The record does not disclose whether any of the questions raised by the taxpayers’ petition for review have been decided or considered. Presumably, these questions await consideration and decision at some further hearing.
The only question presented by this appeal is whether the court erred in dismissing Mecklenburg County’s petition for review.
Mecklenburg County is a person “aggrieved by a final administrative decision” and entitled to a judicial review thereof. G.S. 143-307;
In re Assessment of Sales Tax,
G.S. 143-309, in pertinent part, provides: “In order to obtain judicial review of an administrative decision under this chapter the person seeking review must file a petition in the Superior Court of Wake County; . . . Such petition may be filed at any time after final decision, but must be filed not later than thirty days after a written copy of the decision is served upon the person seeking the review by personal service or by registered mail, return receipt requested. Failure to file such petition within the time stated shall operate as a waiver of the right of such person to review under this chapter, except that for good cause shown, the judge of the superior court may issue an order permitting a review of the administrative decision under this chapter notwithstanding such waiver.” (Our italics.)
The court’s findings of fact establish that Mecklenburg County received on or about May 31, 1966, in the usual and ordinary course of the mails, “one or more of the aforesaid four copies of said Administrative Order and thereby had actual notice of the contents and ruling thereof,” and that Mecklenburg County has not denied it received such copy on May 31, 1966. There is no finding as to the exact date on which Mecklenburg County or any particular official thereof received such a copy. Nor is there any admission by Meck-lenburg County with reference thereto.
Under G.S. 143-309 a petition for review may be filed tit any time *24 after final decision by the State Board of Assessment. The only requirement is that such petition'must be filed not later than thirty days “after a written copy of the decision is served upon the person seeking the review by personal service or by registered mail, return receipt requested.” Ilere, the “written copy” was not served either “by personal service” or “by registered mail, return receipt requested.”
A distinctive feature of each of the two prescribed methods of service is certainty in respect of proof of service. Seemingly, the General Assembly intended to avoid, if possible, the necessity for hearings to determine whether or when a “written copy” was served. Too, it may have thought the receipt of a “written copy” by registered mail would direct attention to the importance of the document and the need for immediate attention. Whatever the reasons therefor, the General Assembly provided that service by one or the other of two specific methods is prerequisite to the commencement of the thirty-day period prescribed for filing a petition for review.
Ordinarily, “(w)here a specified mode of giving notice is prescribed by statute, that method is exclusive.” 39 Am. Jur., Notice and Notices § 9, p. 237. “Generally speaking, a person relying on the service of a notice by mail must show a strict compliance with the requirements of the statute.” 66 C.J.S., Notice § 18(e) (1), p. 663.
“ (I) f the statute provides for notice to be given, the notice which is prescribed must be given; and failure to give such notice will render any order of the board void, in the absence of a waiver thereof.” 84 C.J.S., Taxation § 503(b), p. 947.
In
Yuma County v. Arizona Edison Co.,
In
Linder v. Watson,
In
Allen v. Strickland,
In
McNeill v. B. B.,
“If the giving of notice is relied upon to sustain a forfeiture or divestiture of one’s rights, directions as to how such notice shall be given must be strictly complied with.”
Pennsylvania Co., etc., v. Forrest Hill Bldg. & L. Ass’n,
In
White v. March,
Appellees contend the provisions as to notice in G.S. 143-309 should be construed liberally in their favor. As authority for such construction they cite
Fleisher Engineering and Constr. Co. v. United States,
In
Fleisher
the action was instituted by the United States of America for the use and benefit of one George S. Hallenbeck upon a payment bond given by the prime contractor on a government project pursuant to the Miller Act. 40 U.S.C., §§ 270a (a) (1, 2) and 270b(a). Hallenbeck had performed labor for a subcontractor. The statute conferred a right of action upon the bond “upon giving written notice to said contractor within ninety days from the date on which such.person did or performed the last of the labor . . . for which such claim is made, stating with substantial accuracy the amount claimed and the name of the party . . . for whom the labor was done or performed.” It provides that “(s)uch notice shall be served by mailing the same by registered mail, postage prepaid, in an' envelope addressed to the contractor at any place he maintains an .office or conducts his business, or his residence, or in any manner in which the United States marshal of the district in which the public improvement is situated is authorized by law to serve summons.” It was conceded that the prime contractor received written notice and that the contents thereof were adequate. However, such notice was not sent by “registered mail.” The Supreme Court, in opinion by Mr. Chief Justice Hughes, held the statute was “highly remedial and should be construed liberally”
in favor of the person upon whom it conferred new rights.
In holding the notice sufficient, the Supreme Court affirmed
United States v. Fleisher Engineering & Const. Co.,
*27 Subsequently, in Peerless, the Court of Appeals of the Eighth Circuit, relying on Fleisher, held a notice sent in the ordinary course of mail and not by registered mail, which was received by the contractor and answered in the same course of mail, was a sufficient compliance with the statutory requirement as to notice.
The cited federal decisions are not authoritative and, in our opinion, are distinguishable factually from the present case.
“No appeal lies from an order or decision of an administrative agency of the State or from judgments of special statutory tribunals whose proceedings are not according to the course of the common law, unless the right is granted by statute.” In re Assessment of Sales Tax, swpra. The right to petition for review of the administrative order of the State Board of Assessment is conferred by the statute now codified as G.S. Chapter 143, Article 33, entitled “Judicial Review of Decisions of Certain Administrative Agencies.” The primary purpose of this statute is to confer such right to judicial review; and, in our opinion, the statute should be liberally construed to preserve and effectuate such right. Hence, the provisions of G.S. 143-309 providing for the waiver or forfeiture of such right under certain conditions should be construed strictly; and, when so construed, the right to petition for review continues unless and until thirty days have expired from the date “a written copy” of the administrative order has been served on the party seeking review either by personal service or by registered mail, return receipt requested. Absent service by either of the two methods prescribed therefor, there was no waiver or forfeiture of Mecklenburg County’s right to petition for review.
Our conclusion is that Mecklenburg County’s petition for review was filed as permitted by G.S. 143-309. Accordingly, the judgment of the court below dismissing Mecklenburg County’s petition for review solely on the ground it was not filed in apt time is reversed.
Reversed.
