Court Opinion

ID: 6696547
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 21:53:13.587416+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:01:16.071969
License: Public Domain

ClaeK, 0. J.,
dissenting: The plaintiff is already in the Superior Court, and there are three reasons, each good and sufficient, why the plaintiff should not be dismissed out of that court and compelled to come back into the same court at heavy expense to litigate identically the same question.
1. This action is to recover $42.75, which was paid by H. L. Millner to the defendant Cain, the tax collector of the town of Morganton, but which it is alleged the collector did not pay over to the town of Mor-ganton. It is not denied that Millner paid this tax to the said Cain, and the sole issue is whether Cain has paid it over to the town of Morganton.
The plaintiff put in- evidence the tax list for Morganton for the year 1916, showing that Millner owed $41.90; that Cain, as collector, had charge of the book for the collection of taxes, and it appears therefrom that his total taxes, including cost, was $42.75.
The auditor for the town testified that when he settled with Cain for the taxes of 1916 this matter of Millner’s taxes was left out of the settlement, Cain being given credit for those receipts because those taxes had not been collected. “He was charged with them originally,” says the auditor, “but he was credited with the receipts still in the book, and the •difference was the cash that he ought to. have had in hand. He ought to have had $40 and some odd dollars more than he had, but he never accounted for those taxes in his settlement with us. I remember the day he made the settlement. .There was something said about those receipts the day I made that audit, but just what it was I do not know; the subject was brought up. The receipts were still there (in the stub book), and I could not do anything in the world but credit or charge Mr. Cain with it, because he could not-show they were paid. The way I was doing it amounted to a credit. I charged him'with everything that was on the book, and credited him with the receipts that were still in the book. I charged him up with the amount he was chargeable with, and then I gave him credit for such receipts for taxes as it appears he had not collected, and the balance I charged up against him in favor of the town.” From this it would appear that this was not a full settlement by the defendant with the town, but simply crediting the defendant with the money he had paid into the town treasury, and crediting him also with the receipts still in the book which he had not torn out and delivered to parties on payment of taxes. This action, therefore, is not *368to surcharge and falsify an account, but the plaintiff was proving that this sum had not at that time been paid by Millner as the receipt for the taxes was still in the stub book, and hence that item was not erroneously omitted, but was not taken into the settlement at all. Cain did not produce any receipt in full from the town showing that he had paid up, and the auditor’s evidence showed that by the settlement then made Cain received credit for the $42.15 as uncollected. This action, therefore, is a plain action of debt to recover from Cain a certain amount which at the settlement he did not claim he paid over, but was credited with it as unpaid, the receipt for the same being still in the stub book.
Whether this was correct or not was a matter which the jury should have settled, and not the judge. The action was properly brought before the justice of the peace, and by appeal it came to the Superior Court. If there was any equitable element it is solely in there being an omission by mistake to include the Millner taxes in the settlement, but the plaintiff’s testimony denies this, and Cain’s defense is that he actually paid over to the town the $42.15, which he admits he collected. Tf either is right, there was no omission by mistake, and no possible equity involved, and the jury should have been allowed to settle it.
The plaintiff’s testimony is that there was no mistake, for that the Millner taxes were purposely omitted because the receipt therefor was still in the tax-collector’s book, and he was charged only with the cash he had collected at that time.
Whichever contention is right there was no mistake, it is simply a question of fact — Cain saying he had paid and the plaintiff saying he had not — a pure issue of fact, of payment or no payment, which a jury must settle, which it was then empaneled to settle and should have settled without all this needless countermarching. The plaintiff was seeking only to recover $42.75 (which the opinion says appears now not to have been included in the amount paid to town), and was doing no wrong, but only its duty in seeking to get the $42.75 paid up. Yet it is penalized with the costs before the justice, with the costs in the Superior Court, and with the costs of this Court! To what end and for what possible benefit to any one ? There is certainly no equity in this.
The defendant produced no receipt in full from the town, and if he had a receipt it would be only prima facie, and even in the old days when technicalities were the delight of judges could be disproved in a court of law. Keaton v. Jones, 119 N. C., 43.
2. As a second ground why the action should not have been dismissed, this proceeding was properly begun before the justice of the peace. It is true a suit to surcharge and falsify an account was formerly called an equitable proceeding, but there is nothing in the Constitution of North Carolina which justifies the contention that a justice of the peace *369bas not equitable jurisdiction. There have been some few decisions to that effect, but an examination of the Constitution as it is written will show that such holding was but the survival of former ideas in regard to the distinction between law and equity, which was utterly abolished by the Constitution, which should be of more authority than any opinion which any judge may have inadvertently expressed. The language of the Constitution will speak for itself.
The Constitution of North Carolina, Art. IY. “Sec. 1. Abolishes distinction between actions at law and suits in equity, and feigned issues. The distinction between actions at law and suits in equity, and the forms of all such actions and suits shall be abolished; and there shall be in this State but one form of action for the enforcement or protection of private rights or the redress of private wrongs which shall be denominated a civil action.” It will appear from this that the distinction which formerly was deemed most essential between the actions at law and suits in equity and the forms of all such actions and suits were absolutely abolished in this State. There is nothing that indicates that that abolition applied only to the Superior Courts. The distinction was absolutely abolished, and could no longer have any existence in any court in this State by whatever name it might be called — whether it was a justice of the peace, a city court, a county court, a Superior Court, or the Supreme Court. Any decisions to the contrary are in contradiction of the very language of the Constitution, which could not be more explicitly or plainly expressed than it is written. Therefore, even if this could be termed an equitable proceeding to surcharge and falsify an account, still the object of the action by the town was to recover the sum of $42.75 taxes for the year 1916'due the plaintiff, which the taxpayer alleged he had paid to the tax collector, Cain, and which the latter asserted that he had paid over to the town, but which the evidence for the plaintiff showed was not embraced in any settlement, and was expressly excluded and omitted because the receipts were still in the collector’s book, and he was given credit for them. The question was not to surcharge or change any settlement actually made, but whether the settlement as made'embraced this sum, which was not a matter of equity but an issue of fact for the jury, which they should have settled.
