The central issue on this appeal involves the meaning of the term “clear proceeds.” The threshold question in this case, whether funds collected from overtime parking violations constitute penalties or fines within the meaning of Article IX, Section 7 of thе North Carolina Constitution, the clear proceeds of which shall belong to the county for maintaining free public schools, has already been decided. In Cauble I, as affirmed by Cauble II, the Court of Appeals and subsequently the Supreme Court held that such monies collected are indeed fines resulting from “a breach of the penal laws of the State,” the clear proceeds of which are to be paid to the Buncombe County finance officer for disbursement to the appropriate administrative units. As to the current appeal, insofar as the judgment of the trial court defined “clear proceeds” as the amounts collected by defendant for overtime parking violations undiminished by direct and indirect costs or expenses of collection, it was in error. What will follow is a disсussion of the meaning of clear proceeds and the standard by which such proceeds are to be measured on remand.
The term “clear proceeds” as used in Article IX, Section 7, is synonymous with “net proceeds.” The North Carolina cases of
State v. Maultsby,
Once it is established that “clear proceeds” means “net proceeds,” namely, that some deductions from gross amounts cоllected shall be allowed, we come to the more difficult aspect of this issue — which deductions shall be allowed. North Carolina case law offers minimal guidance on this matter. In
Hightower v. Thompson, supra,
which involved the forfeiture of a criminal ap
*541
pearance bond, our Supreme Court, relying on
State v. Maultsby, supra,
noted that “ ‘[C]lear proceeds’ have been judicially defined as the аmount of the forfeit less the cost of collection. . .
Id.
at 493,
In
State v. Maultsby, supra,
the court held that a statute providing that one-half of a fine imposed on a criminal defendant convicted of violating state prohibition laws be paid to the informant was unconstitutional, observing “[b]y ‘clear proceeds’ is meant the total sum less only the Sheriffs fees for collectiоn, when the fine and costs are collected in full.”
Id.
at 585,
Both State v. Maultsby, supra, and Hightower v. Thompson, supra, involved particularized applications of the general directive that “costs of collection” will be deducted from gross proceeds to calculate clear proceeds. The рlain import of these cases is not that any specific item, such as the sheriffs fee, is to be deducted; rather, that the scope of permissible deductions concerns the cost of collecting the fines. In the case at bar no sheriffs fee is involved, and a rule making such a fee the only permissible deduction is patently illogical.
Although no North Carolina statute or case adequately identifies which deductions from gross proceeds are permissible, in arriving at a definition of the term “clear procеeds” it is helpful to understand which deductions are impermissible by examining cases from North Carolina and other jurisdictions holding that funds had been unconstitutionally diverted from the public schools or similar institutions. The North Carolina General Assembly is clearly without power to appropriate or divert by statute all or any part of fines resulting from violations of city ordinances to cities and towns, this being in direct contravention of the constitutional provision.
School Directors v. Asheville,
In accordance with North Carolina authority, it is generally true that where a state constitution gives the clear proceeds of fines to public schools, any statute which purports to divert the total proceeds derived from a particular type of fine to any other purpose will be held unconstitutional.
See State ex rel. Rodes v. Warner,
The clear implication in North Carolina casе law is that costs of collection of a fine will be deducted to determine clear proceeds, see State v. Maultsby, supra, and Hightower v. Thompson, supra, and this proposition receives support from other jurisdictions. In a Virginia case, although the monies in question were deemed penalties rather than fines and therefore not within the purview of the constitutional provision, the court reasoned in dicta that deduction of costs is a necessarily implied aspect of the constitutional provision:
It could not have been intended or expected by the framers of the constitution that the laws imposing fines for offenses could be enforced or collected without cost or expense. They must have . . . intended to appropriate to the literary fund the amount coming to the state after deduсting such part as the legislature may have set apart to secure their enforcement and collection. . . . This is not an appropriation or diversion of the fine to an object other than that to which the constitution dedicates it.
