A courthouse in North Carolina being destroyed by fire, the
County Commissioners rented a building on another site, about 200
yards distant from the old site, to be used as a courthouse, and
after five years' occupancy purchased the building and paid for the
same by issuing bonds of the county to the seller. In an action on
the bonds against the county,
held that the Act of the
Legislature of North Carolina of 1868, c. 20, relating to the
removal of county buildings, does not apply to such a case.
The provisions contained in the proviso in § 5 of the Act
of the Legislature of North Carolina of February 27, 1877, to
establish county governments apply only to commissioners to be
chosen thereafter under the provisions of that act.
Page 119 U. S. 177
This was an action at law to recover upon bonds issued by the
Commissioners of Washington County, North Carolina, for the
purchase of a courthouse. The case is stated in the opinion of the
Court.
MR. JUSTICE MATTHEWS delivered the opinion of the Court.
The object of this writ of error is to reverse a judgment
rendered against the plaintiff in error on five obligations in
writing, for $1,000 each, of like tenor, as follows, to-wit:
"OFFICE OF THE BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS"
"No. 19 OF THE COUNTY OF WASHINGTON, N.C."
"Twelve months after date, with interest from date at the rate
of six percent per annum, the Board of Commissioners of Washington
County promise to pay to Louis M. Hornthal, or to his order, one
thousand dollars, for value received, and to secure indebtedness
contracted for the necessary expenses of said county in the
purchase of brick building for courthouse."
"This first day of October, 1877."
"J. G. AUSBON [Seal]"
"
Chairman of the Board of Commissioners"
"
of Washington County"
"Countersigned:"
"W. H. STUBBS"
"
Register of Deeds and Clerk of said Board"
The plaintiff below was a purchaser for value before due and
without notice of any defense. His right to recover was denied on
the ground that under the circumstances, the Board of Commissioners
of Washington County had no authority of law for making and issuing
the obligations sued on.
It appears from the bill of exceptions that the Courthouse of
Washington County was destroyed by fire in the spring of
Page 119 U. S. 178
1872; that in the following August, the defendants, the County
Commissioners, rented the building for the purchase of which the
bonds sued on were afterwards issued, which is situated about 200
yards from the courthouse which was destroyed by fire in the Town
of Plymouth, and, before the succeeding fall term of the superior
court, gave notice by public advertisement for thirty days,
declaring the house so rented to be the public Courthouse of
Washington County, and that courts were held continuously therein
until the commencement of the action.
The defendant offered in evidence a copy of the proceedings, as
recorded, of a special meeting of the Board of County Commissioners
of Washington County held on the first Monday in October, 1877 at
which the whole number of five were present. The transcript of the
proceedings of that meeting sets out a paper addressed to the Board
of Commissioners or Washington County, signed by eight justices of
the peace, requesting that body at its next meeting to contract
"for the purchase of the brick store and lot in Plymouth, lately
the custom house, for the use of the County of Washington for a
courthouse, paying for the same the bonds of the county, bearing
six percent interest, payable at one, two, three, four, and five
years, with interest from date at price of five thousand dollars,
or five bonds of one thousand dollars each at the rate of interest
due as aforesaid, as we have here reconsidered."
"Plymouth, N.C., September 24, 1877."
It was thereupon moved and seconded that a vote of the board be
taken on the purchase of the brick building then used as a
courthouse, whereupon three votes were cast for said purchase and
one vote against it. The record of the proceedings of the meeting
then contains the following:
"Whereas, the Courthouse of the County of Washington, with the
offices for the preservation of the public records and for the
transaction of the public business, were destroyed by fire in the
month of May, 1872, and it is absolutely necessary that the county
shall own a courthouse, with suitable offices, wherein the public
records may be safely kept and wherein the officers of the court
and the county can conveniently transact
Page 119 U. S. 179
the public business, and this board declare that it is
inexpedient longer to occupy a rented house for these purposes, and
whereas Louis M. Hornthal, of the City of New York, has offered to
sell to this Board of Commissioners for said county the water part
of lot numbered one hundred and forty-nine, situated in the Town of
Plymouth in said county, so numbered upon the plat or plan of said
town, known as the 'Custom house Property,' fronting fifty feet
upon Water Street and extending to the river, including the wharf
upon the same, with the brick house, forty feet wide, sixty feet
long, of three stories in height, with basement or cellar at the
price of five thousand dollars, to be secured by the bonds of the
Board of Commissioners, payable in five equal annual installments,
bearing interest at the rate of six percent per annum, and agree to
execute title to the same upon payment of the purchase money and
interest, and to execute to this board a bond, with surety, to
perform this agreement, and whereas a majority of the justices of
said county have in writing directed this Board of County
Commissioners to accept the offer of the said L. M. Hornthal, and
to make the purchase of said property upon the terms named:"
"It is ordered by this board, a majority of said justices
concurring, that James G. Ausbon, chairman of this board, contract
with the said L. M. Hornthal, through his agent, L. H. Hornthal,
for the purchase of said property; that he take from the said L. M.
