Palmer v. County of Haywood

Baenhilu, J.,

dissenting:

The court below found that during the past two years the Haywood County Hospital has cared for indigent sick and afflicted poor of Haywood County in excess of its full normal capacity, and has not been able by reason of the crowded condition to provide for hospital care and treatment for all the indigent sick and afflicted poor of the county needing hospital treatment; that it has become necessary for the defendant county to enlarge its hospital by the building of an annex, which is contemplated to be used principally for the care of the indigent sick and afflicted poor of the county, and that the expense therefor is necessary within the meaning of the Constitution, and that there is no other hospital in Haywood County.

The plaintiff does not allege or contend that the issuance of these bonds will violate the provisions of Art. Y, sec. 6, of the Constitution, nor is there any allegation of any defect or irregularity in the resolution, or in the proceedings of the commissioners authorizing the issuance and sale of the bonds. He rests his case, squarely upon the question as stated in his brief: “Is the proposed building of an annex to the Haywood County Hospital principally for the care of indigent sick and afflicted poor of the county a necessary expense, or would the issuance of the bonds for that purpose and the levying of the tax for the payment of principal and interest thereof without a vote of the people be a violation of Art. VII, sec. 7, of the Constitution of North Carolina?”

That the court has the power to determine what are necessary expenses is not debatable. It is the only means through which the people of the State are assured that the governing agencies will not exceed the limitations prescribed by the Constitution.

It is too well established in this State that the State and its subdivisions are charged with the duty as a governmental function to care for the poor and to protect the health of the citizens of the State to re*290quire tbe citation of authorities. The counties are the governmental agencies through which these duties are to a large extent performed. A county is not in a strict legal sense a municipal corporation, it is rather an instrumentality of the State, by means of which the State performs certain of its governmental functions within its territorial limits. Bell v. Comrs., 127 N. C., 85; Jones v. Comrs., 137 N. C., 579. In the exercise of ordinary governmental functions they are simply agencies of the State constituted for the convenience of local administration in certain portions of the State’s territory, and in the exercise of such functions they are subject to almost unlimited legislative control, except when the power is restricted by constitutional provisions.

County organizations are created almost exclusively with a view to the policy of the State at large for the purposes of political organization and civil administration in matters of finance, of education, of provision for the poor, of the means of travel and transfer, for the promotion of the health and general welfare of the people, and especially for the general administration of justice. The county organizations have a direct and exclusive reference to the general policy of the State, and are in fact but a branch of the general administration of that policy, and they are an integral portion of the general administration of State policy.

If it is a governmental function of the State to make provision for the poor and for the protection of the health of its citizenship, then the State has the power to delegate the performance of this duty to the respective counties. The Legislature has exercised this right of delegation and has vested the counties with authority to provide for the maintenance, comfort and well-being of the poor; 0. S., 1297, subsection 28, and to establish public hospitals, C. S., 1297, subsection 29; 0. S., 1334 (8) ; ch. 81, P. L. 1927. The defendants do not have to rely upon the provisions of 0. S., ch. 119.

If, then, the proposed expenditure' is either a means by which the county seeks to provide for the comfort and well-being of the poor or to promote the health of its citizens, it is a necessary expense.

The opinion correctly states the rule to be followed by the court in determining what expenses are necessary, that is to say, the courts determine what class of expenditures made, or to be made, come under the definition of necessary expenses. The sole duty of the court is to classify the expense, and if it falls within a class of expenses which is governmental in its nature, or in furtherance of governmental functions, it is necessary. “Necessary expense” refers to the ordinary and usual expenditures required to enable a county to properly perform its duties as part of the State government and to exercise the functions delegated to the county by the Legislature. The words must mean such expenses as are or may be incurred in the establishing and procuring of those *291things without which the peace and order of the community, its moral interests, or the health and the protection of the property of its inhabitants would suffer considerable damage, leaving out of view the matter of the great inconvenience that would be attendant upon our social life for want of such expenditures. What particular projects or means shall he adopted, or whether an expenditure shall be made in the furtherance of governmental functions rests exclusively in the sound discretion of the governing body. Evans v. Comrs., 89 N. C., 154; Brodnax v. Groom, 64 N. C., 244.

Some of the projects approved by the court and the class within which the expense therefor falls are as follows: (1) The building and maintenance of public roads, streets, sidewalks and bridges — public convenience, intercourse, travel and commerce; (2) lighting streets and building light plants — public safety and convenience; (3) jetties — protection of property; (4) water and sewer systems, abattoirs — protection of health; (5) incinerators — sanitation.

The court reviews the ultimate purpose — not the incidental means; the primary objective — not individual projects or items. To do otherwise, and undertake to determine that a particular project is not necessary, is to invade the policy making field, which belongs exclusively, to other branches of the government. The wisdom of expenditures must he left to the sound discretion of the governing agency. Speaking to this subject more than sixty years ago in Brodnax v. Groom, supra, Pearson, C. J., says: “Who is to decide what are the necessary expenses of a county? The county commissioners to whom are confided the trust of regulating all county matters. ‘Repairing and building bridges’ is a part of the necessary expense of a county as much so as keeping the roads in order, or making new roads; so the case before us is within the power of the county commissioners. How can this Court undertake to control its exercise? Can we say such a bridge does not need repairs, or that in building a new bridge near the site of an old bridge it should he erected as heretofore upon posts so as to be cheap, hut warranted to last for some years, or that it is better policy to locate it a mile or so above where the hanks are good abutments and to have stone pillars at a heavier outlay at the start, hut such as will insure permanency and he cheaper in the long run ?

