24 S.E. 425 | N.C. | 1896
That plaintiff is a citizen and taxpayer of Forsyth County, and defendant is the owner of a valuable lot of ground in the city of Winston, formerly used as a courthouse seat; that a courthouse until recently stood thereon. When it was found entirely insufficient for the wants of Forsyth County, and that the public business and convenience required a larger and more commodious building, for the purpose of constructing a building more suitable to the wants of the public, the courthouse which stood on said site was torn down, (637) and the lot is now cleared and excavation made for a new building; that by an order of the board of commissioners, bonds or notes of the county were issued for an aggregate of $50,000, to be used in the construction of said courthouse; that this sum is not extravagant, but is sufficient for the purpose aforesaid; that the county of Forsyth has a population of about 29,000 people, its taxable property is $8,000,000, and it owes no debt, save a small floating debt for current expenses, that can be promptly met on presentation; that the facts set forth in article No. 4 of the complaint are true; that the defendants have made an effort to negotiate a loan in favor of the county and float the said $50,000 of notes, but have been unsuccessful; *393 that it cannot be done without some additional security; that defendants have negotiated to sell said bonds at par and mortgage said lot of land to secure said bonds; that this can be done and the money raised to construct the building; that the contemplated courthouse building is to be placed on the public square to be mortgaged.
The 4th article of the complaint, referred to in the agreed statement, is as follows:
4. "That for the purpose of erecting a courthouse building for the county of Forsyth on said square, the said board of commissioners have passed an order to issue bonds of the said county in the sum of $50,000, bearing six per cent interest, and payable as follows: $20,000 payable in two years; $20,000 payable in three years; $10,000 payable in four years. That for the purpose of securing said bonds, the defendants have adopted the following resolutions, adopted at an adjourned meeting of said board held on 11 March, 1896:
"Whereas the building of a courthouse for the county of Forsyth is a public necessity, for which it is necessary to (638) raise funds; and whereas as it now appears, it will be necessary to obtain additional legislation before the board of commissioners can levy a special tax for the purpose of meeting the payments of the notes which it will be necessary to issue and sell before the said courthouse is built; and whereas the county of Forsyth is at this time without a courthouse building, and parties have signified their willingness to purchase said notes if the same are amply secured; now, therefore,
"It is ordered that M. D. Bailey, chairman of the board of county commissioners, is hereby authorized and empowered to execute a deed of trust to the Wachovia Loan and Trust Company, as trustee, on the courthouse lot, 200 feet square, for the purpose of securing the payment of the principal and interest of the $50,000 courthouse notes to be issued, payable $20,000 in two years, $20,000 in three years, and $10,000 in four years, with interest from date at six per cent until paid, said notes to be issued for the purpose of securing money with which to erect a courthouse building.
"That in pursuance of said order and authority granted him by the board of commissioners, the said M. D. Bailey, chairman of the said board, is about to execute a deed of trust upon said county property for the purpose indicated in said order, which said deed of trust will contain a clause granting power of sale to the Wachovia Loan and Trust Company, trustees, to sell the said property, of the county of Forsyth if said bonded indebtedness is not paid as it falls due."
His Honor refused the injunction and dissolved the restraining order which had previously been issued by Starbuck, J., and plaintiff appealed. *394
The right to contract the contemplated bonded indebtedness has already been passed upon. Vaughan v. Comrs.,
A county is a governmental agency, created in part at least for the purpose of providing public buildings for the administration of justice and for the safe-keeping of prisoners. The county revenue is safe from seizure by creditors, or even for taxes due the Federal Government, because to admit the right to appropriate them in satisfaction of a claim would be to concede the power to destroy the State Government by depriving its agencies of the means of performing their proper functions. Subject to the restrictions contained in the Federal Constitution, the State is a sovereignty, and it is essential to its preservation to give to all the property held for it by such agencies, as counties, the same protection as is given to that held in its own name.Hughes v. Comrs.,
It is contended that the amendatory act (Laws 1895, ch. 135, sec. 1) makes no change or no material alteration in the language of The Code, sec. 707 (20). But whether the contention be well founded or not, if the county commissioners have no authority to convey the land *395
on which they propose to erect the courthouse by a mortgage deed to secure the bonds issued to build it, and thereby render the site and buildings liable to sale for the satisfaction of the debt, it is needless to discuss the effect of the legislative amendment; for, though it be conceded that the effect of the amendment was to delegate to the commissioners, without the assent of the justices, the power "to sell or lease the real property of the county and to make deeds or leases for the same to any purchaser or lessee," they cannot by any fair implication claim the right under this authority to encumber by mortgage instead of making an absolute sale. The general rule, as laid down by almost all of the text writers and a majority of the courts of the States, is that a power to sell and convey real estate does not confer authority to mortgage. To bring a particular case (641) within the exception to the rule, it must appear from the language used and the nature of the property subject to the power that the principal donor or grantor of the power intended that the agent should be at liberty to raise money by mortgaging it. 1 Jones Mort., sec. 127; 2 Dillon, supra, sec. 579; Stronghill v. Anstey, 1 DeG. M.
G., 634 (490); Morris v. Watson,
Where a taxpayer shows prima facie that an illegal tax is about to be levied by the county authorities, or that they are about to issue bonds of the county contrary to law, courts of equity will restrain such abuse of power at his instance. McDowell v. Construction Co.,
Reversed.
Cited: Gastonia v. Engineering Co.,