Citation Numbers: 195 S.E. 617, 213 N.C. 119
Judges: Stacy
Filed Date: 3/2/1938
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Proceeding in the nature of quo warranto to try title to office of tax lister and to recover emoluments of the office alleged to have been wrongfully collected by respondent.
The relator, Wayne Brigman, alleges that he was duly appointed tax lister in No. 1 Township, Madison County, for the year 1935 by the Tax Commission of said county under authority of ch. 177, Public-Local Laws 1931; that the respondent, J. M. Baley, Sr., claims a like appointment by the county commissioners of the county under the general law, and that said respondent has received the emoluments of the office, which justly belong to the relator.
Respondent demurred to the evidence and moved for judgment of nonsuit. Overruled; exception.
From verdict and judgment in favor of relator the respondent appeals, assigning errors. It is conceded by all the parties that the case turns on the validity of ch. 177, Public-Local Laws 1931, being "An Act to Create a Jury Commission and a Tax Commission for the County of Madison."
The record discloses that relator was appointed tax lister in one of the townships of Madison County for the year 1935 by the Tax Commission created by the Public-Local act in question, while the respondent was appointed to the same office by the commissioners of the county under the general law. If relator's appointment be valid, the remaining questions are not difficult of solution. On the other hand, he concedes that if the members of the Tax Commission were not authorized to act, his purported appointment is a nullity. The office was held by respondent *Page 121 under his appointment by the county commissioners, and he has received the emoluments thereof.
The pertinent provisions of the act in question follow:
"Sec. 1. That the chairman of the board of education, the chairman of the board of health, and the superintendent of public schools of Madison County, and their successors in office, be and they are hereby named as a jury commission for the said county of Madison, to serve without pay, and whose term of office shall begin on the first Monday in April, one thousand nine hundred and thirty-one, or as soon thereafter as they may qualify, as hereinafter provided. . . .
"Sec. 3. That on the first Monday in April, one thousand nine hundred and thirty-one, or as soon thereafter as practicable, the aforesaid named commission shall present themselves before the clerk of the Superior Court for Madison County, or some other person qualified to administer oaths, where they shall all take the oath of office to the effect that they will honestly and conscientiously perform their said duties towards carrying out the provisions of this act without fear or favor, to the very best of their ability.
"Sec. 4. That immediately after taking their said offices it shall be their duty to revise the jury box for Madison County. . . .
"Sec. 10. That the jury commission of Madison County, composed of the chairman of the board of education, chairman of the board of health, and the county superintendent of schools and their successors, shall serve as a tax commission for Madison County, and shall, from and after the ratification of this act, as is or hereafter may be provided by law, name all county supervisors, tax listers and assessors for Madison County, including county, township, and all other county supervisors or supervisors, listers and assessors that are or may hereafter be provided by law. The said commission shall, while acting in the capacity of a tax commission, name the salaries to be drawn as it or hereafter provided by law, and make such other rules and regulations as the law governing listers and assessors provides. The said commission shall serve as members of the equalization board and shall sit with the county commissioners as members of said equalization board, and the two boards shall constitute the equalization board of Madison County."
The validity of this Public-Local Act, which respondent here assails, was upheld in the court below on authority of McCullers v. Comrs.,
The decision in the McCullers case, supra, is supported by authority, as well as by time-honored custom and practice. It is not unusual for the General Assembly to confer or impose additional powers and duties upon offices already in existence, or to require officers already elected or appointed for general service to act as ex officio members of boards or commissions. Grimes v. Holmes,
A statute which creates no new office and appoints no additional officer, but merely attaches new duties to offices already existing, to be performed by the incumbents therein, does no violence to Art. XIV, sec. 7, of the Constitution, which provides that "no person who shall hold any office or place of trust or profit . . . under this State, or under any other state or government, shall hold or exercise any other office or place of trust or profit under the authority of this State." McCullers v. Comrs.,supra, and cases there cited.
The Public-Local Act here assailed is presumed to be within the constitutional power of the General Assembly. S. v. Williams,
The jury commission is to serve as tax commission for Madison County and also as members of the equalization board. As tax commission they are to name all county supervisors, tax listers and assessors, fix their salaries, and promulgate rules and regulations governing listers and assessors. The effect of the act, therefore, is to create new offices, with certain defined duties, and attach these offices to other offices already *Page 123 existing. This is not permissible under the Constitution. See C. S., ch. 62, Offices and Public Officers.
It is not provided by the Public-Local Act in question that the persons or individuals who hold the offices of chairman of the board of education, chairman of the board of health and superintendent of public schools of Madison County, respectively, shall constitute the jury commission, with duties of tax commission attached, so as to put them to an election between their present offices and the new ones. Barnhill v. Thompson,
We do not have the case where the acceptance of a second office by one holding a public office operates ipso facto to vacate the first. Harris v.Watson,
Nor do we have a case of de facto officers acting colore officii or under color of authority. Hughes v. Long,
The conclusion results that as the designated officers are not competent to serve as jury commission, with duties of tax commission attached, under the terms of the statute, the attempted appointment of relator as tax lister was unavailing, and his action fails. Whitehead v. Pittman,
Reversed.
Hughes v. . Long , 119 N.C. 52 ( 1896 )
State Ex Rel. Harris v. Watson , 201 N.C. 661 ( 1931 )
Grimes v. . Holmes , 207 N.C. 293 ( 1934 )
Groves v. . Barden , 169 N.C. 8 ( 1915 )
State Ex Rel. Barnhill v. Thompson , 122 N.C. 493 ( 1898 )
McCullers v. Board of Commissioners , 158 N.C. 75 ( 1911 )
Whitehead v. . Pittman , 165 N.C. 89 ( 1914 )
Worthy v. . Barrett and Others , 63 N.C. 199 ( 1869 )
State v. . Williams , 209 N.C. 57 ( 1935 )
Hill v. . Stansbury , 223 N.C. 193 ( 1943 )
In Re Advisory Opinion in Re Phillips , 226 N.C. 772 ( 1946 )
Stansbury v. . Guilford County , 226 N.C. 41 ( 1946 )
Freeman v. . Comrs. of Madison , 217 N.C. 209 ( 1940 )
Rice v. Rigsby , 259 N.C. 506 ( 1963 )
Ogden City v. Patterson , 122 Utah 389 ( 1952 )
State Ex Rel. Hill v. Ponder , 221 N.C. 58 ( 1942 )