Busbee v. Commissioners of Wake County

93 N.C. 143 | N.C. | 1885

The restraining intermediate order having served its purpose, and any further restraint being refused, the commissioners proceeded with their work, and, as appears from their sworn affidavits, produced before us since the argument, have caused to be built under contract all but a small part of the entire enclosing structure, as reported to them by the finance committee, the cost of which remaining part will not exceed three hundred dollars; that the portion so built has been accepted by the commissioners, and paid for in orders on the county treasurer, taken up by him. The counter-affidavits show gaps in the structure at different points, but do not directly impugn the statements of the commissioners in regard to the extent to which the work has progressed. Arresting the further prosecution of the work under such circumstances and preventing (147) its completion might entail serious loss and damage upon the landowners who, relying upon this common enclosure for the protection of all, may have failed to keep up and repair their own separate fences, while no substantial and practical good would accrue from preventing the completion of the work, the remaining cost of which is such an inconsiderable part of the entire cost. We should not feel called upon, therefore, at this preliminary stage of the action to put a stop to the work unless we were fully satisfied that it was being prosecuted in violation of the Constitution and with no legal warrant therefor. But as it is of public importance that the validity of the legislation under which the commissioners are acting should be settled before the moneys levied under its authority are taken from the taxpaying landowners, upon whom an assessment has been made, we proceed to examine that question, pressed with so much earnestness upon us in the argument of appellants' counsel. This is the only inquiry that we propose to consider.

There have been several cases before the Court since the inauguration by the Legislature of the policy of substituting a single barrier around a large territory for the protection of the cultivated lands therein, erected at the expense of those reaping its benefits, for the far more costly barriers which individual proprietors engaged in cultivating the soil, would be otherwise compelled to erect at their own separate expense for the security of their crops and to escape the penal consequences of a violated law. Such legislation for local and special improvements, beneficial to one species of property, and for the expenses of which, local, as distinguished from general and public assessments for the common good, are made upon the property so benefited, has been *145 repeatedly held not to be under all those constitutional restraints found in Art. V, sec. 3, though the principle of uniformity runs through both. The principle underlying local assessments conferring special advantages upon land is but an application of the maxim illustrated and applied inNorfleet v. Cromwell, 64 N.C. 1: qui sentit commodum, debet sentireet onus. Without examining them in detail, the rule will be found to be vindicated in many, if not all, the cases decided in (148) this Court. Simpson v. Comrs., 84 N.C. 158; Cain v. Comrs.,86 N.C. 8; Newson v. Earnheart, ibid., 391; Shuford v. Comrs., ibid., 552; Comrs. v. Comrs., 92 N.C. 180; Bradshaw v. Comrs., ibid., 278.

The right to levy and collect assessments upon lands to meet the costs of constructing a boundary barrier against the inroads of stock, enclosing them, being conceded upon the authority of decided cases, the plaintiffs deny that any such power, though possessed by the Legislature, has been conferred upon the defendants, and hence it cannot be exercised. The argument is that they are directed to take the moneys needed for the purpose out of the county treasury, and the case is not within the terms of sec. 2824 of The Code, which is confined to cases in which a favoring and approving popular vote has been taken, by force of the qualifying words "within the county, township, or district which may adopt the stock law."

It is true this language has reference more immediately to the preceding sections in which the sanction of the electors is required, but it cannot be less applicable to the present case when no vote is necessary and the authority to build the fence is given without any such condition, and must convey the right to use the appropriate means of payment. It is an essential condition in the cases where an approval by the electors must be first obtained; it is put out of the way when the Legislature dispenses with the approval and commands the work to be done absolutely. In our construction of this clause the defendants may assert and exercise the right to levy and collect the assessment authorized by it. Again, it is objected that the tax is in excess of constitutional limits and cannot be raised except by a vote, it not being for any necessary county expense. Art. VII, sec. 7. Nor for "a special purpose with the special approval of the General Assembly." Art. V, sec. 6. We can scarcely conceive a case in which this special approval is given more clearly than in its positive command to the commissioners to do the work and providing the means for its being done. But these local assessments (149) are not under all the restraints put upon the taxing power. They stand upon a different footing and rest upon the equitable and just consideration that lands rendered more valuable by the improvement ought to contribute to the expenses of making the improvement, and that these expenses ought not to fall upon the entire body of the taxpayers — *146 as well those not benefited as those who are benefited. The advantage is to the land and to the persons only as owners of the land.

In answer to a suggestion comparing the benefits of a school established in a district with that received by land for a local improvement, a careful writer on the subject thus speaks:

"In the theory of local assessments a benefit received is not of the same kind as the benefit contemplated in taxing a county or school district. In the latter cases the benefit inures to all the inhabitants; in the local assessment it is a benefit not to persons but to land. Such a benefit must necessarily be a pecuniary benefit to the land adjacent to the improvement, arising from increased facilities for travel which increase the market value of the land; and if this be the character of the benefit, then the conclusion follows irresistibly that the tax ought to be only to the extent of the benefit. Beyond that benefit or increased value the owner of the land received no more benefit from the improvement than any other inhabitant of the city. This is in accord with the universally recognized theory of local assessments, and these are a class of cases which require the practice and theory to be consistent." Burroughs on Taxation, 406.

Reiterating the language employed in adapting the rule to the facts presented in Cain v. Comrs., supra, which are essentially the same as in this before us, we say: "We can scarcely conceive a case more clearly within the compass of the rule than that now under consideration. . . . The enactment proposes to dispense with separate enclosures for each man's land and substitute a common fence around the county boundary, to protect all agricultural lands from the inroads of stock from abroad and the fencing in of stock owned within the limits. (150) It creates a community of interest in upholding one barrier in place of separate and distinct barriers for each plantation, and thus in the common burden lessens the weight that each cultivator of the soil must otherwise individually bear. As the greater burden is thus removed from the landowner he, as such, ought to bear the expense by which this result is brought about." It is observed that the policy embodied in this form of legislation is growing in public favor, of which no stronger proof can be given than that furnished in the numerous enactments on the subject to be found upon the statute book. Should it prevail over the whole State it would be attended with a large reduction in expense, and perhaps pass out of the domain of local improvement and become of public utility, but of this we express no opinion, as our duty is to expound and enforce such laws as the General Assembly may possess the power and choose to enact for the general welfare. It is not easy to discriminate between an enactment that compels every farmer to keep a sufficient fence around his land in cultivation, *147 at his own expense, under the penalty of exposure to a public prosecution, and that which directs a single fence to be constructed around the boundaries of a county at the common expenses and for the common benefit of all. Nor is it plain that such a fence is not one of the necessary expenses of a county, as much so as an expensive bridge, such as we held the commissioners could deem such, in Evans v. Comrs., 89 N.C. 154.

Our consideration leads us to the conclusion reached by his Honor, and we find no error in his refusal to award the injunction asked for. This opinion will be certified, with instructions to the court below that the cause may proceed according to law.

No error. Affirmed.

Cited: Puitt v. Comrs., 94 N.C. 716, 717; Raleigh v. Peace, 110 N.C. 38;Harper v. Comrs., 133 N.C. 110; Asheville v. Trust Co., 143 N.C. 369;Sanderlin v. Luken, 152 N.C. 741; Tripp v. Comrs., 158 N.C. 184;Gastonia v. Cloninger, 187 N.C. 768.

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