Hornthal his bond, with surety as above provided, and that he
execute, as chairman of this board, five bonds, each for one
thousand dollars, payable severally first October, 1878, 1879,
1880, 1881, 1882, bearing six percent interest; that he cause the
same to be countersigned by the clerk of this board, who is the
register of deeds for this county, and that the seal of his office
be attached."
"[Signed] J. G. Ausbon, Chairman"
The transcript of the record of the proceedings of a special
meeting of the Board of County Commissioners held on the first
Monday, November 5, 1877, was also put in evidence, wherein it
appeared as follows: J. G. Ausbon, as chairman, reported in
writing
"that, in obedience to the order of this board
Page 119 U. S. 180
proposed on the first day of October, 1877, he accepted the bond
of L. M. Hornthal, of the City of New York, in the penal sum of ten
thousand dollars, with justified surety, conditioned to execute
title to this Board of County Commissioners for the brick store and
lot in Plymouth, known as the custom house, upon payment of the
purchase money, and that, under said order, he executed to him five
bonds, each for one thousand dollars, dated the first day of
October 1877, bearing six percent interest from date, payable at
one, two, three, four, and five years from date, which were
countersigned by the clerk of this board, and sealed with the seal
of his office as register of deeds, and that he has caused the said
title bond to be proved and registered."
It was thereupon ordered that the report be adopted, and that
the action of the chairman in the premises be in all respects
confirmed and approved. All the commissioners were present at this
meeting.
Upon this state of case, the court directed the jury that the
plaintiff was entitled to recover, and there was verdict and
judgment accordingly.
It is now contended by the plaintiff in error that the ruling of
the court, and the judgment rendered in pursuance thereof, are
erroneous on two grounds:
First, that by the laws of North Carolina in force at that time,
and applicable to the transaction, the commissioners of the county
had no power to change the site of the county courthouse unless
authorized to do so by a unanimous vote of all the members of the
board at their September meeting, and after a notice of the
proposed change, specifying the new site, published in a newspaper
printed in the county, and posted in one or more public places in
every township in the county for three months next immediately
preceding the annual meeting at which the final vote on the
proposed change was to be taken, and upon that point cites the Laws
of North Carolina, 1868, c. 20, § 8, subsec. 8, and Battle's
Revisal 1873, c. 27, § 8, subsec. 8.
Second, that the Board of Commissioners did not have the power
to make the contract in question and the bonds in pursuance and
execution of the same, "without the concurrence of a majority
Page 119 U. S. 181
of the justices of the peace sitting with them," in pursuance of
§ 5 of the Laws of North Carolina of 1876-77, c. 141.
The statute of North Carolina referred to in support of the
first assignment of error is the act of 1868, c. 20. It provides
for the organization and government of counties, and enacts that
every county is a body politic and corporate, and has the powers
specified by statute or necessarily implied in such a body, which
can only be exercised by the Board of Commissioners, or in
pursuance of a resolution adopted by them. Among its general powers
enumerated is "to purchase and hold land within its limits, and for
the use of its inhabitants, subject to the supervision of the
General Assembly." The Board of Commissioners of each county are
required to hold a regular meeting at the courthouse on the first
Mondays of September and March of each year. They are expressly
authorized
"to purchase real property necessary for any public county
building, and for the support of the poor, and to determine the
site thereof where it has not been already located;"
also to locate the necessary county buildings, and to raise, by
tax upon the county, the money necessary for their erection.
Subdivision 8 of § 8 of the statute is as follows:
"To remove or designate a new site for any county building, but
the site of any county building already located shall not be
changed unless by a unanimous vote of all the members of the board
at the regular September meeting, and unless upon notice of the
proposed change, specifying the new site. Such notice shall be
published in a newspaper printed in the county, if there be one,
and posted in one or more public places in every township in the
county for three months next immediately preceding the annual
meeting at which the final vote on the proposed change is to be
taken. Such new site shall not be more than one mile distant from
the old, except upon the special approval of the General
Assembly."
