121 S.E. 534 | N.C. | 1924
Among other taxes levied by the board of commissioners for 1923 were the following: General county fund, 18 cents on the $100; county road bonds, 26 cents on the $100; general road fund, 6 cents on the $100; general floating debt, 3 cents on the $100; general county schools, 50 cents on the $100.
In December, 1923, the plaintiff brought suit against the defendant to enjoin the collection of $197.65, which was a tax of 3 cents on every *321 $100 valuation of its property, on the ground that the levy was in excess of the constitutional limitation. A temporary restraining order was issued, and the cause was heard and determined at the January Term, 1924, upon the complaint and answer (which were treated as affidavits), the resolution of the board of commissioners, the levy, and other record evidence.
The defendant in his answer alleged the facts to be substantially as follows: On 11 August, 1923, the board of commissioners met and first determined to levy 15 cents on each $100 valuation of property for general county purposes, and upon further consideration determined that it was necessary to levy a special tax of 3 cents on each $100 valuation for the construction and maintenance of bridges and the maintenance of the county home for the aged and infirm. The board then levied 15 cents for the general county fund and 3 cents as a special tax for the combined purposes of constructing and maintaining bridges and maintaining the home for the aged and infirm. At said meeting the clerk of the board placed the general county fund at 18 cents, adding the 15 cents, general county fund, and the levy of 3 cents for bridges and the county home, making 18 cents on the $100 valuation, and so expressed it in the resolution and on the minutes. For the purpose of computing the taxes, he carried it out on the tax books so as to make one calculation instead of two. The resolution as recorded on the minutes of the board of commissioners for said meeting of 11 August, 1923, is as appears in Exhibit A attached to the complaint. At the meeting of said board of commissioners held in the courthouse on 3 September, 1923, the same being the next regular meeting of the board, the minutes of the meeting held on the first Monday in August, 1923, were read and declared adopted.
His Honor apparently accepted the defendant's answer as true, and found the facts to be as therein set out.
The plaintiff contends that the board of commissioners levied 18 cents for the general county fund, and exceeded by 3 cents the limit prescribed by the Constitution, Art. V, sec. 6, and that the act under which it was levied (Public Laws 1923, ch. 7) is itself invalid. The defendant takes the position that, although the minutes of the board show a levy of 18 cents for the general county fund, only 15 cents was levied for this purpose, and the additional 3 cents for maintaining the county home and building and repairing bridges. The plaintiff replies that the minutes of the board cannot be impeached in this action.
The restraining order was dissolved and the action dismissed. The plaintiff appealed.
The plaintiff bases its claim to injuctive relief on the ground that the tax levied for general county purposes is in excess of the constitutional limitation, and therefore illegal. C. S., 858, 7979. There is no suggestion that the tax was levied in breach of Article VII, section 7, of the Constitution, or that the maintenance of the county home and the building and repairing of bridges do not involve a necessary expense. Long v.Comrs.,
The amended section is as follows: "The total of the State and county tax on property shall not exceed 15 cents on the $100 value of property, except when the county property tax is levied for a special purpose and with the special approval of the General Assembly, which may be done by special or general act: Provided, this limitation shall not apply to taxes levied for the maintenance of the public schools of the State for the term required by Article IX, section 3, of the Constitution: Provided further, the State tax shall not exceed 5 cents on the $100 value of property."
The tax was levied under this act: "The board of commissioners of the various counties in the State, for the purpose of maintaining roads, bridges, the upkeep of county buildings, county homes for the aged and infirm, and other similar institutions, and to supplement the general county fund, are hereby authorized to levy annually a tax upon all taxable property not to exceed 5 cents on the $100 of valuation, in addition to any tax allowed by any special statute for the above enumerated purposes, and in addition to the rate allowed by the Constitution." Private Laws 1923, ch. 7.
The plaintiff insists (1) that the tax therein proposed is to be levied, not for a special purpose, but for supplementing the general county fund; and (2) that even if the purpose of maintaining bridges and county institutions be construed as special, the purpose to supplement the general county fund is not special, and as one of the purposes is unauthorized the entire act must fail.
