Defendant assigns as error the order overruling defendant’s demurrer to the complaint. The demurrer challenged the jurisdiction of the superior court to adjudicate the matters alleged in the complaint.
In
Construction Co. v. Dept. of Administration,
Plaintiff contends that it is authorized to maintain this suit by G.S. 136-29, which permits the filing of an action in the superior court in certain cases and subject to conditions precedent as specified in the statute. This appeal, therefore, presents the question: “Does G.S. 136-29 authorize plaintiff’s action against the State Highway Commission on a contract for the maintenance and reconditioning of ferryboats used in the North Carolina Highway System?” Our answer is yes.
The pertinent provisions of G.S. 136-29 are as follows:
“§ 136-29. Adjustment of claims — (a) Upon the completion of any contract for the construction of any State highway awarded by the State Highway Commission to any contractor, if the contractor fails to receive such settlement as he claims to be entitled to under his contract, he may, within sixty (60) *651 days from the time of receiving his final estimate, submit to the State Highway Administrator a written and verified claim for such amount as he deems himself entitled to under the said contract setting forth the facts upon which said claim is based. -* * #
(b) As to such portion of the claim as is denied by the State Highway Administrator, the contractor may within six (6) months from receipt of said decision, institute a civil action for such sum as he claims to be entitled to under said contract by the filing of a verified complaint and issuance of summons in the Superior Court of Wake County or in the superior court of any county wherein the work under said contract was performed. * * *
«
(e) The provisions of this section shall be deemed to enter into and form a part of every contract entered into between the State Highway Commission and any contractor, and no provision in said contracts shall be valid that is in conflict herewith.”
The impact of this statute is well summarized in 17 N.C.L. Hev. 340 as follows: “Prior to this statute [c. 318 at that time] one who had any claim growing out of a contract with the commission could not bring suit against the commission for it is a state agency and no consent to suit has been given. The claimant might present his claim to the general assembly or he might invoke the original jurisdiction of the supreme court under Article IV, Section 9 of the state constitution. [After 1965 Amendment, Section 10.] The latter course was not very satisfactory for the court has said that in such a proceeding it will consider only questions of law. The decision of the court, if in favor of the claimant, was simply recommendatory and was reported to the next General Assembly for its action. * * *”
In determining whether G.S. 136-29 authorizes plaintiff’s suit, this Court notes the principle that statutes in derogation of the common law are generally construed strictly. On the other hand, as a remedial statute, it “ought to receive from the courts such a construction as will remedy the existing evil,”
Morris v. Staton,
The General Assembly has undertaken a comparably radical and systematic substitution of statutory provisions for the monarchistic doctrine of sovereign immunity: by G.S. 97-2(3) and 97-7, the State is an “employer” subject to workmen’s compensation; by G.S, 143-291, et seq., tort claims against State agencies and institutions may be asserted; by G.S. 143-135.3, the State may be sued on certain contracts for the construction of public buildings, and by G.S. 136-29, the State may be sued on a contract for highway construction.
The separate opinions of three distinguished justices in the case of
Alliance Co. v. State Hospital,
In
Floyd v. Highway Commission,
It is, therefore, the opinion of this Court that the “rule” of strict construction of statutes waiving governmental immunity, which has its questionable origins in Floyd and Ivey and has subsequently been quoted without examination in cases where the strictest possible construction was not required to reach the result, is not so clearly and definitely the rule in North Carolina as to compel this Court to take the strictest possible view of G.S. 136-29. If the “rule” of strict construction is a clear mandate, still the “rule that certain statutes must be strictly construed does not require that they be stintingly or even narrowly construed, but only that everything shall be excluded from their operation which does not come within the scope of the language used, taking their words in their natural and ordinary meaning.” See 7 Strong, N.C. Index 2d, Statutes, § 5, p. 74. This Court will not attempt at this point to enunciate a rule of construction, or to express a preference as to “the sounder view.” Rather, we will simply examine the language of G.S. 136-29 within its context, mindful of the principle that “[t]he intent of the legislature controls the interpretation of a statute,” and the principle that “[t]he intent and spirit of an act are controlling in its construction, and the language of a statute will be construed contextually * * *.” See 7 Strong, N.C. Index 2d, Statutes, § 5, pp. 68 & 69.
We are of the opinion that such an approach will accurately reflect the attitude of the General Assembly, which enacted G.S. 136-29 to relieve that body from the judicial function of passing upon certain claims against the State. The role of the appellate court in dealing with a statute waiving immunity was aptly stated by Judge Cardozo in
Anderson v. Construction Co.,
Such an approach is demanded by the language of G.S. 136-29. As the Court said in
Yacht Co. v. High, Commissioner of Revenue,
The defendant bases its argument on the contention that a ferryboat is not included in the term “highway” as in G.S. 136-29. In Yacht Co., however, the court indicated that a ferry may well be a “highway” :
“* * * In discussing the meaning to be given to the term ‘highway’ it has been pointed out that whether ‘streets, ferries, railroads, toll roads, rivers or rural roads are all meant to be included in a particular statute can not, in many instances, be asserted without a careful study of the entire statute and a full consideration of all the matters which the courts usually call to their assistance in ascertaining the meaning and effect of legislative enactments.’ ” (Emphasis added.)
After such a study, the court in Yacht Co. held that the legislature did not intend that “highways” include navigable waters when the Revenue Commissioner attempted to apply a motor vehicle privilege tax to a yacht on the theory that such a boat comes within the statutory definition of “motor vehicle” as “any vehicle which is self-propelled and designed primarily for use upon the highways.”
A careful study of the scope and history of North Carolina’s statutory law on “Roads and Highways,” Chapter 136 of the General Statutes, indicates a legislative intent to include ferries within the term “highway” in a proper case. Article 12, Chap. 70, § 3828, Consolidated Statutes of North Carolina, 1924, refers to the counties’ acquisition of toll bridges or ferries; it provides in part that “said toll-bridge or ferry, with the causeways, roads, and bridges leading to the same,
shall become a part of the public highway.”
(Emphasis added.) The State Highway Commission, by G.S. 136-83, “* * * shall succeed to all rights and duties vested in the county commissioners or county highway commissioners * * * with respect to the maintenance and operation of any public
ferries or toll bridges forming links in the county highway systems
* * (Emphasis
*655
added.) The State Highway Commission is authorized by G.S. 136-82 “* * * to acquire, own, lease, charter or otherwise control all necessary vessels, boats, terminals or other facilities required for the proper operation of such ferries or to enter into contracts with such persons, firms or corporations for the operation thereof and to pay therefor such reasonable sums as may in the opinion of said Commission represent the fair value of the public service rendered.” While judicial constructions of the word highway “only throw some light upon the normal usage of the term,”
Yacht Co., supra,
the overwhelming weight of authority is to the effect that a “ ‘ferry’ is simply a movable portion of a highway where it crosses a stream.”
Reid v. Lincoln County,
In
State Highway Commission v. Yorktown Ice & Storage Corp.,
In
Sullivan v. Board of Supervisors,
In
U. S. v. William Pope,
There is little question that a contract for the establishment of a ferry — which the Commission may undertake by G.S. 136-82 — would be equivalent to the “construction of a highway.” Repair or reconditioning, i.e. “maintenance” — which the Commission may undertake by G.S. 136-82 — as a means of reestablishing ferry service, is a lesser act and is deemed to be included within “construction” for the G.S. 136-29 adjustment of claims. It is the opinion of this Court that the procedure for adjustment of claims set out in G.S. 136-29 is available to the plaintiff.
The order overruling defendant’s demurrer to the complaint is
Affirmed.
