Judges: Brogden
Filed Date: 4/4/1928
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
The defendant was tried in recorder's court in the town of Zebulon for violation of "Miscellaneous Preventive Ordinance No. 15" for that the defendant did not display auto tags of the town of Zebulon as required by said ordinance. The defendant appealed from the judgment of recorder's court to the Superior Court of Wake County and was again convicted. He appealed, assigning error.
The State offered in evidence a certified copy of the ordinance in controversy, the certificate being as follows: "C. M. Kavanough, being first duly sworn, deposes and says: That he is the mayor of the town of Zebulon; that the above is true copy of an ordinance of the town of Zebulon, the same being under the head of `Miscellaneous Preventive Ordinances' is section 15 thereof; that said ordinance was in force at the time of the alleged violation of the same by J. E. Gill; that the same has been in force since 7 June, 1926." The defendant contended that the ordinance had not been properly enacted by the commissioners of the town of Zebulon and offered the minutes of the meeting of the board of commissioners of the town of Zebulon, held on 7 June, 1927, which was the date when the purported ordinances appeared to have been adopted. The minutes of said meeting failed to disclose any reference whatever to the ordinance. C. S., 1750, provides: "In the trial of appeals from mayors' courts, when the offense charged is the violation of a town ordinance, a copy of the ordinance alleged to have been violated, certified by the mayor, shall be prima facie *Page 427
evidence of the existence of such ordinance." The affidavit of the mayor states that the ordinance had been in force since 7 June, 1926. Does the fact that the minutes of the meeting of the board of commissioners on 7 June, 1926, do not disclose any reference to said ordinance or the adoption thereof, rebut the prima facie evidence of the existence of the ordinance created by C. S., 1750? Adams, J., in White v. Hines,
A valid ordinance must be duly passed or enacted by the governing body when such governing body is acting in its official capacity. The minutes of the meeting of 7 June, 1926, fail to show the adoption of the ordinance on that particular date, but the minutes of that particular meeting are not conclusive upon the question "of the existence of such ordinance" as specified by C. S., 1750. The determination of this question was the function of the jury. We therefore conclude that the judgment is correct.S. v. Abernethy,
No error.