Suncrest Lumber Co. v. North Carolina Park Commission

30 F.2d 121, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 959
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. North Carolina
DecidedJanuary 14, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 30 F.2d 121 (Suncrest Lumber Co. v. North Carolina Park Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Suncrest Lumber Co. v. North Carolina Park Commission, 30 F.2d 121, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 959 (W.D.N.C. 1929).

Opinion

PARKER, Circuit Judge

This is an application for an interlocutory injunction heard before a court of three judges constituted in accordance with section 266 of tho Judicial Code (28 USCA § 380). The complainant is the Suncrest Lumber Company, a corporation of the state of Delaware, owning property in Swain and Haywood counties, N. C., and the defendants are the North Carolina park commission and the individual members of the commission. The members of the commission are officers of tho state. Suncrest Lumber Co. v. North Carolina Park Commission et al. (C. C. A. 4th) 29 F.(2d) 823. And the commission is an agency of tho state. Yarborough v. North Carolina Park Commission, 196 N. C. 284, 145 S. E. 563, 567; State Highway Commission of Wyoming v. Utah Construction Co., decided January 2, 1929, 49 S. Ct. 104, 73 L. Ed. -. Injunction is asked to restrain defendants from instituting condemnation proceedings against the lands of complainant under chapter 48 of Public Laws of North Carolina of 1927, known as the Park Commission Act, or from applying for injunction under section 27 of that aet to restrain complainant from cutting timber on said lands. The ground upon which it is asked is that tho act violates the rights of plaintiff under the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States and certain provisions of the Constitution of North Carolina. The questions arising under the North Carolina Constitution have been settled against complainant by the decision of the Supreme Court of that state in the Yarborough Case, supra, which is binding upon us. Hunter v. City of Pittsburgh, 207 U. S. 161, 176, 28 S. Ct. 40, 52 L. Ed. 151; Long Island Water-Supply Co. v. Brooklyn, 166 U. S. 685, 688, 17 S. Ct. 718, 41 L. Ed. 1165; 4 Encyc. of U. S. Rep. 1068. This leaves for our consideration only the questions arising under the Constitution of the United States. These also have been decided against complainant by tho North Carolina Supreme Court; Hut its decision with regard to them, although highly persuasive because of the strength of the opinion and the great learning and ability of the judges of the court, is, of course, not binding authority as in the case of questions involving the Constitution of the state.

The statute in question was enacted that the state might avail itself of the provisions of the Aet of Congress of May 22, 1926, 44 Stat. 616, 16 USCA §§ 403-403c, providing for the establishment of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park in the states of North Carolina and Tennessee. It appointed a commission composed of eleven citizens of the state, and authorized them to acquire in the name of the state title to the lands which under the aet of Congress had been designated by the Secretary of the Interior for the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, and to convey such lands to the United States for national park purposes. It authorized the commission to take over the assets of Great Smoky Mountains, Inc., a corporation of the state of North Carolina, and directed the state treasurer to issue and sell bonds of the state in the amount of $2,000,000 and deliver the proceeds thereof to the park commission to be used in the purchase of land, subject to a provision that the bonds should not be issued until the Governor and council of state should have determined, among other things, that adequate financial provision had been made to purchase the part of the park area lying within the state of North Carolina.

The aet authorized the commission, in the acquirement of the land designated, to exercise the right of eminent domain pursuant to chapter 33 of the Consolidated Statutes of North Carolina, the general eminent domain statute of the state, but provided that it should not be necessary to allege or prove that an effort had been made to agree with the owner upon a price, and that the limitations of section 1714 of the Consolidated Statutes, which we need not consider here, should not apply. It provided that condemnátion proceedings might he instituted in the *124 superior courts of Buncombe or Haywood counties or of tbe county wherein the land sought to be condemned should lie, and that the commissioners to appraise the lands might be citizens of any county of the state. It further provided that, if after the final judgment was rendered, the award should be so excessive as to make the acquisition of the lands undesirable, the commission might elect not to acquire title by filing a written instrument to that effect in the proceeding, but, in that event, should be liable to the land-' owner for his costs.

Section 27 of the act, of which particular complaint is made, provides that in any condemnation proceeding the petitioner may apply to the judge of the superior court having jurisdiction thereof for a restraining order against the defendants, and that “if the court is of the opinion that such defendants, or any of them, are engaged in or are likely to be engaged in, or have threatened to engage in, any aet that will affect or change the present character and condition of such lands, then such restraining order shall be issued, without bond, and upon such terms as may be just.” The aet then proceeds to provide that, if the petitioner shall elect not to acquire title to the lands protected by the restraining order, the landowner or landowners interested therein shall have the right to have the damage suffered by them assessed in said proceeding, in the same manner and under the same practice as applies when injunctions are dismissed upon the hearing or upon final judgment. There is a proviso that the state of North Carolina shall be under no obligations or liability for the payment of any damages so assessed; but section 2 of the aet provides that out of the funds received from Great Smoky Mountains, Inc., or the pledges made to that corporation, shall be paid the expenses of the commission and any judgment or judgments for damage assessed under section 27.

Pursuant to the act of Congress, the Secretary of the Interior has caused to be surveyed approximately 428,000 acres of land situate in the states of North Carolina and Tennessee, approximately 214,000 acres of whieh lie within the state of North Carolina, and has signified to the Governors of the two states his willingness to accept same as a national park. The park commission and the Governor and council of state of the state of North Carolina have made the findings prescribed by the aet as prerequisite to the issuance of bonds, including the finding that adequate financial provision has been made for the purchase of that part of the area lying within the state of North Carolina, and have authorized the state1 treasurer to issue and sell notes of the state to the amount of $2,000,000 in anticipation of .the sale of bonds as provided by the aet. The validity of the aet authorizing the issuance of the bonds has been adjudicated by the state Supreme Court (Yarborough v. North Carolina Park Commission, supra), and the commission has the $2,000,000 available for the purchase of land for park purposes. It also has $460,000 in donations and subscriptions whieh it took over from Great Smoky Mountains, Inc., of which amount approximately $100,000 has been paid to it in cash. It appears also that a like commission of the state of Tennessee has available $1,500,000 from bonds authorized by that state and $383,000 of subscriptions and donations, and has also acquired 76,000 acres of land of a value estimated at $500,000.

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Bluebook (online)
30 F.2d 121, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 959, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/suncrest-lumber-co-v-north-carolina-park-commission-ncwd-1929.