Thomson v. . Harnett County

184 S.E. 490, 209 N.C. 662, 106 A.L.R. 602, 1936 N.C. LEXIS 314
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedMarch 18, 1936
StatusPublished

This text of 184 S.E. 490 (Thomson v. . Harnett County) 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
Thomson v. . Harnett County, 184 S.E. 490, 209 N.C. 662, 106 A.L.R. 602, 1936 N.C. LEXIS 314 (N.C. 1936).

Opinion

This is an injunctive proceeding, brought by plaintiff against defendants, to restrain them from issuing $427,000 of county bonds.

The judgment in the court below was as follows:

"This cause coming on to be heard before the undersigned judge holding the courts of the Fourth Judicial District, at chambers in Lillington, North Carolina, on 17 February, 1936, upon the complaint, treated as an affidavit, and the demurrer of the defendants, the court concludes:

"1. That the bond issues of the several townships of Harnett County described in the complaint, now outstanding and unprovided for, totaling $427,000, were issued lawfully, and the proceeds thereof expended for the improvement of the public roads constituting the public road system of Harnett County.

"2. That said bonds are and will remain valid obligations against the taxable properties of the several townships issuing them until paid, and the continued levying and collecting of a tax to pay at least the interest thereon by the commissioners of Harnett County is a valid exercise of the taxing power.

"3. That the county of Harnett as a whole received a direct benefit from the expenditure of the money represented by said indebtedness, and the proposed underwriting of said indebtedness by the issuance of county bonds is in accordance with law and for a county purpose.

"4. That the carrying out of the proposed arrangements, as outlined in the complaint, will violate no constitutional right of the plaintiff, or any other taxpayer, but will inure to the benefit of the plaintiff and all other taxpayers of the county as a whole.

"Therefore, the motion of the plaintiff for an injunction is denied, the proposed issuance of bonds is declared to be a valid and lawful exercise *Page 664 of the authority vested by law and in said board of commissioners, and the action is therefore dismissed. N. A. Sinclair, Judge."

The plaintiff excepted and assigned error to the judgment as signed, and appealed to the Supreme Court. The exception and assignment of error and necessary facts will be set forth in the opinion. The facts: Under and by virtue of the provisions of chapter 427 of the Public-Local Laws of 1913, each and every one of the townships of Harnett County from time to time issued township road bonds by vote of the people, and expended the proceeds of the said road bonds upon the improvement and development of the public roads of the county lying within the respective townships, the said bonds being in the total sum of $430,000. None of the principal of the said bonds has been paid, except $3,000 of the bonds of Buckhorn Township, and the remainder of the said principal remains due and unpaid, and no provision has been made by the respective townships for the payment of the said principal sum.

Section 17 of the act provides that the township road commissions to be set up in the event of a favorable vote in each township shall "succeed to and have all of the rights, powers, and duties, not inconsistent with the provisions of this act, now conferred by law upon the township board of supervisors." The act does not deprive the board of county commissioners of their general right to aid in the improvement of the public roads of the county.

Chapter 293 of the Public-Local Laws of 1925, substituted for the existing several agencies of township road commissions, one commission for the entire county, and vested in this county highway commission the control of the roads then being maintained and improved by the several townships, and that act, in section 13, expressly declared, with reference to the outstanding township bonds: "The proceeds of said bonds are hereby declared and found to have been expended for the necessary improvement of the public roads of Harnett County." The county commissioners were, in that act, authorized, in their discretion (section 13), "to purchase or assume the payment of any and all of the road bonds of the several townships heretofore issued and outstanding." This discretion, however, was never exercised.

By chapter 342 of the Public-Local Laws of 1935, after reciting in detail the outstanding township road bond issues, it was declared: "The proceeds of the said bonds were used for the purpose of the *Page 665 necessary improvement of public roads constituting a part of the general road system of the county, and the entire county received direct benefit from the said expenditures, and the county as a whole was relieved of an expenditure which otherwise would have fallen upon the whole county."

The several townships of Harnett County issued road bonds between 1 October, 1914, and 1 July, 1921. These bonds constitute obligations of the respective townships. The proceeds thereof were spent in the respective townships for improving roads therein which the General Assembly has declared constitute "a part of the general road system of the county." Some of these township road bonds are now in default.

Chapter 342, Public-Local Laws 1935, supra — "An act to authorize refunding bonds for the county of Harnett for the retirement of township road bonds in said county," provides that the township bonds are in all respects validated; that Harnett County is authorized to issue full faith and credit bonds of the county bearing interest not exceeding 4% per annum and maturing serially over not to exceed thirty years, and to levy and collect annually upon the entire taxable property of the county such tax as may be necessary, in addition to other sources of revenue provided in the act to pay interest and principal on the county bonds as the same may become due. The act declares that the county bonds and tax are for meeting a necessary expense of the county, and provides that with the consent of the Local Government Commission as to each transaction, the Board of Commissioners may exchange the bonds authorized by the act for township bonds, or, after their sale at not less than par, may use the proceeds for the exclusive purpose of purchasing township bonds of the issues described in the preambles, all upon such terms as may be agreed upon with the holders of township bonds, but not more than par for par; that the township bonds so "acquired" shall remain valid obligations of the respective townships, and shall be deposited in the sinking fund for the county bonds and held for the purpose of paying the county bonds; that the board shall be required to levy and collect annually in each township a tax sufficient to pay at least 6% interest annually on the township bonds now outstanding and unpaid; that proportion of the collections from this tax which represents the proportion of the total outstanding township bonds which are held in the sinking fund, shall be paid to the sinking fund; and that such tax and payments are to continue in each township until collections from such township are sufficient to retire an amount of the county bonds equal to the amount of bonds of such township acquired by the sinking fund.

Under the authority of the above act, the board of commissioners for the county of Harnett has adopted a resolution providing for the issuance of $427,000 Harnett County Township Road Refunding Bonds. *Page 666 This resolution describes the township bonds to be acquired by purchase or exchange for the county bonds authorized. The county accountant is directed to negotiate and enter into agreements with the holders of the township bonds, subject to the approval of the board of commissioners of Harnett County, on the most advantageous terms available to the county, for the acquisition of such bonds.

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Bluebook (online)
184 S.E. 490, 209 N.C. 662, 106 A.L.R. 602, 1936 N.C. LEXIS 314, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomson-v-harnett-county-nc-1936.