Trotter v. Town of Franklin

60 S.E. 509 | N.C. | 1908

The facts sufficiently appear in the opinion of the Court. The governing body of the town of Franklin consists of a mayor and five aldermen. The plaintiff was one of the aldermen. At a meeting of that body, held 30 April, 1906, it was ordered that Main Street be extended and the extension graded, and that a short by-street which led from the end of Main Street (before it was extended into Palmer Street) be discontinued. It appears from the plat sent up that the extension of Main Street leads into Palmer Street, thus making, apparently, the former by-street no longer useful. (555) To the passage of this order the only negative vote was cast by the plaintiff. The other aldermen present and the mayor voted in the affirmative. Another resolution, as to certain grading, received one additional negative vote.

The plaintiff, thereupon, in his capacity as taxpayer, brought a proceeding for an injunction against the town of Franklin, naming its mayor and aldermen, including (doubtless by inadvertence) himself, as codefendants, to prevent the execution of the aforesaid resolution of *406 the town board. The temporary restraining order was dissolved, upon the complaint and answer, after hearing affidavits filed on both sides, and the plaintiff appealed.

From the pleadings and affidavits it does not appear that the plaintiff has any property upon either the discontinued by-street or upon the extension of Main Street, but to the contrary, and the whole controversy turns upon the advisability of the resolution, which the plaintiff denies, considering the expense, and that the town has heretofore gotten along without the improvement. The opposite view, however, obtained with the majority of the board, as we have seen, and this is, in effect, an effort by the plaintiff to reverse its action by order of the court. In this Court he withdrew his opposition to opening and extending Main Street, restricting his opposition to the closing up of the by-street. But such matters as this are for regulation by the town authorities. It may or may not be that the plaintiff is right as to the best policy for the town, but that may be safely left to its people. The plaintiff neither avers nor shows that his right will be infringed, otherwise than in the general way that all taxpayers will be affected by the cost of a public measure that he believes unnecessary and injudicious. His remedy is by an appeal to the citizens to elect a new board that will be in accord with his own views, and not by an appeal to the courts, who are not charged with the supervision of such matters. Stratford v. Greensboro, 124 (556) N.C. 132. As it is more than probable that the resolution has now, after the lapse of nearly two-years, been long since put into effect by extending Main Street and discontinuing the by-street, it is not clear that the plaintiff could save any expense to the town if he could now secure the rescinding of the resolution and a reversion of the streets in question to their former status.

Affirmed.

Cited: Moore v. Meroney, 154 N.C. 162.

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