Board of Education v. Board of Commissioners
Board of Education v. Board of Commissioners
Opinion of the Court
The questions presented for our consideration are precisely the same as those which are determined in the case of Barksdale v. Commissioners, 93 N. C, 472, wherein it was held that while it is the duty of the County Commissioners, under Article IX., section 3 of the Constitution of North Carolina, to keep the public schools open for at least four months every year, yet, in discharging this duty, they cannot disregard the limitations imposed by Article V., section 1, as to the amount of tax to be levied; and that section 23 of chapter 174 of the Laws of 1885, which requires the Commissioners, if the tax levied by the State for this purpose shall be insufficient to carry it into effect, to levy annually a special tax to supply the deficiency is unconstitutional, because it is not such a special tax for county purposes as is provided for by Article V., section 6 of the Constitution.
The subject has been so recently and thoroughly discussed in the opinion delivered by Chief Justice Smith for the Court, and in th'e dissenting opinion of the then Associate Justice Mekhimon, with all the authorities on both sides, that we deem it unnecessary to recite the reasons upon which a conclusion was then reached by a majority of the Court.
We have been induced to give the questions a careful reconsideration, and have listened with interest to the able argument of counsel who have sought to induce us to put a different construction upon the Constitution than was announced in the decision above referred, and to hold that it is the duty of the County Commissioners to obey the mandate of the Act of 1885, and levy the additional tax sufficient to make up the deficiency, caused by the failure of the General Assembly to provide funds to maintain the schools for at least four months in the year. But we are constrained by
In saying this, we do not wish it to be understood that, were the question before us an open one, we should^ reach a different conclusion upon it than has been declared by the Court.
The subject of taxation, general and special, by State and counties, has been considered in a long line of judicial decisions, beginning almost immediately upon the adoption of the Constitution of 1868. It is well settled that, for the ordinary expenses of government, both State and county, the first section of Article V. of the Constitution places the limit of taxation and preserves the equation between the capitation and the property tax — the capitation tax never to exceed two dollars, and the tax upon property valued at three hundred dollars to be confined within the same limit. It is also settled in the same manner that by Article V., section 6, the counties may not exceed the double of the State tax, within the equation, except for a special purpose and with the special approval of the General Assembly. It appears from an examination of the authorities that no case has ever come before the Courts involving the exercise of this special power of taxation by the counties, except upon special or private acts for local objects, until the Act of 1885 was brought to our attention, wherein, in a public act (“An Act to amend the public school law, ch. 15 of The Code ”), it is sought by section 23 to require a special tax in the county to supply
It was held in Barksdale’s case, supra, which we are now asked to review, that this section 23 of the Act of 1885 was not warranted by section 6 of Article V. of the Constitution, because it was not such a special tax for local objects as was contemplated in the last-named section. We see no reason to doubt the correctness of the decision of the Court upon this question, if it were now open to us for revision. The reasons are given and cases cited in the opinion of the Chief Justice in the case referred to, and it would be but cumbering t-he books for us to reproduce them here.
Were the question presented to us of the power of the General Assembly to deal with the matter and provide adequate means for the necessary expenses incident to the maintenance of the public schools under the requirement of Article IX., by general taxation, unfettered by any limitation of Article V., section 1, in the same manner as they may provide for a casual deficit, or for the payment of the public debt or interest on the same, or for the suppression of insurrection or invasion, we might possibly find a solution of the apparent difficulty which has resulted in a failure in some counties to maintain the schools for at least four months in every year. But, as the question may never arise, we will not discuss it.
We are content to abide by the decision of the Court in Barksdale’s case, and declare that, in the judgment of his Honor below, following that decision, there is
No Error.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting: Entertaining the most profound respect for the views of my brethren, I feel, nevertheless, constrained to give expression to the reasons that have impelled me to the conclusion that a most important provision of the organic law has been misconstrued, and the will of the people, as embodied therein, has been thwarted by restricting the right of the Legislature to delegate to the counties the power to levy tax for the maintenance of public schools. If the Court has fallen into error, it is a misconception that vitally concerns the public welfare. In the face of this constitutional inhibition the Legislature is no longer left free to enact and enforce uniform and liberal laws for sustaining our schools and elevating and educating the ignorant classes of our people. Experience and observation have shown that education and morality advance hand in hand, while ignorance and vice are, as a rule, as constant companions. Acting upon the enlightened and philanthropic idea that crime could be best combatted, and happiness promoted by the refining influences of religion, morality and learning, the framers of our fundamental law dug deep and made mandatory public education as one of the bedstones upon which the Constitution rests. The provisions which apply specifically to this subject are sections 1, 2 and 3 of Article IX., the material portions of which are as follows:
“ 1. Religion, morality and knowledge being necessary to good government and the happiness of mankind, schools and the means of education shall forever be encouraged.