But even if it were, as claimed, an action to surcharge the account, there is no authority in the Constitution which will justify holding that a justice of the peace would.not have jurisdiction. Constitution, Art. IY, sec. 27, provides: “Jurisdiction of justices of the peace. The several justices of the peace shall have jurisdiction, under such regulations as the General Assembly shall prescribe, of civil actions founded on contract wherein the sum demanded shall not exceed $200, and wherein the title of real estate shall not be in controversy.” This was *370a civil action founded on contract, and whether the question involved is one of equity or óf law, as that distinction was formerly asserted, is immaterial, for that distinction was absolutely abolished, and therefore cannot exist in any court, and is not recognized in any line or word of the Constitution, nor in the provision which prescribes the jurisdiction of the justice of the peace or of any other court.
It is true that a justice of the peace cannot issue an injunction, nor can the Supreme Court (except a temporary one in a matter pending before it), nor can any other court except the Superior Court alone, but that is not because it is equitable, but because the statute does not confer the right to issue the ancillary remedies of injunction or mandamus on any other court. Just as the writ of prohibition can be issued only by the Supreme Court. These are not forms of action, but simply remedies, the right to exercise which is conferred on certain courts by legislation.
Besides what is already stated, this Court has recognized that the justice of the peace has jurisdiction of equitable matters. In Levin v. Gladstein, 142 N. C., 495, this Court held that the justice of the peace could take cognizance of an equitable defense, Connor, J., saying: “It would be incompatible with our conception of remedial justice under the code system to require the defendant to submit to a judgment and be compelled to resort to another court to enjoin its enforcement. This is one of the inconveniences of the old system which was abolished by the Constitution and the adoption of our Code of Practice.” If the justice has jurisdiction of an equitable defense, he must have jurisdiction of an equitable claim for the same reason.
3. There is a third reason why, being already in the Superior Court, this litigation over the sum of $42.75 should not have been taken from the jury and judge who were competent to decide it, and the town should not have been sent out of the Superior Court at heavy expense to begin exactly the same action upon the same subject in the very same Superior Court. The case had gotten into the Superior Court by appeal and even upon the contention of the defendant that court had jurisdiction of this subject-matter, and having' jurisdiction, the plaintiff should not be sent out of court to come back again into the same court. There have been conflicting decisions of the Court on this question. These conflicting decisions are cited and arrayed in Holmes v. Bullock, 178 N. C., 379, 380, and need not be again repeated. The iflaintiff who has appealed to the Superior Court admits thereby that that court is seized of jurisdiction. The defendant, who is seeking to evade the settlement of the issue by a plea that the justice did not have jurisdiction, is thereby affirming that the Superior Court has jurisdiction, and as, therefore, both parties admit jurisdiction there was no advantage to the administration of justice in the child’s play of sending them out of the *371court wbicb both sides admit has jurisdiction to come back again into the same court upon the ground that the Superior Court has jurisdiction and inflicting the penalty of heavy costs in all three courts upon- the plaintiff. In close analogy to this is the incident when Texas, then á new State, was a city of refuge for parties charged with crime. One of these citizens committed a homicide in Texas, and when advised by his friends to leave, exclaimed in dismay, “Where can I go ? Am I not already in Texas?” Why dismiss the defendant from the Superior Court to come back into that court when he is already in the Superior Court.
To sum up:
1. The issue is simply payment or no payment, and even under the former technical system (happily and totally abolished now more than 50 years ago) it would have been an action at law begun before a justice of the peace to recover $42.75.
2. Even if an equitable proceeding to recover that sum, the justice had jurisdiction thereof under the Constitution, Art. IY, secs. 1 and 27.
3. Even if the justice of the peace did not have jurisdiction, the case having gotten into the Superior Court, that court should retain jurisdiction and determine the controversy. This principle has statutory recognition in C. S., 637, enacted to cure the decision to the contrary in Brittain v. Mull, 91 N. C., 498. See Roseman v. Roseman, 127 N. C., 497.
Under the old system in which technicality was more important than merits a plaintiff was dismissed if his lawyer guessed differently from the judge as to which of the many forms of action he should choose, or sued in equity when the judge thought it should have been at law or vice versa. If he sued in the wrong county, or if he had too many or too few parties, or pleaded more than the judge thought enough or too little, the case was dismissed. Now, the action is simply removed to-the proper county and amendments are freely allowed as to pleadings and parties. These changes were all brought about by the demand that justice should be administered, and not injustice under the forms of law.
There is but one point in this case, and that is an issue of fact which can be settled only by a jury. It was before the jury, and they should have been allowed to settle it. The plaintiff was seeking to collect an item which it claimed that the tax collector had not paid in, and the defendant denied it. The taxpayers of Morganton ought not to be required to pay the costs in three courts to get back before a jury in the same courthouse, upon the same evidence to decide the same question, which might and could have been settled in a few moments.