Southern Exp. Co. v. Commonwealth,
*543
If costs of cоllection may be validly deducted from amounts collected by the City of Asheville as gross proceeds without violating the constitutional provision, there remains the question of how to arrive at those costs. Case law relating to the determination of costs in similar instances indicates that defining costs of collection is a legislative function.
See, e.g., State ex rel. Rodes v. Warner, supra
(legislature has discretionary power to give part of fine to informant, remainder being clear proceeds);
State ex rel. Guenther v. Miles,
The North Carolina General Assembly has not, however, seen fit to provide municipalities with a formula for determining “clear proceeds” of fines realized from traffic violations. Lacking guidance on the subject, this Court is compelled to resort to a less precise measure in order to allow municipalities to retain the costs of collecting the fines in question.
See generally People v. Barber,
We therefore hold that the test for determining permissible deductions from gross monies taken in is that the item to be deductible must bear a reasonable relation to the costs of collection of the fine. Although the trial court refused to interpose the “arbitrary, uncertain and perhaps inconsistent exercise of judicial discretion in determining reasonable costs of collection,” we believe a determination of costs can be made by qualified accountants, which determination is no more complicated than other problems accountants are daily accustomed to resolving.
We are mindful that in the situation of parking fines, the costs of collection often surpass the amounts collected, the intent of the municipality in pаssing these ordinances being the regulation of traffic rather than the production of revenue, and that the evidence produced at trial tends to support that proposition. See People v. Barber, supra (where act purporting to fund officers’ *544 training council out of a percentage of fines exempted “minor traffic violations”); State ex rel. Commissioners of Public Lands v. Anderson, supra (where evidence showed county lost money in collecting traffic fines).
We are equally cognizant of the manifest purpose of the framers of the Constitution in enacting Article IX, § 7, that is, tо set aside property and revenue to support the public school system and to prevent the diversion of such property and revenue to other purposes.
Shore v. Edmisten, supra,
at 588, 633,
quoting Boney v. Kinston Graded School,
As to appellant’s other assignments of error, the assignments relating to the failure of the trial judge to distinguish between on- and off-street overtime parking violations are without merit. The case was tried gеnerally on a theory of overtime and delinquent overtime parking violations; there was neither allegation nor evidence that any distinction should be made between on- and off-street parking violations.
There is also no error in that part of the judgment thаt retained the cause for the purpose of awarding attorneys’ fees. It is true that attorneys’ fees are not usually an element of court costs. However, a rule exists allowing a court to award attorneys’ fees “to a litigant who at his [or her] own expense has maintained a successful suit for the preservation, protection, or increase of a common fund,”
Horner v. Chamber of Commerce,
As to the assignment of error concerning the trial court’s conclusion as a matter of law that the amount of total collections *545 for parking violаtions between 22 April 1975 and 30 June 1982 would be res judicata and binding upon both the parties and upon the Board of Education, this Court first notes that such information is more properly made a finding of fact rather than a conclusion of law, although no prejudice results from mislabeling it a conclusion of law. Indeed, the trial court made the information concerning the amount of collections one of its findings of fact as well as a conclusion of law. As a finding of fact, the amount of collections is res judicata and binding upon the parties to this action.
As to the Board of Education, howevеr, the trial court erred in ruling that such a finding, whether denominated fact or law, would be binding upon that organization. A plea of
res judicata
is customarily sustained only where there is an identity of parties, subject matter, and issues, but there are exceptions to this general rule. The dоctrine of
res judicata
also applies to privies as well as parties, privies being persons who have mutual or successive rights to the same interest in property.
Masters v. Dunstan,
That part of the judgment of the trial court that defines clear proceeds, and that part which states that the $491,800.00 figure for total collections for all parking violations between 22 April 1975 and 30 June 1982 shall be res judicata upon the Board of Education, are reversed; all other assignments of error are overruled. This cause is remanded for an accounting consistent with this Court’s definition of “clear proceeds.”
Reversed and remanded.
