G.S. 160-453.3 (3) b rеquires, in respect of a plan for extension of services to areas proposed to be annexed, the following: “Provide for extension of water mains and sewer lines into the area to be annexed so that property owners in the area to be annexed will be able to secure public water and sewer services according to the policies in effect in such municipality for extending water and sewer lines to individual lots or subdivisions. If the municipality must, at its own expense, extеnd water and/or sewer mains into the area to be annexed before property owners in the area can, according to municipal policies, make such connection to such lines, then the plans must call for contracts to be let and construction to begin on such lines within one year following the effectivе date of annexation.”
Chapter 1189, Session Laws of 1963, enacted subsequent to our decision in
Huntley v. Potter, 255
N.C. 619,
“Section 1. Subsection (3)b of G.S. 160-453.3 is hereby amended by changing the period at the end thereof to a semicolon, and by adding immediately thereafter the following: ‘provided, however, that in the event the sewerage system of the municipality shall have been declared to be unfit, obsolete, or a source of unlawful pollution to adjacent streams or Waterways by the State Stream Sanitation Committeе, then the municipality shall not be required to extend any sewerage outfalls into the area to be annexed; provided, further, that the area to be annexed shall be provided sewerage service on substantially the same basis and in the same manner as such service is provided within the rest of the municipality whenever a modеrnized sewerage system is created subject to the approval of the State Stream Sanitation Committee.’
“Sec. 2. This Act shall apply only to the Town of Beaufort.
“Sec. 3. All laws and clauses of laws in conflict with the рrovisions of this Act are hereby repealed to the extent of such conflict.
“Sec. 4. This Act shall become effective upon its ratification.
“In the General Assеmbly read three times and ratified, this the 25th day of June, 1963.”
*688 Article II, Section 29, of the Constitution of North Carolina, in pertinent part, provides: “§ 29. limitations upon power of General Assembly to enact private or special legislation. — The General Assembly shall not pass any local, private, or special act or resolution relаting to health, sanitation, and the abatement of nuisances; . . . Any local, private or special act or resolution passed in violation of the provisions of this section shall be void. The General Assembly shall have power to pass general laws regulating matters set out in this section.”
Manifestly, said 1968 Act, which applies “only to the Town of Beaufort,” is a local act.
S. v. Dixon,
While in agreement with Judge Latham’s ruling that said 1963 statute is unconstitutional and void, we are of opinion, and so decide, plaintiffs’ action should have been dismissed on acсount of their failure, within thirty days following the passage of said Annexation Ordinance, to file a petition in the Superior Court of Car-teret County seeking a review of the action of the Board of Commis
*689
sioners in accordance with the procedure prescribed by G.S. 160-453.6. Under the prescribed statutory procedure, plaintiffs could have challenged the constitutionality of said 1963 statute; the sufficiency of the plan for the extension of services to the areas proposed to be annexed; and the sufficiency of the plan and Annexation Ordinance in any other respect. The prescribed statutory procedure has been followed in prior litigаtion relating to annexations:
In re Annexation Ordinances,
In many jurisdictions, unless such ordinance be absolutely void,
e.g.,
on the ground of lack of legislative authority for its enactment, private individuals may not attack, collaterally or directly, the validity of proceedings extending the corporate limits of a municipality, this being an action to be prosecutеd only by the state through its proper officers. Annotation,
A similar factual situation was considered in
Leavell v. Town of Texico,
The statute under consideration in
Hite v. Town of West Columbia,
We are of opinion, and so decide, that the statutory remedy providеd by G.S. 160-453.6 was the only procedure available to plaintiffs to 'prevent the annexation provided by the Annexation Ordinance. Having been completed without being challenged in the manner prescribed by statute, the annexation is an accomplished fact; and the remedies of property owners and citizens within the annexed areаs are those provided in G.S. 160-453.5 (h).
For the reasons stated, the judgment purporting to adjudge the Annexation Ordinance and the annexation pursuant thereto void, is reversed.
Reversed.
