84 N.C. 829 | N.C. | 1881
The action is to recover the amount due on three bonds issued by the municipal authorities of the town of Fayetteville in payment for stock subscribed in the Western railroad company, and to compel their payment by the levy of the necessary tax. Demand was made upon *830 the treasurer of the town just previous to the institution of the suit. The defences set up are:
1. That no sufficient demand was made before the action.
2. That the omission to present the bonds within two years after their maturity to the chief officer of the town, as required by the act of March 22d 1875, ch. 243, is a bar to the recovery.
3. That the finance committee, without whose approval under the act of March 10th, 1879, no tax can be levied, are a necessary party to the action. These objections will be considered in their proper order.
I. The plaintiff alleges and proves that he made a demand of payment on the treasurer of the town, the official custodian of its funds, and this was sufficient to put the defendant in fault. "If the plaintiff had alleged in his complaint," says BYNUM, J., "that he had presented his claim to the board of commissioners to be audited and allowed, and that they had refused to act, or had disallowed it, he would have had a cause of action; or had he alleged that he presented to the treasurer a claim so allowed and that he had refused payment, he would have had a cause of action." Jones v.Commissioners of Bladen,
II. For the same reasons the act of March 22d 1875, is unavailing as a bar to the action as is decided in Wharton v. Commissioners of Currituck,
III. The last objection predicated upon the required concurrence of the finance committee to any tax levy under the act of March 10th, 1879, has been expressly declared to be invalided for the reasons fully set out in the case of Hawley v. Commissioners of Fayetteville,
There is no error. This will be certified for further proceedings in the court below.
No error. Affirmed.