60 S.E. 516 | N.C. | 1908
The objections to the validity of the bonds and the legality of the issue are fully set out in the complaint, and we deem it necessary to notice four only of the contentions urged by plaintiffs.
It is insisted, first, that the bond act is unconstitutional and void, for the reason that said act is a private act and that thirty days notice was not given, as required in section 12, Article II of the Constitution. It is immaterial whether the act be a public-local law, as defined in S. v.Chambers,
Second, that said act is unconstitutional and void because it was not passed in the manner required by section 14, Article II of the Constitution, in that the yeas and nays were not recorded on the second and third readings, as required by said section. An inspection of the journals *428
of both houses of the General Assembly shows that this contention is without foundation. Comrs. v. Trust Co.,
Fourth, that the bonds are to be issued and the tax levied for a purpose that is not corporate in its character, viz., not within the scope and purpose of a municipal corporation, and, therefore, violative of the State Constitution.
This position seems to find support in the decision of the Supreme Court of Ohio in Hubbard v. Fitzsimmons,
While such corporations cannot donate their funds to strictly private enterprises, there is nothing in our Constitution which prohibits them, with legislative sanction, from assisting undertakings of a public or semipublic character, which are expected and intended to promote the prosperity and general welfare of the community. The purpose in issuing these bonds is to secure the establishment within the (587) county of Pitt of the Eastern Carolina Teachers Training School, in accordance with the terms of the act establishing it. Chapter 820, Laws 1907. That such donation is not for a private purpose, but intended to assist a great public institution, which will be of inestimable local as well as general benefit cannot be doubted.
The principle indorsed by the Supreme Court of the United States is that if the donation is for a public purpose, viz., for the benefit of the inhabitants of the municipality, then it will be for a corporate purpose.R. R. v. Smith,
Affirmed.
Cited: Comrs. v. McDonald,
(588)