State v. . Womble

17 S.E. 491, 112 N.C. 862
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 5, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 17 S.E. 491 (State v. . Womble) 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. . Womble, 17 S.E. 491, 112 N.C. 862 (N.C. 1893).

Opinions

CLARK, J., dissents arguendo. The jury returned the following special verdict: The defendant was a depot agent at Goldston, Chatham County, in the employ of the Cape Fear and Yadkin Valley Railway Company, and was duly summoned by the overseer of the road in the township to work the same, to which he had been assigned by the board of supervisors. Defendant received the summons, but failed to appear and work as required, and refused to pay any amount in lieu thereof, claiming that he was an employee of said company and in its actual service, and was exempt by its charter from working the public road. Thereupon the court held the defendant not guilty, and the solicitor for the State appealed from the judgment rendered. Conceding that the section in the charter of the "Cape Fear and Yadkin Valley Railway Company," which provides that the "officers, servants and employees of the corporation shall be exempt from the performance of ordinary militia duty, working on public road, and serving on juries" (section 25, chapter 147, Laws 1852; chapter 67, Laws 1879), constituted no part of the contract between the State and the company, it remains to be determined whether that particular section has been repealed by the enactment of sections 2018 and 2059 of The Code, which declare that certain classes of persons, and no others, shall be exempt from liability to work on the public roads. Those provisions of the general road law are clearly repugnant to, and operate as a repeal of, that portion of the charter which granted the exemption, (864) unless the older statute was, in contemplation of law, "local or private in its nature" and was "saved from repeal" by sections 3867 and 3873 of The Code. Shepherd v. Comrs., 90 N.C. 115. It has been settled that acts incorporating railroad companies are private statutes.Durham v. R. R., 108 N.C. 399; Hughes v. Comrs., 107 N.C. 598. But it is contended that the charter of a railroad company may contain some provisions of a public and some of a private nature, and that under a proper construction of the saving provisions cited in enacting The Code the Legislature repealed not the whole, but every section of every railroad charter theretofore granted by the State which could be singled out and shown to operate upon the whole of the public. It would be difficult to foresee the effects of such a ruling upon the charters of public, quasi- public, and strictly private corporations in this State. The safer and more natural interpretation of the saving statutes is, that private as well as local acts are, as a whole, and in every clause, unaffected by any repugnant provision of The Code. The language of *Page 561 section 3873 is, that "No act of a private or local nature . . . shall be construed to be repealed by any section of this Code," as we think, in whole or in part. Any other construction would involve an endless scrutiny of both municipal and railroad charters to ascertain how much of every particular one is still left intact. The fact that so much of a private act as creates a criminal offense, applicable alike to all citizens of the State, is so far public that the courts will take judicial notice of its existence without offering it in evidence, is not inconsistent with a purpose on the part of the Legislature to save from repeal, not simply certain sections, but the whole of an "act of a private nature." If the charter of the North Carolina Railroad and that of the Atlantic and North Carolina Railroad are private acts, as both have been held to be (Durham v. R. R., and Hughes v. Comrs., supra), then that (865) under consideration is also a private statute, and all three, from beginning to end, remain unaltered by the repugnant provisions of The Code.

It is true that section 2017 of The Code constituted a part of chapter 82, Laws 1879 (being section 4), and that by section 12 of said chapter all laws and clauses of laws in conflict with its provisions were repealed. But it does not necessarily follow that the effect of that statute was to establish a sweeping rule, without any such exception as had been previously made by law. The very next section (2018), which then constituted a part of the Revised Code, provided that "No persons between the ages prescribed shall be exempt, except such as shall be exempted bythe General Assembly or the board of supervisors," etc. The Code Commissioners, finding no conflict between the two sections, brought forward both, yet, if the act of 1879 is to receive the construction contended for, there could be no exception, not even when the General Assembly had specifically declared certain persons exempt. When the charter of the railroad company was granted, in 1858, the Revised Code, ch. 101, sec. 9, made it the duty of the overseer to "summon all white males between the ages of 18 and 45," etc. (the act of 1879 being a reenactment of it), and a subsequent section (112) of the same chapter excepted (just as The Code, sec. 2018, has done) all such persons as "shall be exempted by the General Assembly." By reference to the Revised Statutes, ch. 104, secs. 10 and 12, we find the same provisions — first, that "all males between 18 and 45" shall be summoned and shall be liable to a penalty for failing to work; and, second, that no person shall be excused, except such as are or shall be exempted by the General Assembly, etc. By going still further back to the fountain-head, it appears that those two sections of The Code (sections 2017 and 2018) were enacted in the years 1784 and 1786, the first (866) *Page 562 being substantially the same as section 3, chapter 256, Laws 1786, and the second the same as section 8, chapter 227, Laws 1784, the latter of the two being by its terms merely amendatory of the former. 1 Potter's Revisal, chs. 227 and 256. So, at every stage of the history of legislation on this subject, by construing all the statutes in force together, and giving effect to all laws in existence, we reach inevitably the conclusion that the statutory general rule has at all times made all such persons between 18 and 45 liable, but the exception has kept pace with the rule and has provided for the exemption of such as had been or should be, by any special legislation or by the action of the county authorities, for certain specified reasons, excused. It is clear that the charter was enacted in 1858 in the face of the same sweeping rule, followed by the same exception (of "such as shall be exempted by the General Assembly," etc., Revised Code, ch. 101, secs. 9 and 12) as in the present Code, the two having stood together in perfect harmony since 1784, and the immunity given was manifestly intended to be placed, and to stand until repealed, within the exception.

The Legislature of 1879 reenacted section 9 and declared all clauses inconsistent with it repealed. Does it follow that section 12 was thereby repealed? If they were repugnant, as is contended, how could they have been left standing in the Revised Code as sections in the same chapter and on successive pages? Not only did the eminent men who codified the laws in 1855 consider them consistent with each other, but the commissioners, in 1883, upon reviewing the history of legislation upon the subject, brought forward both as a part of the existing statutory law and recommended a reenactment. In construing the law, both (867) commissioners adopted the views of Nash, Battle and Iredell in bringing forward the same provisions from the acts of 1784 and 1786.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 S.E. 491, 112 N.C. 862, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-womble-nc-1893.