Citation Numbers: 80 S.E. 890, 165 N.C. 12, 1914 N.C. LEXIS 205
Judges: AlleN
Filed Date: 2/18/1914
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/11/2024
This is a proceeding under chapter 140, Private Laws 1907, as amended by chapter 163, Private Laws, 1909, to condemn land for school purposes.
All the issues and questions of fact were found in favor of the petitioner, and judgment was rendered condemning the land, and awarding the defendant $3,000, to which he excepted and appealed. The only question presented by the appeal is the constitutionality of the act of the General Assembly authorizing the condemnation of land for the purposes of a graded school.
As was said in R. R. v. Davis,
This case has been approved on this point more than thirty times, and it would seem to follow from the principle declared that if a user for schools is a public use, that the General Assembly was acting within its powers.
In Lewis on Eminent Domain, vol. 1, sec. 270, the author says: "Property taken for public buildings of all kinds, such as city halls, courthouses, jails, public schools, markets, almshouses, and the like, is taken for a public use," and statutes permitting the condemnation of land for school purposes were held to be constitutional in Long v. Fuller, 68 Pa. St., 170; Township Board v. Hockmann,
This accords with the spirit of our Constitution, which says that "schools and the means of education shall forever be encouraged," because knowledge is "necessary to good government and the happiness of mankind," and which requires the General Assembly to "provide by *Page 42 taxation and otherwise for a general and uniform system of public schools" for all the children of the State.
We find no error.
Affirmed.
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