The bonds aggregating in amount the sum of $2,125,000, which were issued and sold by the city of Greensboro, prior to 1926, when the Greater Greensboro School District was created by the Board of Education of Guilford County, were valid obligations of the city of Greensboro, a municipal corporation of this State. The issuance and sale of said bonds were authorized by statute and were first approved by a majority of the qualified voters of the city of Greensboro. The proceeds of the said bonds were used by the city of Greensboro to provide sites, buildings, and equipment for schools which were established, maintained, and operated by the city of Greensboro, under valid provisions of its charter, in a special charter school district, which was coterminous with the corporate limits of the city of Greensboro, as such corporate limits existed prior to 15 March, 1923, when said corporate limits were extended. These schools were not established, maintained, or operated by the Board of Commissioners or by the Board of Education of Guilford County. The special charter school district, which was coterminous with the corporate limits of the city of Greensboro, was created by the General Assembly of this State, in order that the city of Greensboro might provide better schools in said district than those which the General Assembly at that time provided in obedience to the constitutional man*659date that “the General Assembly at its first session under this Constitution, i.e. (the Constitution of North Carolina adopted in 1868), shall provide by taxation and otherwise for a general and uniform system of public schools, wherein tuition shall be free of charge to all children of the State between the ages of six and twenty-one years.” Sec. 2, Art. IX, Const, of N. C. It was manifestly contemplated by the General Assembly, when it created the special charter school district which was coterminous with the corporate limits of the city of Greensboro, and imposed upon the city of Greensboro the duty of establishing, maintaining, and operating schools in said district, that the school facilities in said district would be better in all respects than those provided by the General Assembly for districts in which schools were maintained and operated for only the minimum term required by the Constitution of this State.
The bonds aggregating in amount the sum of $2,300,000, which were issued and sold by the Board of Education of the Greater Greensboro School District, after the said district had been created by the General Assembly a special charter school district, were valid obligations of said district. The issuance and sale of said bonds were authorized by statute and were first approved by a majority of the qualified voters of said district. The proceeds of said bonds were used by the Board of Education of the Greater Greensboro School District to provide sites, buildings, and equipment for schools which were established, maintained, and operated in said district by said Board of Education, under statutory authority. These schools were not established, maintained, or operated, after the issuance and sale of said bonds, by the Board of Commissioners or by the Board of Education of Guilford County. The Greater Greensboro School District, which was first established by the Board of Education of Guilford County, as a school district, in 1926, was created by the General Assembly in 1927, a special charter school district. See chapter 77, Private Laws of North Carolina, 1927. It is provided therein that “the $2,300,000 bonds voted for and in behalf of said district may be issued and sold by the Board of Education of the Greater Greensboro School District, in the name of the district.” All the provisions of chapter 77, Private Laws of North Carolina, 1927, show that it was contemplated by the General Assembly, when it created the Greater Greensboro School District a special charter school district, and imposed upon the Board of Education of said district the duty to establish, maintain, and operate schools in said district, that the school facilities of said district would be better in all respects than those which the General Assembly had then provided for districts in the several counties of the State, in which schools were main-*660tamed and operated for only the minimum term required by the Constitution of the State.
The facts as found by the jury at the trial of these actions that the sites, buildings, and equipment acquired, constructed, and used by the plaintiffs for schools in their respective districts, were not reasonably essential and necessary for the operation in said districts of schools for the minimum term required by constitutional mandate, do not support the suggestion that the jury, in answer to issues submitted by the court, found that the governing authorities of the plaintiffs had acquired sites, constructed buildings, and purchased equipment, with the proceeds of said bonds, which were not reasonably required by the needs of their respective special charter school districts. On the contrary, all the evidence at the trial shows that the sites acquired, the buildings constructed, and the equipment purchased, were all required for the operation of schools in their respective districts, as contemplated and authorized by the General Assembly of this State. These facts are, however, material to a proper determination of the questions involved in these actions, to wit: Whether, under the law of this State, it has become and is now the duty of the defendants to assume the payment of the amounts now due and unpaid on the bonds which were issued and sold by the plaintiffs as obligations of their respective districts, and thereby make said bonds the obligations of Guilford County.
In support of their contention that the questions involved in these actions should be answered in the affirmative, the plaintiffs cite and rely upon the decision of this Court in City of Hickory v. Catawba County and Newton Graded School District v. Catawba County, 206 N. C., 165, 173 S. E., 56. These cases were consolidated and tried together in the Superior Court of Catawba County. On defendants’ appeal to this Court, the judgment of the Superior Court, on the facts found by said court, commanding the defendants to assume the payment of bonds issued by the plaintiffs, and to levy taxes on all the taxable property in Catawba County for that purpose, was affirmed. In that ease it was found as a fact by the Superior Court that the proceeds of the bonds issued and sold by the plaintiffs had been used by them in the construction of buildings which were necessary for the operation in their respective districts of schools for the minimum constitutional term of six months in each and every year. In his opinion in that case, writing for the Court, Justice Adams says: “This is not a problem to be solved by the defendants in the exercise of their discretion, or one in the solution of which the courts are shorn of jurisdiction. The exercise of jurisdiction implies the right to hear evidence on the question whether buildings and equipment of certain types are essential to the operation of the schools.” The clear implication is that when it is found as a fact, as in *661the instant case, that the buildings constructed by the governing authorities of a special charter school district and paid for out of the proceeds of bonds which were obligations of the said district, at the time the said bonds were issued and sold, were not reasonably essential and necessary for the operation in said district of schools for the minimum constitutional term of six months, there is no duty imposed by law upon the county in which said district is located, or upon its Board of Commissioners or Board of Education, which can be enforced by a writ of mcmdamus, to assume the payment of said bonds, where the General Assembly has authorized and directed the county and its governing authorities to take over said buildings and use them in operating public schools as part of the general and uniform system of public schools, required by the Constitution of this State. In such case, liability for the bonds cannot be imposed upon the county without the approval of a majority of the qualified voters of the county. Art. VII, sec. 7, Const, of N. C.
We have considered the numerous contentions of the plaintiffs on this appeal. Many of them are not supported by assignments of error based on exceptions taken during the trial. For this reason they do not require discussion. Contentions which are so supported are without substantial merit. They are not sustained. The answers to the 7th and 8th issues are sufficient to support the judgment, without regard to the answer to the 9 th issue. In view of the answers to the 7th and 8th issues, it is immaterial whether or not the defendants have assumed the payment of bonds issued by the rural districts of Guilford County. The proceeds of these bonds were used in the construction of buildings in said districts, which were required for the operation of schools in said district for the constitutional term of six months.
The situation in Guilford County with respect to the bonded indebtedness of said county for schools, as disclosed by the record on this appeal, is the result of a belated recognition by the General Assembly of its constitutional duty to provide a general and uniform system of public schools, which shall be as the Constitution contemplates, a State system. The problems presented by this situation are legislative and not judicial. Relief must be sought from the General Assembly and not from the courts.
We find no error in the trial of these actions. The judgment is affirmed.
No error.