Commissioners of Currituck County v. Commissioners of Dare County
Commissioners of Currituck County v. Commissioners of Dare County
Opinion of the Court
The county of Dare was formed out of parts of the counties of Currituck, Tyrrell, and Hyde, under an act of the General Assembly, ratified and taking effect on the 3rd day of February, 1870. Acts of 1869-’70, ch. 36. Section 17 of the act directs the organization of the county after a popular vote of approval from the electors residing within its proposed limits, and then follows this proviso:
That that portion of the citizens taken from the county of Currituck and attached to the county of Dare shall not be released from their proportion of the outstanding county debt contracted for public improvement before the passage of this act, to be determined by the county commissioners of Currituck and Dare counties.” The debt referred to has been adjusted between °the counties, and the share allotted to Dare is 15 11-20 per centum, and the commissioners of Currituck have i*ecovered judgment against the commissioners of Dare for five thousand nine hundred and seventy two dollars, their apportioned part of the ascertained debt of Currituck, reserving the right to prosecute a claim for Dare’s ratable share of the disputed deb.t which may be hereafter adjudged. On the hearing of the application for a mandamus to compel the levy of the necessary tax to meet the judgment, the plaintiff moved that the order direct an assessment upon all the persons and taxable property within the county of Dare, while the defendant moved that the assessment be confined to that portion of the territory sev
The only point before this Court then is as to the correctness of this judgment requiring an assessment upon the whole county. In the case of the Commissioners of Granville v. Ballard, 69 N. C. 18, and Moore v. Ballard, Ibid. 21, a portion of Granville had been detached and annexed to Franklin by the act 1872-73, ch. 143. Two objections were made to the validity of the act. 1st. That the change of boundary disturbed the senatorial districts and violated Art. II., § 5 of the constitution. 2nd. That the exemption of the taxable property on the transferred territory diminished the ability of Granville county to pay its debts, and pro tanto impaired the security of the creditors for the payment. Both objections were declared untenable because no alteration in the political'divisions of the State had been made— the vote being taken as before the dismemberment; and while the boundary lines between the counties were changed for some purposes, they were not changed so as to affect the senatorial districts. And it was further declared that the ■creditors of Granville county had no such lien on the taxable property therein as prevented its removal, if personality; ■or its transfer to another county, if land; and especially was this so, as the act declared that Franklin should assume its proper share of the debt of Granville.
A similar clause is contained in the act of 1871-72, ch. 182, providing for the apportionment of the debt of Craven county, between it and Pamlico, which was formed entirely out of the territory of the former. In our ease the provision is not that Dare county shall bear its proportional part of the public debt for internal improvements incurred by Currituck county, but only that the citizens and their taxable property on the transferred territory shall continue liable for their
“ So in Massachusetts it has been held that if a new corporation is created out of the territory of an old corporation, or if part of its territory or inhabitants is annexed to another corporation, unless some provision is made in the act respecting the property and existing liabilities of the old corporation, the latter will be entitled to all the property and be solely answerable for all the liabilities.” 1 Dill, on Mun. Corp., § 128, and numerous cases referred to in note.
And again 'the author says; “But upon the division of the old corporation and the creation of a new corporation out of part of its inhabitants and territory, or upon the annexation of part to another corporation, the legislature mag provide for an equitable appropriation or division of the property, and impose upon the new corporation or vipon the people and territory thus disannexed, the obligation to pay an equitable proportion of the corporate debts.” Ibid. § 129. The provision suggested is contained in this act for the formation of a new corporation out of the dismembered parts-of the three other corporations.
Error. Reversed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- THE COMMISSIONERS OF CURRITUCK COUNTY v. THE COMMISSIONERS OF DARE COUNTY
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- 13 cases
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- Published