It is for want of conformity to the directions of this clause
that it is contended that the proceedings of the County
Commissioners of Washington County in the purchase of the
courthouse building, which constitutes the consideration for the
obligations in suit, are illegal. We are of opinion, however,
that
Page 119 U. S. 182
the provisions of that subsection do not apply to the
circumstances of the present case. The language of the law is
limited to the removal or designation of a new site for an existing
county building, and cannot be applied to a case such as the
present, where the courthouse has been destroyed by fire. It was
the duty of the commissioners, after the destruction of the
existing courthouse, to provide a place where the courts could be
held and a building suitable for the purpose. The renting of a
building in another locality cannot be considered as a removal or
designation of a new site for the county building already located.
Where a county building has been destroyed by fire, its site cannot
be said any longer to exist as a location. A literal adherence, as
required by the argument for the plaintiff in error, to the terms
of the section in its application to this case leads to a necessary
absurdity, for the regular September meeting at which the unanimous
vote of the board must be given, which it is contended is a
necessary condition precedent to the validity of the transaction,
is required to be held at the courthouse, but, according to the
circumstances of this case, there was no courthouse at which any
such meeting could be held. By the terms of the law, the County
Commissioners have power to designate the site of any county
building not already and previously located, and the terms of the
subsection relied on apply, we think, only to the case where it is
a naked proposition to abandon one building then in use for county
purposes, and to establish another one, in another site, for the
same purpose.
In the present case also, if there was any change in the site of
the county building, it took place immediately after the
destruction by fire of the old one, when the premises subsequently
purchased were leased by the commissioners and occupied as a county
courthouse. This had been done five years previously. In the
meantime, the occupancy of the place in question as a courthouse
had been public and notorious, so that, we think, it may be
considered at the time when the purchase of the property was made
that the site for a county courthouse had been already established.
The change of title from that of lessee for a term of years to an
ownership in fee
Page 119 U. S. 183
by reason of the purchase was not a change of the site of a
county building. It therefore does not come within the prohibition
relied on.
As to the second assignment of error, reliance is had upon an
act to establish county governments, ratified February 27, 1877.
Laws of North Carolina, 1876-77, c. 141, p. 226. That was a statute
which enacted a new mode of governing counties. It provided in
§ 4 that justices of the peace should be elected by the
General Assembly, and the General Assembly, it was provided at its
then present session, should elect three justices of the peace for
each township in the several counties of the state, to be divided
into three classes, and hold their offices for the terms of two,
four, and six years, respectively; but the successor of each class,
as his term expired, should be elected by the General Assembly for
the term of six years. It was also provided that the terms of those
elected at the then present session which the justices of the peace
then of the General Assembly should which the justices of the peace
then in office had been elected, and not before. Section 5 enacted
that justices of the peace for each county, on the first Monday in
August, 1878, and on the first Monday in August every two years
thereafter, should assemble at the courthouse of their respective
counties, and, a majority being present, should proceed to the
election of not less than three, nor more than five, persons, to be
chosen from the body of the county, including the justices of the
peace, who should be styled the Board of Commissioners for the
county, and hold their offices for two years from the date of their
qualification and until their successors should be elected and
qualified. Those elected on the first Monday in August, 1878, were
to enter upon the duties of their office immediately upon the
expiration of the term for which the Board of County Commissioners
then in office had been elected, and not before. The same section
contained the following proviso:
"
Provided however that the Board of Commissioners shall
not have power to levy taxes, to purchase real property, to remove
or designate new sites for county buildings, to construct or repair
bridges the cost whereof may exceed five hundred dollars, or to
borrow
Page 119 U. S. 184
money for the county, nor alter or make additional townships,
without the concurrence of a majority of the justices of the peace
sitting with them, and for the purposes embraced in this proviso
the justices of the peace of the county shall meet with the Board
of Commissioners on the first Monday in August, 1878, and annually
thereafter, unless oftener convened by the Board of Commissioners,
who are hereby empowered to call together the justices of the
peace, when necessary, not oftener than once in three months; but
for such services the justices of the peace shall receive no
compensation."
The next section of the statute provided that the Board of
Commissioners so elected should have and exercise the jurisdiction
and powers vested in the Board of Commissioners then existing.
It is quite evident, we think, that the proviso to § 5,
which is relied upon as prohibiting the exercise of the powers
specified, except in conjunction with the justices of the peace
sitting with the Board of Commissioners, applies only to those
commissioners who should be chosen thereafter under the provisions
of that act, the first election under which could not occur prior
to the first Monday in August, 1878, and that those then elected
could not enter upon the duties of their offices until after the
expiration of the term for which the existing Boards of County
Commissioners then in office had been elected. The limitations upon
the powers of the commissioners under that statute cannot be
construed as affecting the powers of the Boards of Commissioners in
office at the date of this transaction, which was in the year 1877.
The Act of February 27, 1877 therefore has no application to this
case.
There is therefore no error in the record, and the judgment of
the circuit court is
Affirmed.