“ 2. The General Assembly, at its first session under this Constitution, shall provide, by taxation and otherwise, for a general and uniform system of public schools, wherein tuition shall be free of charge to all children of the State.
“ 3. Each county of the State shall be divided into a convenient number of districts, in which one or more public schools shall be maintained at least four months in every year, and if the Commissioners of any county shall fail to comply*583 with the aforesaid requirements of this section, they shall be liable to indictment.”
This, like many other expressions of the sovereign will embodied in the Constitution, is not only addressed to and obligatory upon the Legislature, but likewise appeals to and deals directly with its agencies for local government, the counties, and arms the Coui’ts with power to stimulate the Commissioners to diligence. Starting out with the announcement, as solemn and binding and as clear and comprehensible as any fundamental principle transplanted from Magna Charta into our Declaration of Rights, that knowledge, as the handmaiden of religion and morality, is essential to the perpetuity of good government, two conventions of the people have deliberately and solemnly ordained that the system which “shall be maintained,” must meet this necessity by compliance, on the part of the Legislature, with certain requirements of the instrument, and that the aid of the criminal law also shall be invoked, if necessary to insure the enforcement of the constitutional mandate. .
1. It was made the duty of the Legislature, without delay,, at its first session, both after the ratification of the Constitution in 1868 and in its amended form in 1876, to provide for a “ general and uniform system ” by taxation or otherwise.
2. The County Commissioners were required to fix the bounds of the districts in which one or more schools were to be maintained four months, &c.
3. The County Commissioners are declared liable to indictment for an offence created by the Constitution, to-wit, the failure to comply with this section, not only by neglecting or refusing to lay off the limits of the districts, but by omitting to keep up the schools.
How could the law-making power provide a general and uniform system of schools, so that the counties, as public agencies, should have the power, which they were liable to punishment for not exercising, of keeping up public schools
Counties and towns are created by the Legislature for public convenience, and may be destroyed at any moment by the authority that gave them existence. Lilly v. Taylor, 88 N. C., 489; 10 Myers Fed. Dig., §§ 2424, 2425, 2026. The only limit upon the law-power is to be found in the restrictive clauses of the Federal and State Constitutions. 1 Dillon Mun. Corp. (3d Ed.), §§ 65-68, et seq.; Barrington v. Ferry Co., 69 N. C., 165. Duties and burdens may be devolved upon the governing officers of counties against their will, and in the absence of a restraining provision in the organic law, counties may be even compelled to assume the liabilities of towns lying within their borders. Cooley Const. Lim. (4 Ed), 295, 296, star page 241; 1 Dillon, supra, §§ 60 (35) to 65 (38); Commissioners v. Ballard, 69 N. C., 18; Commissioners v. Commissioners, 79 N. C., 565, and 95 N. C., 189. The Legislature may devote the streets, or other property of a town, to a public purpose, or, if such action does not violate the rights of creditors, it may modify or repeal a tax levy already laid by its authorities, or modify its action in any other respect. 1 Dillon, supra, § 70 (40) to § 77; Bridge Co. v. Commissioners, 81 N. C., 491; Carrow v. Toll-bridge Co., Phil., 118. The statute which has been pronounced invalid (section 23, chapter 174, Laws of
Construing the Constitution of 1868 together with the amendment of 1875 and the Act of 1876-77, it is manifest that before J 875 there was this further recognition of the right and duty of the County Commissioners to overlook the schools as a part of the ordinary and necessary county government, and that the Act of 1876-77, passed in pursuance
But despite of all these constitutional and statutory grants-of power and injunctions of duty, it is contended that section 1, Article V. of the Constitution, limits the levy for ordinary purposes to not more than two dollars on the poll or sixty-six and two-thirds cents on every hundred dollars in value of land, that the education of the people of a county is not a county purpose, and the Act -of 1876-77 does not provide for levying a “special tax,” though the Legislature-expressly so denominated the tax to be levied in every instance when there should be a deficiency in the appropriation by the State. Is education a county purpose? No one has ever contended that a tax providing for the support of the penal and charitable institutions