a debtor, without reduction by reason of' the mortgage or other indebtedness; the taxation of the tangible property of a corporation and also of its capital stock and of its franchises and also of the certificates of *776 shares in the hands of the shareholders. Sturges v. Carter, 114 U. S., 511; Commissioners v. Tobacco Co., supra. There are many other instances, but this is a matter of legislation. Certainly this is not double taxation any more than taxing the dweller in town to keep up his streets (all of which falls upon him), and also laying a tax on his property to aid in working the roads.

Nor does the fourteenth amendment require equality in levying taxation by the State, .if this exaction of labor be taxation. . How a State shall levy its taxation is a matter solely for its Legislature, subject to such restrictions as the State Constitution throws around legislative action. If, on the other hand, working the roads by labor is a police regulation or a public duty, certainly it is not a matter of federal supervision. Besides, as the dwellers in the towns keep up their streets at a greater expense than the value of the statutory labor put on the roads, there is no discrimination of which the defendant can complain, especially as- the tax money expended on the roads to supplement the statutory labor is levied on town property as well as upon that in the country.

The requirement to work the roads is not a poll or capitation tax, which is a sum of money required to be paid by “every male inhabitant over 21 and under 50 years of age,”' which “shall be applied to the purposes of education and the support of the poor.” Const., Art. V, secs. 1 and 2. Certainly “four days’ work on the public roads” in one’s own township are not capable of being applied to education, or the poor or anything else except to the roads.

This brings us to the first ground urged. To say that “time is money” is a metaphor. It expresses merely the fact that time is of value, and that the use of a man’s muscle, or' of his skill, or of his mentality will usually procure money in exchange. But time is not money, nor is labor property, in any other sense than that it is usually of some value and *777 its proceeds belong to the individual or to the parent or guardian if he is a minor, or to the State, if he is a convict. But it is not property in the sense that it can be liable to a property tax.

As already pointed out in State v. Sharp, 125 N. C., 634, the conscription of labor to work the public roads is not a tax at all (Cooley, supra, 737; Pleasant v. Kost, 29 Ill., 494), but the exaction of a public duty like service upon a jury, grand jury, coroner’s inquest, special venire, as a witness, military service and the like, which men are required to render either wholly without compensation, or (usually) with inadequate pay, as the sovereign may require. Quilford v. Comrs., 120 N. C., 26; State v. Hicks, 124 N. C., 837. Originally none of these received any pay whatever (State v. Massey, 104 N. C., 878), the duration of military service only having a time limit. And to this day witnesses, above two to each material fact, receive no pay (Revisal, sec. 1300), and witnesses for the losing party receive none unless he is solvent, and talesmen summoned upon a special venire unless chosen on the trial panel receive (except in a few counties) no pay; which was true till recently of witneses summoned before the grand jury in all cases where “not a true bill” is returned; and witnesses for the State in criminal cases where the convicted are insolvent receive only half pay.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
53 S.E. 358, 141 N.C. 773, 1906 N.C. LEXIS 160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-wheeler-nc-1906.