Lutterloh v. City of Fayetteville

62 S.E. 758 | N.C. | 1908

A temporary restraining order was issued, and being heard upon the pleadings, affidavits and exhibits, the court found the material facts, dissolved the injunction, and plaintiff appealed, and filed exceptions to said findings and judgment. 1. The plaintiffs contend that the judge should have passed solely upon the necessity for continuing the injunction to the hearing, instead of going fully into the case and deciding the entire controversy.

As the only relief asked for in the complaint is a perpetual injunction restraining the defendant's authorities from exercising any jurisdiction within the territory recently included within the municipality, it would have been impossible intelligently to determine whether to continue the restraining order without considering and determining the legal issues presented in the pleadings. There seems to be no controverted issue of fact raised therein necessary to be submitted to a jury.

An action for a perpetual injunction is the proper remedy in (67) controversies of this character (28 Cyc., 212), and where the judge refuses to enjoin the exercise of jurisdiction over the annexed territory, he must necessarily determine the case on its merits.

2. It is contended that the boundaries given in the act of 1907 can not be located, and that they are indefinite, uncertain and void.

There appears to have been an omission of certain words in enrolling the act of 1907, which error has been cured by the act of the special session of 1908, Private Laws, chap. 22, but independent of the effect of this latter act, the judge below finds upon the testimony of the surveyor that the boundaries of the city, including the extension under the act of 1907, have been located, and that they embrace, plaintiff's property.

The surveyor testifies, that locating the boundaries under the act of 1907 covers the same territory as those included in the amendatory act of 1908, except a small vacant and unimproved space, containing one and nine-tenths acres of land.

This testimony of the surveyor is adopted by the judge as a fact and *50 made a part of his findings. We think that settles the question so far as this Court is concerned, as the first section of the act setting out the boundaries is certainly not void on its face.

3. It is contended that the act of 1907 was not read on three several days and an aye and nay vote taken and recorded, as required by the Constitution, Art. 2, sec. 14, and that, therefore, the act is void and can confer no power to levy a tax within the annexed territory. For this position plaintiffs rely on the case of Cotton Mills v. Waxhaw,130 N.C. 293.

The charter of the city of Fayetteville, as at present organized, was enacted in 1893, and contains full authority for the levying of (68) taxes within the municipal boundaries, however those boundaries may be extended by subsequent legislation.

The Waxhaw case is authority for the position, that a municipal charter conferring power to levy a tax must be enacted in accordance with that section of the Constitution. It is not contended that the charter of Fayetteville, enacted in 1893, is void for such reason.

The act of 1907 does not purport to authorize the levying of any tax or the contracting of any debt, and there is nothing on its face which could indicate to the General Assembly that it is one of those bills coming within the purview of section 14, article 2 of the organic law. It is not a city charter, but only an act annexing territory to a chartered municipality already in existence.

4. The plaintiffs except to the following rulings of the court: "That, although the terms of the act of 11 March, 1907, do not prescribe with such definite clearness as they might have done who were qualified voters under the act, nevertheless, construing all of the parts thereof, it would seem that the Legislature intended to provide that the voters of the old town and the annexed district were all entitled to vote in said election. But the act itself is made a part of this finding."

The plaintiffs contend that the intention of the Legislature was to confine the election to the voters of the annexed district.

The language of the act would seem to give color to such contention, but taking the entire act as a whole, a careful reading of it, we think, justifies his Honor's interpretation.

Section 1 of the act describes particularly the territory to be annexed, then adds: "Provided, that no part of the city limits as now existing shall be eliminated from said city when so extended."

Section 3 provides for an election of "all persons embraced in the above-described boundaries," in which must necessarily be (69) included all parts of the city as then existing; and it also provided "for a registrar of voters living in the city of Fayetteville, including said above-described territory." The same section requires the *51 registrar to register "such persons in said city, and in said above-described new territory as may present themselves for registration and are qualified to vote in city elections and not at present registered."

These last words indicate clearly that the legislative intent was that all qualified voters in the old and new territory should be allowed to register and participate in the election.

5. Another and final objection made to the act of annexation is, that the object sought to be accomplished by it, in the mode provided, is beyond the power of the General Assembly, because it authorizes annexation, and consequently, taxation, without the consent of those who are affected by it.

We have held in common with all the courts of this country, that municipal corporations, in the absence of constitutional restrictions, are the creatures of the legislative will, and are subject to its control; the sole object being the common good, and that rests in legislative discretion. Dorsey v. Henderson, 148 N.C. 423, and Perry v. Comrs.,ibid., 521; Manly v. Raleigh, 57 N.C. 372.

