52 S.E. 408 | N.C. | 1905
The General Assembly, Laws 1905, chap. 259, prescribed a carefully drawn method for working the public roads in *498 Hertford County. Section 17 thereof provides: "That any person, firm or corporation desiring to use any of the public roads of a township for carrying on his or its business of hauling mill logs or timber or other heavy material with log wagons, log carts or other heavy vehicles shall first obtain a license for this purpose from the board of supervisors of the township in which he or they may desire to operate and make use of the roads, by paying an annual license tax of fifteen dollars for each wagon or cart or vehicle of the kind above described to be used, which tax shall be paid to the treasurer of the board fund and placed to the credit of the board of supervisors of the township, to be used by (644) the board as other funds for said township. Any person violating this section shall be guilty of a crime and liable to a penalty of fifty dollars, to be recovered in an action by the board of supervisors of roads of the township where the offense took place, for the benefit of the road fund of that township." And section 23 provides: "That section 17 of this act shall not be enforced in any township unless a majority of the members of the board of supervisors of that township shall have voted to enforce the same." Section 12 authorizes the levy by the county commissioners of a county tax on property for road purposes, such tax to be used in the township from which it is derived, and section 24 provides that one-half the net proceeds of all dispensaries for the sale of liquor in the county shall be apportioned per capita among the several townships and used by the board of road Supervisors of each township to be used solely for repairing the public roads therein.
The special verdict finds that the majority of the justices of Murfreesboro township on 3 June, 1905, under authority of section 23 of said act, adopted the provisions of section 17, above set out, and imposed the license tax of $15 upon all persons or corporations using the roads of said township for carrying on their business of hauling mill logs or timber or other heavy material with log wagons, log carts and other heavy vehicles, and that the defendant had verbal notice both from a justice of the peace and member of the board of road supervisors of said township, and also from the secretary of said board, of such action, and that the law was in force requiring a license tax of $15, but the defendant nevertheless continued the business of hauling logs over the public roads in said township with log wagons and team after having received the verbal notices aforesaid, without taking out license or paying the license tax, until later upon receiving written notice that the board had refused to rescind the order, he discontinued using the (645) public roads for hauling logs with log wagons.
As the law did not require written notice of the action of the board under section 23, the defendant cannot avail himself of the fact *499 that no written notice was served upon him. The special verdict finds that he had notice that the law had been put in force in said township by virtue of the authority conferred by section 23 of the act, above set out. The public roads are for ordinary use, and it is common knowledge that when used by heavy vehicles hauling heavy logs and timber over them, the roads are cut up and require an extraordinary expenditure to be kept in order. The general public might well complain at being called upon to bear this additional expense for the profit of the lumber companies using the road, not for ordinary travel and usage, but for their individual benefit, not as members of the community, but in the prosecution of a special and usually temporary but profitable business.
That the General Assembly can provide a special road law and method of working the public roads for a county or several counties, or a township or other locality, and make the adoption of such system depend upon the acceptance or rejection thereof by the people or the landholders (as with "no fence" laws), or by the official boards of such county, township or locality, is well settled. This is the flexible "local option" system which gives the greatest freedom of local self-government, and has been applied already to the sale of liquor, to fence laws, to the sale of seed cotton, to cattle running at large, to variations in the methods of electing town commissioners, and in the mode of selection of county commissioners, to local provisions for public schools, to dispensaries, to close season for game, to this very matter of working the public roads, and in many other instances. S. v. Sharp,
This license tax is simply a mode of regulating the use of the public roads and requiring that those desirous of using them for extraordinary purposes, as hauling heavy lumber and logs over the roads in unusually heavy vehicles, shall not do so without taking out a license for such unusual and extraordinary and injurious use of the public highway, and paying a license tax for the privilege. This statute prescribes that the license tax shall be "placed to the credit of the board of supervisors of the township, to be used by the board as other funds for said township." As all the funds of each board of road supervisors are to be used "solely for road purposes in its township," the evident purpose is to use these license taxes to make good the extra cost of road maintenance entailed by the use of the public road by heavy vehicles in hauling heavy logs and timber by these lumber companies and others.
In S. v. Yopp,
This statute deprives no citizen of any right to use the highway. It does not restrain trade, nor is it oppressive. Heavily loaded vehicles cut up and injure the public road and a reasonable license tax, the proceeds of which are appropriated to repairing the damage thus produced, is exceedingly equitable.
The method of providing for working and keeping in repair the public roads is a matter solely for the legislative department. The (647) old system of working the roads by conscription of labor was exceedingly inequitable, because it threw the cost of road maintenance upon those deriving the least benefit therefrom — the laboring element. This system was handed down to us by our British forefathers, in whose government that class had small voice, if any, in the adjustment of public burdens. It was a part of the trinoda necessitas under the Roman law, and in France, where that system of working the roads was known ascorvees, it was one of the great grievances which found utterance in the great French Revolution and was swept away. S. v. Covington,
In many other States there has been similar legislation which has been upheld by the courts. The cases presenting the question are mostly those in which there has been an abatement of the road tax in consideration of the use of broad tires, an abatement granted by reason of the lessened wear and tear of the roads when those are used. People v.James, 16 Hun., 426; Utica v. Blackeslee, 46 How. Pr., 165; Gartside v.East St. Louis,
(648) It is for the legislative department to prescribe by what *501
methods the roads shall be worked and kept in repair — whether by labor, by taxation on property, or by funds raised from license taxes, or by a mixture of two or more of these methods — and this may vary in different counties and localities to meet the wishes of the people of each, and can be changed by subsequent Legislatures. This matter has been fully discussed. S. v. Sharp,
Under this statute, the State prosecutes for the misdemeanor and the board of supervisors can sue for the penalty. S. v. Parker,
Upon the special verdict the court should have instructed the jury to find the defendant guilty.
Reversed.
Cited: S. v. Wheeler,
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