McPeeters v. . Blankenship

31 S.E. 876 | N.C. | 1898

The Code, sec. 707, subsection 10, amended by the Laws of 1895, ch. 135, sec. 2 (which strikes out the proviso) gives county commissioners power "to construct and repair bridges in the county and to raise by tax the money necessary therefor; and (653) when a bridge is necessary over a stream which divides one county from another, the board of commissioners of each county shall join in the construction or repairing of such bridge, and the charge thereof shall be defrayed by the counties concerned in proportion to the number of taxable polls in each. "The Code, sec. 2014, giving the county commissioners power "to appoint where bridges shall be made" is to be construed in connection with section 707 (10), and is not in conflict with it.

The commissioners of Yancey County deemed that a bridge was necessary over the Toe (or Estatoe) River at the point where the public road from Burnsville, the county seat, to Johnson City, Tennessee, crosses it, as that road is much used by citizens of the county, and rises of water in the river are not infrequent. The river at that place is the dividing line between Yancey and Mitchell counties, but as the road in question passes through a very narrow strip of Mitchell county, lying between the river and the Tennessee line, the commissioners of the latter county refused the application of the commissioners of Yancey to join in building the bridge, upon the ground that the interest of Mitchell County in having a bridge at that point was too slight to justify them in sharing the expense. Thereupon the commissioners of Yancey assumed the entire expense and caused an iron bridge to be constructed at a cost of $4,000 payable in five annual installments. The bridge has *452 been completed, and has been accepted by the commissioners, and five warrants for $800 issued to the contractor, the first of which falls due this year. This is an action by sundry taxpayers to restrain the (654) county treasurer from paying the warrants, on the ground that the erection of the bridge was ultra vires and the warrants are not a valid indebtedness of the county.

It would have been more seemly and just if some taxpayer had enjoined the erection of the bridge in the beginning, but there is no estoppel in matters of this kind. The county commissioners have only such powers as are conferred by statute, or plainly incident thereto, and in this matter of building bridges over a stream dividing one county from another, their powers are plainly prescribed and restricted. The commissioners of Yancey had no power to build the bridge across such boundary stream and throw the entire expense upon Yancey County, nor to build it at all in the absence of the joining of the commissioners of Mitchell, in which county half of the bridge is situated. It was held inGreenleaf v. Commissioners of Pasquotank, at this term, that the county commissioners could not accept a bridge as a gift to the county, to be maintained at its expense, when at one end of the bridge the road was a private road and not under county control. Clearly therefore the county commissioners cannot build a bridge at county expense when half of it will be in another county, and the road at the other end will not be under their control, except in the manner prescribed by statute, unless a special statute is procured to authorize it. If the bridge is a necessity to Mitchell county also, and the refusal of its commissioners is arbitrary, possibly a mandamus might have issued to compel them to join in the erection of the bridge, but that point is not before us. If the bridge is a necessity to Yancey County alone, the commissioners of that county, upon the refusal of the commissioners of Mitchell to join in its construction, should have applied to the Legislature for a special act (655) authorizing the county of Yancey to construct the bridge at its sole expense. Certainly in the absence of such legislative authority the warrants are invalid and their payment must be restrained.Washer v. Bullitt, 110 U.S. 558, and Bullitt v. Washer, 130 U.S. 142, relied on by defendant, differ from this case in that there the necessity for the bridge was adjudged and the contract ordered by the county court, presided over by the county judge, and the justices of the county, and afterwards ratified by judicial decree. But the county commissioners of this State have not been held invested with any common law power to exceed a restricted authority conferred on them by statute, and inWasher v. Bullitt, supra, the court is careful to add: "We find nothing in the decisions of the Court of Appeals of Kentucky contrary to this," in recognition of the right of the highest court of the State to construe *453 the powers conferred by its statute upon its own officers. Wilson v. N.C.169 U.S. 586, reprinted in 122 N.C. 1108 A (at p. 1108c).

Whatever hardship there is on the contractors, we cannot recognize any power in public officers to bind the public by contracts not authorized by law. If the warrants have passed for value and without notice to subsequent holders, they are equally invalid and unenforcible in their hands, as the warrants, orders and bonds of municipal corporations are not entitled to the protection that attaches to mercantile paper, even when negotiable in form. Wright v. Kinney, at this term.

Whether the Legislature (which will shortly be in session) may not, with or without a popular vote of the county, validate the warrants, is a matter which the holders may consider, but it is not (656) now before us.

The injunction will issue as prayed.

Reversed.

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