Consequently, it follows that the enlargement of the municipal boundaries by the annexation of new territory, and the consequent extension of their corporate jurisdiction, including that of levying taxes, are legitimate subjects of legislation. In the absence of constitutional restriction, the extent to which such legislation shall be enacted, both with respect to the terms and circumstances under which the annexation may be had, and the manner in which it may be made, rests entirely in the discretion of the Legislature. With its wisdom, propriety or justice we have naught to do.

It has, therefore, been held that an act of annexation is valid which authorized the annexation of territory, without the consent of its inhabitants, to a municipal corporation, having a large unprovided for indebtedness, for the payment of which the property included (70) within the territory annexed became subject to taxation. Powersv. Wood, 8 Ohio St. 285; Blanchard v. Bissell, 11 Ohio St. 96; Richardsv. Cincinnati, 27 L.R.A., 746, and cases cited in note.

In the first cited case, the Supreme Court of Ohio says that there is no constitutional provision on the subject, and that "it would require a very artificial and unsound mode of reasoning to hold that territory could not be annexed to a town which owed debts, until the owners of such territory were paid a compensation in money for a proportional part of such debt"; and, further, "that it is not to be presumed that a municipal corporation has contracted a debt without being correspondingly benefited."

In Richards v. Cincinnati, supra, it is said, "it is not perceived how the amount or nature of the municipal indebtedness can affect the right *52 of annexation if it be otherwise legal; for the power to bring into a municipal corporation by annexation, property not theretofore subject to taxation for municipal purposes, and lay taxes upon it to raise funds for the payment of any previously existing municipal debt, necessarily includes the power to do so for the payment of every such debt lawfully incurred. Persons thus brought into the annexing corporation and their property, like all of its other inhabitants and their property, receive and enjoy the benefits of all local improvements and should share the burdens existing when the enjoyment commences." See also St. Louis v. Russell, 9 Mo., 507;Smith v. McCarty, 56 Pa., 359; McCallie v. Chattanooga, 3 Head., 317; NewOrleans v. Cazela, 27 La., Ann., 156; Montpelier v. East Montpelier,29 Vt. 12.

Dillon Municipal Corporations (4 Ed.), sec. 185, cites an array of authority in support of his text: "Not only may the Legislature originally fix the limits of the corporation, but it may, unless specially restrained in the Constitution, annex, or authorize the annexation of, contiguous or other territory, and this without the consent, and (71) even against the remonstrance, of the majority of the persons residing in the corporation or in the annexed territory. And it is no constitutional objection to the exercise of this power of compulsory annexation that the property thus brought within the corporate limits will be subjected to taxation to discharge a preexisting municipal indebtedness, since this is a matter which, in the absence of special constitutional restriction, belongs wholly to the Legislature to determine." Such legislative enactments involve no sort of a contract between the General Assembly, on the one part, and the citizens of the locality to be annexed, on the other part.

This was settled in this State as long ago as 1850 in Mills v. Williams,33 N.C. 558, and reiterated in Manly v. Raleigh, supra, and subsequent cases.

The doctrine of those cases was acted upon by the Supreme Court of the U.S. in the Memphis case, 97 U.S. 284, when it held that: "The charters and constituent acts of public and municipal corporations are not, as we have seen before, contracts, and they may be changed at the pleasure of the Legislature, subject only to the restraints of special constitutional provisions, if any there be."

And the same position is affirmed in the recent case of Hunter v.Pittsburgh, 207 U.S. 161, wherein it is said: "There is no contract between citizens and taxpayers of a municipal corporation and the corporation itself, that the former shall be taxed only for uses of the enlarged municipality formed by annexation under authority of Pennsylvania, act of 7 February, 1906, to an adjoining and larger municipality. *53

"Citizens and taxpayers of a lesser municipality annexed under authority of this act, to an adjoining and larger municipality, are not deprived of their property without due process of law by reason of the burden of additional taxation resulting from consolidation, although the method of voting prescribed by the statute has permitted the voters of the larger city to overpower the voters of the smaller (72) one, and compel the union without their consent and against their protest."

Upon a review of the entire record the judgment of the judge below is

Affirmed.

Cited: Comrs. v. Comrs., 157 N.C. 517, 518; Pritchard v. Comrs.,160 N.C. 478; Cottrell v. Lenoir, 173 N.C. 146.

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