87 N.C. 203 | N.C. | 1882
Every intendment that can be fairly made, should be made in support of the judge's ruling. Therefore, though no copy of the account, alleged to have been stated between the parties, is sent with the transcript to this court, we still infer from the statement contained in the answer that it was in fact annexed to the answer, and showed the account to have been itemized; or else, that the plaintiff accepted as true the statement that such a settlement had (205) been made and appeared of record on the books kept by the board of commissioners, and was willing that his Honor should upon that footing determine the question, whether the settlement so made and recorded was as a bar to the plaintiffs' right to have another account, upon such allegations of fraud and mistake as are made in his complaint.
Viewing the case in this light, this court can feel no sort of hesitation in giving its concurrence to the ruling of his Honor. The statute (Bat. Rev., ch. 102, sec. 40) provides for the appointment at the end of each and every year of a committee, whose duty it shall be to audit and settle the accounts of all officers authorized to receive and disburse the county funds, and that the accounts so audited shall be reported to the county commissioners, and when approved by them, shall be filed with their clerk, and recorded in his book, and shall be prima facie evidence of their correctness, and be impeachable only for fraud or specified error. *170
To hold that the presumption thus created in favor of such settlements can be removed, and the accounts reopened upon allegations so loose and general in their nature as those contained in plaintiff's complaint, would be to discard the statute altogether, and really to put parties in a worse condition than they would be without it.
Independently of any enactment, the well established principle of a court of equity is, that an account once settled is conclusive, unless assailed for fraud or mistake; and in order thus to assail it, the complaint must not simply insinuate fraud, but must charge it, and aver the particulars with such definite certainty as that issues may be raised in regard to them. Mebane v. Mebane,
When to this principle governing courts of equity, we have (206) added, a positive declaration of the legislature that accounts taken and evidenced as this was should be deemed correct unless impeached for fraud or Specified error, it would seem to put the matter beyond question, and to require clear, distinct and specific assignments of error in order to open the way for another accounting.
The distinction between this case and Commissioners v. Taylor,
As said in Harrison v. Bradley,
There is no error in the judgment of the court below, and the same is affirmed.
No error. Affirmed.
Cited: Williamson v. Jones,
(207)