of a. county, or for building bridges across streams at the public crossings in its limits, is not a county purpose; or, if such a position has-ever been assumed, it will no longer be insisted on in view of the decisions of this Court and the constant practice of the Legislature. Barrington v. Ferry Co., supra. When we find the word “schools” sandwiched between charitable institutions and roads in the constitutional definition of the duties of Commissioners who are the embodiment of the-municipal corporation, it would seem unreasonable to insist that an answer to an alternative mandamus, which stated that a levy of twenty cents on the hundred for support of prisoners in the jail and the poor, ten cents to make up the deficiency in school appropriation, and five cents for payment of damages assessed for public roads opened by order of the Commissioners, raised the tax in the aggregate, with that levied by the State, to the constitutional limit, would not be deemed sufficient to relieve the Commissioners from attachment for contempt. Fry v. Commissioners, 82 N. C., 304. The distinction between taxes levied under a power which associated schools with roads and bridges, and between
If the maintenance of schools is a county purpose, then the remaining question is whether it is competent for the Legislature to pass an act providing for the levy, under certain specified circumstances, of a “ special tax ” by any •county in the State, or whether it is essential, in order to authorize the levy for the very same purpose, to pass a separate act specifically applicable to each county. I do not think that the organic law requires any such vain and useless proceeding. I believe that the Legislature construed the Constitution properly in enacting that all c ¡unties, under ■certain clearly specified circumstances should have the power delegated to them to lay a special tax for the particular purpose of making up a deficiency in the appropriation for the maintenance of schools for four mouths of the year, and inci«dentally of relieving themselves of their liability to indict
A careful scrutiny of the cases cited by the Court in Barksdale v. Commissioners, 93 N. C , 476, will show that the Court had never, prior to the announcement of the doctrine in that-case,' held that the taxation provided for in section 6, Article-V., should be so far local as well as special as to deprive the-Legislature of the power to pass a special statute applicable to all counties alike under certain specified circumstances. The Court in the case at bar have advanced a step-further than did Chief Justice Smith in Barksdale’s case, in declaring that the maintenance of schools is not a county purpose. Assuming that I have shown that the Constitution-so characterizes it, it is difficult to conceive of a plausible-reason for so limiting the power of the Legislature that it-could not pass a special act applicable to a class of counties, where a certain state of affairs already existed or might arise-in the future, instead of declaring in the case of each individual county, by a separate act, that if the appropriation of the next year should not be sufficient to accomplish a certain-end, the Commissioners should be authorized to make a levy to supplement it.
But it would seem to have been intended, in framing the-Constitution, to place the maintenance of public schools, like-the payment of debts of the State, far above constitutional restrictions applicable to ordinary expenditures for State or county purposes. ' If the simple declaration of broad generalities in reference to preserving the public credit is sufficient to override the constitutional limit of taxation in order to meet the obligations of the State whenever created, and if the Commissioners are required, without any special statutory warrant for their conduct, to levy a tax in excess of the limit also to meet a debt of the county created before the limit-was imposed (in 1868), it would seem to me altogether more-reasonable to hold that the provision of the Constitution
The doctrine of stare decisis can be invoked and insisted on only where, by acquiescence in a decision for a long time, it has become a rule of property, but inadvertent decisions, which can be corrected without disturbing titles, should be ■overruled at the earliest possible moment. Sedgwick on Stat. and Const. Law, 254; Long v. Walker, 105 N. C., 90; Gaskill v. King, 12 Ired., 223. Not a single title or vested right in the •State depends upon our adherence to the decision in Barks-dale’s case.
Upon reviewing the dissenting opinion of the late Chief Justice Merrimon in Barksdale’s case, supra, I have been so
Reference
- Full Case Name
- BOARD OF EDUCATION OF BLADEN COUNTY v. BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS OF BLADEN COUNTY
- Cited By
- 10 cases
- Status
- Published