Wells v. Housing Authority of the City of Wilmington

197 S.E. 693, 213 N.C. 744, 1938 N.C. LEXIS 187
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJune 15, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by79 cases

This text of 197 S.E. 693 (Wells v. Housing Authority of the City of Wilmington) 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
Wells v. Housing Authority of the City of Wilmington, 197 S.E. 693, 213 N.C. 744, 1938 N.C. LEXIS 187 (N.C. 1938).

Opinion

Seawell, J.

Tbe plaintiff contends that chapter 456 of tbe Public Laws of 1935, known as tbe Housing Authorities Act of 1935, is unconstitutional, since tbe purposes sought to be accomplished by tbe act are not of a public nature, that tbe body created under it has not been given any governmental function and is not a municipal corporation; that tbe city of Wilmington is without power to convey any of its property to this corporation, and that tbe property, in tbe bands of tbe corporation, if conveyed, would not be exempt from taxation.

*747 These contentions are somewhat sketchily supported by argument and citations in the brief, and counsel for plaintiff made no oral argument. Perhaps, as sometimes happens in “friendly suits,” his function in this case is similar to that of the “devil’s advocate” at the canonization of a saint. But the decision of the case will have an effect beyond the immediate litigation, and the matters involved must have that careful consideration their importance demands.

Is the act under consideration constitutionally valid, and is the agency set up for its administration a municipal corporation within the meaning of the Constitution?

The case of Webb v. Port Commission, 205 N. C., 663, is very similar to the case at bar, and must be considered as decisive of most of the questions raised, but there is a difference in the declared purpose of the two acts which merits attention.

The court accepted without question that the purpose of the Port Commission Act was public in its nature and a proper subject for the exercise of governmental power, stating the proposition as follows : “. . . the Port Commission of Morehead City is not a private or business corporation, but is a public corporation created by the General Assembly as an agency of the State, to perform a well recognized governmental function, to wit: to provide facilities for the transportation of goods, wares, and merchandise, both into and out of the State by means of carriers over land and water." Webb v. Port Commission, supra.

The purpose of the Housing Authorities Act is to accomplish “slum clearance” — to rehabilitate crowded and congested areas in cities and towns where insanitary and other conditions exist conducive to disease and public disorder, menacing the safety and welfare of society. In this the plaintiff insists there is no public purpose justifying the exercise of the governmental function.

Our attention is directed to the fact that in the statute the Housing Authority is declared to be “a public body and body corporate and politic, exercising public powers.” Ordinarily, courts will not permit a simple declaration of the Legislature to give a character to a body, or a transaction, which appears to be inconsistent with the facts of the case. In an analogous matter, the courts have declined to permit the Legislature to declare what is “a necessary purpose” under Article YU, section 7, of the Constitution, holding this to be a matter for the courts. Sing v. Charlotte, ante, 60; Glenn v. Commissioners, 201 N. C., 233.

In the same manner the Court will determine what is a “public purpose,” looking to the end sought to be reached and to the means to be used, rather than to statutory declarations to aid its decision. Webb v. Port Commission, supra.

The powers given to the agency created under the Housing Authorities Act are not dissimilar to those given to towns and cities in the Constitu *748 tion. and laws, particularly chapter 56 of the Consolidated Statutes, relating to municipal corporations. Under the powers given such municipal corporations to enact ordinances for the welfare and safety of their inhabitants, a town, within reasonable limitations, may zone its territory and designate what areas may be devoted to business and what to residence; where noisome or offensive occupations may be carried on and where they may not; may close places where practices are carried on in violation of law; may designate what kind of buildings may be erected in given localities; and, generally, may regulate numerous matters where necessary to the public welfare or safety. Any or all of these powers might be vested in a separate municipal authority, if convenience required, without offending against any constitutional principle of which we are aware.

The same necessity that prompted the subdivision of political authority, in the creation of cities and towns, to the end that government should be brought closer to the people in congested areas, and thus be able to deal more directly with problems of health, safety, police protection, and public convenience, progressively demands that government should be further refined and subdivided, within the limits of its general powers and purposes, to deal with new conditions, constantly appearing in sharper outline, where community initiative has failed and authority alone can prevail.

It is not questioned that it is a proper function of government to promote the health, safety, and morals of its citizens. The Housing Authorities Act depends for its validity, as a proper exercise of governmental authority, upon its declared objective in removing a serious menace to society, not disconnected with political exigency, in the populous areas to which it applies.

It differs in one particular from the usual type of municipality — -the ownership of the instrumentalities by which the public purpose is to be served. But we cannot see that such ownership detracts from the public or municipal character of the agency employed. Webb v. Port Commission, supra, p. 673; Willnon v. Powell, 91 Cal. Ap., 266 P., 1029.

The State cannot enact laws, and cities and towns cannot pass effective ordinances, forbidding disease, vice, and crime to enter into the slums of overcrowded areas, there defeating every purpose for which civilized government exists, and spreading influences detrimental to law and order; but experience has shown that this result can be more effectively brought about by the removal of physical surroundings conducive to these conditions. This is the objective of the act, and these are the means by which it is intended to accomplish it.

The written Constitution has no direct pronouncement as to the scope of governmental authority — does not define the field in which it must be exercised. It is far from comprehensive of the governmental power of *749 the State. Our Constitution, as bas been so frequently pointed out, is a constitution of limitations, where powers not surrendered expressly or by necessary implication are reserved to the people, to be exercised through their representatives in the General Assembly. Yarborough v. Park Commission, 196 N. C., 284, 291. An attempt by the Legislature to assert those powers must be treated liberally to effectuate its purpose. No matter from what source the power may be derived, the Court, by precedent at least, is not permitted to declare an act of the General Assembly void where there is reasonable doubt. Coble v. Commissioners, 184 N. C., 342; Gunter v. Sanford, 186 N. C., 452; Webb v. Port Commission, supra, 677.

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Bluebook (online)
197 S.E. 693, 213 N.C. 744, 1938 N.C. LEXIS 187, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wells-v-housing-authority-of-the-city-of-wilmington-nc-1938.