“In short, this Court is not capable of controlling the exercise of power on the part of the General Assembly, or of the county authorities, and it cannot assume to do so without putting itself in antagonism as well to the General Assembly as to the county authorities and erecting a despotism of five men, which is opposed to the fundamental principles of our government and the uses of all times past.

*292“For tbe exercise of powers conferred by tbe Constitution tbe people must rely upon tbe bonesty of tbe members of tbe General Assembly and of tbe persons elected to fill places of trust in tbe several counties.

“Tbis Court bas no power and is not capable if it bad tbe power of controlling tbe exercise of power conferred by tbe Constitution upon tbe legislative department of government or upon tbe county authorities.”

It appears to me tbat tbe vice in tbe opinion of tbe Court and in tbe opinions contained in tbe cases cited in support of tbe position taken by tbe Court, to wit: Tbe Armstrong case, supra, tbe Nash case, supra, and tbe Burleson case, supra, lies in tbe fact tbat tbe Court undertakes to determine tbe necessity of a particular project without relating tbe expenditure to tbe class of expense within which it properly falls. An examination of practically all tbe other cases bearing upon tbis question discloses tbat tbe Court classified tbe proposed expense and by so doing avoided falling into tbe error which I feel is attendant upon tbis decision.

Tbe expense here proposed may be classified as one in furtherance of tbe governmental function of providing for tbe indigent sick and afflicted poor. Tbe Constitution expressly provides tbat it is tbe purpose of tbe government to make charitable institutions as nearly self-sustaining as is .consistent with tbe purposes of their creation. Art. XI, see. 11.

But even if it be conceded tbat tbe language of the resolution authorizing tbe issuance of tbe proposed bonds is such as to remove tbe proposed expense from tbis class, then surely it falls within tbe class of expenses which are for tbe protection of tbe health of tbe citizens of tbe county. As I understand it, tbis is an undisputed governmental function and duty. The wisdom of such expenditure rests in tbe sound discretion of tbe board of commissioners. Our State is constantly growing in wealth and population. Our civilization is advancing with tbe habits and customs of necessary changes. New conditions create new necessities. What sometimes appears at tbe time to be an unwise and extravagant expenditure, when viewed in retrospect, is considered an evidence of sound business judgment. It is to be expected tbat in tbe changed conditions which occur in tbe lives of a progressive people tbat things at one time considered luxuries grow to be necessities. Tbe luxuries of yesteryear are tbe necessities of today and tbe luxuries of today become tbe necessities of tomorrow.

In tbe not far distant past tbe State was practically without hospital facilities. Hospitals were available only to tbe rich, and even they considered it extravagant to make use of such facilities except in extreme cases. Today we have hospitals in practically every large town in tbe State, and registered nurses are located in practically every town and village. Hospitals and nursing facilities have grown to be tbe principal means through which tbe medical science is given a practical application.

*293If it is to be conceded tbat it is tbe duty of the government to protect the health of its citizens and to administer medical care and attention to the indigent sick and afflicted poor, then it must be conceded that the State may delegate these duties to the county, and the county has the right in the exercise of its sound discretion to perform these duties through the medium of a hospital adequate in size and equipment.

I conceive it to be the duty of the Court to interpret the law, within the • limitations of the Constitution, with a view to meeting present conditions and present needs. If the decisions cited and relied upon by the Court are in conflict with and prohibit the proposed expenditures, then these decisions should be overruled and the proposed expense should be placed in the class to which it properly belongs and declared to be a necessary expense of the government in the protection of the health of the people’ of this county who have no other hospital facilities available to them within their county. The decisions of the Court should be mile-posts marking the progress of the law, and not hitching posts, beyond which the law may not go.

In Fawcett v. Mt. Airy, 134 N. C., 124, it is said: “In the effort of the courts to check extravagance and prevent corruption in the government of towns and cities, the judicial branch of the government has probably stood by former decisions from too conservative a standpoint, and thereby obstructed the advance of business ideas which would be most beneficial if put into operation; and this conservatism of the courts, outgrown by the march of progress, sometimes appears at a serious disadvantage.”

The Constitution protects the people even against unduly restrictive action of the courts. The Court enforces its protective provisions as against the other branches of the government, and must likewise do so as to its own interpretation and application of the law.

The law as now declared by the Court is such that it is lawful, to incur-an expense in building jetties in the sea to protect the property of summer cottagers on the seashore, but prohibits the construction of a hospital intended primarily to minister to the indigent sick and the afflicted poor — playgrounds and public parks to preserve the health of the well-to-do are necessary, while a hospital, with its attendant nursing facilities, to restore to health those who are sick, is not. This, to my mind, creates an inconsistency that operates to the disadvantage of those who are most in need of the ministering care of a progressive democratic government committed to Christian principles, and it ought not to be.

I am authorized to say that Me. Justice ClaeKSON concurs in this dissent.