The Constitution, Art. V, sec. 6, was amended as hereinbefore set out in pursuance of chapter 93 of the Public Laws enacted at the Extra Session of 1920. Before the amendment, its provisions were these: "The taxes levied by the commissioners of the several counties for county purposes shall be levied in like manner with the State taxes, and shall never exceed the double of the State tax, except for a special purpose, and with the special approval of the General Assembly." C. S., Vol. 2, p. 1119; Const., sec. 6. *323
The "special approval" which, before the amendment, was to have been given by a special statute, may now be expressed by a special or a general act. It should be noted that the cases cited in support of the plaintiff's position were decided prior to the time the amendment went into effect. The first is Williams v. Comrs.,
In R. R. v. Cherokee County,
Also, in R. R. v. Comrs.,
Now, if we apply the statement of Chief Justice Marshall, that "every opinion, to be correctly understood, ought to be considered with a view to the case in which it was delivered" (U.S. v. Burr, 25 Fed. Cases, p. 165), we must conclude that, although a tax "to supplement the general county fund" is not a tax for special purpose, neither of the decisions cited by the plaintiff sustains the contention that the maintenance of the county home or the building and repair of bridges is not such special purpose as comes within the purview of the sixth section of Article V. On the contrary, while the construction and maintenance of the county home and the building and repairing of bridges may be considered a part of the ordinary expenses of the county, to be defrayed out of the general county revenue when sufficient for these purposes, still a tax levied under a special or general act for the specific and exclusive purpose of constructing, maintaining or repairing courthouses, jails, county homes, highways or bridges is deemed to be levied for a special purpose. Therefore, if the tax of 3 cents was levied to provide for constructing, repairing or maintaining bridges or the county home, the purpose was special. Brodnax v. Groom,
The plaintiff further objects that the act of 1923 does not indicate the special purpose to which the authorized tax shall be applied, and in this respect fails to comply with the mandate laid down in Article V, section 7, of the Constitution. This section provides that every act of the General Assembly levying a tax shall state the special object to which it is to be applied, and that it shall be applied to no other purpose. But in passing the act in question the Legislature neither professed nor intended to levy a tax, but merely to delegate its power of taxation within specified limitations to the various counties as agencies of the State for the convenience of the local administration. The exercise of such power has frequently been upheld and is now generally recognized. The reason for it, as stated in Caldwell v. The Justices,
From the decisions cited it seems to be clear that a tax cannot be levied under the act of 1923 "to supplement the general county fund," and that the clause purporting to authorize such tax runs counter to Article V, section 6, of the Constitution; but we do not concur in the argument that the act is for this reason void in its entirety. A statute may be constitutional in part, and in part unconstitutional. "The general proposition must be conceded that in a statute which contains invalid or unconstitutional provisions, that which is unaffected by these provisions, or which can stand without them, must remain. If the valid and invalid are capable of separation, only the latter may be disregarded." Board etc. v.Stanley,
This conclusion leads to consideration of the objection which presents the question whether the record of the commissioners can be attacked and error shown in a collateral proceeding between the taxpayer and the tax collector. As stated heretofore, the minutes show that 18 cents on property valued at $100 was levied for general county purposes. Can the record showing this levy be contradicted or altered or corrected at the instance of the officer who collects the taxes, when the commissioners are given no opportunity to be heard? Would not such procedure demoralize the system under which taxes are levied, and result in
. . . "ruin upon ruin, rout on rout, Confusion worse confounded"?
The register of deeds is constituted clerk ex officio of the board of commissioners, and is required to record all the proceedings of the board in a book to be provided for this purpose. C. S., 1309, 1310. The object is to preserve a memorial of official transactions, which shall serve both as a record and as a guide. By this memorial the commissioners speak. It is the evidence of what they have said and done — the record of their proceedings. "Courts of record speak only in their records. They preserve written memorials of their proceedings, which are exclusively the evidence of those proceedings. If they choose to keep minutes, which they understand and can act on to their own satisfaction, it is well. If from them they can afterwards undertake to draw out the record to perpetuate it to their successors or to communicate its contents to another court, I know nothing to prevent them, but the difficulty in their own minds of being sure they make it what it was intended originally to be. But until the record be so framed, another court cannot know more than the words of the minutes in themselves import. The records may be identified by testimony, but their contents cannot be altered, nor their meaning explained by parol. The acts of the court cannot thus be established." Wade v. Odeneal,
Can the record of the levy yet be amended if it was incorrectly made and is not subject to collateral attack?
If the tax of 3 cents was properly levied and apportioned, as contended by the defendant, and was combined with the county tax by the clerk of the board only as a matter of convenience to him in making his computation and as a means of obviating the necessity of running out two calculations, it may be possible for the commissioners to amend their record nunc pro tunc, so that it may "speak the truth." In *327 Walton v. Pearson,
But such amendment can be made only by the commissioners, and only in case they find that the entry on their minutes is incorrect — that it does not speak the truth. If the tax was levied, as it now appears on their record, they have no power to amend it. But in view of the importance of the controversy, we think they should have an opportunity to be heard. We have, therefore, concluded that the rights of the parties may be protected and the controversy more satisfactorily determined by remanding the cause to the Superior Court of Pasquotank County, with leave to the plaintiff or the defendant to move that the board of commissioners be made a party to the action. All the questions involved in the appeal may then be disposed of in accordance with this decision. If the board be not made a party, or if it be determined that the tax of 18 cents was in fact levied for general county purposes, as it now appears upon the minutes of the board, the order restraining the collection of the tax in excess of 15 cents should be made permanent. For these reasons the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
The plaintiff will recover the cost of this appeal.
Reversed and remanded.