13 S.E. 700 | N.C. | 1891
The ordinance in question was as follows:
"Ordinance XXXIII. — No interment of the dead shall be made within the corporate limits of the town of Washington, N.C. nor shall the clerk issue the permit for any such burial; nor shall the body of any person dying within the corporate limits of the town be removed therefrom without a permit from the town clerk, and no permit shall be given by the clerk where there has been an attending physician without a certificate from said physician stating cause of death; and no dead body shall be exhumed within the corporate limits of the town and removed therefrom without a permit from the clerk. Every violation of this ordinance and every person participating in its violation shall be fined fifty dollars."
The prayer of the complaint was that "said ordinance be declared. *16 void, and that defendants be enjoined from enforcing the same," etc. There was judgment sustaining the demurrer, from which plaintiffs appealed. The plaintiffs in this action seek to have a town ordinance declared void, and an injunction against enforcing the same. The ordinance in question had been authorized in terms by an act of the Legislature (1876-77, Pr. Laws, ch. 34), and has since been recited and declared "valid and legal" by two acts, Pr. Laws 1891, chs. 110 and 223.
It is unnecessary, however, that we pass upon the question debated before us as to the power of the Legislature to authorize or to validate the ordinance in the exercise of the police power inherent in the State, for we have an express authority, if one were needed, that an injunction does not lie to prevent the enforcement of an alleged unlawful town ordinance. Should the plaintiff be injured by its enforcement, he has a redress at law by an action for damages, Cohen v. Commissioners,
As was said in Busbee v. Lewis,
Action dismissed. *17
Cited: Scott v. Smith,