84 Kan. 248 | Kan. | 1911
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Nearly all of the objections to the tax which the plaintiffs seek to enjoin were urged in The State v. Pauley, 83 Kan. 456, and held to be insufficient. The contention in that case, however, that the high schools in Marshall county had not been established under the Barnes law, was disposed of by construing the agreed statement and pleadings as admitting that the schools had been so established. In this case the court found:
“That no new high schools were established in Saline county, Kansas, under the provisions of chapter 397 of the Laws of 1905, as originally passed or as subsequently amended, but that the existing high schools in the city of Salina and in school districts 82 and 22 were brought up to the required standard and made to conform to the provisions of said act, so far as districts 82 and 22 were concerned, in the summer of 1907.”
“It is as often employed to signify the putting or fixing on a firm basis, of putting in a settled or an efficient state or condition, an existing legal organization or institution, as it is to found or set up such organization or institution; the one meaning is as little recondite, abstruse, or obscure as the other.” (The State ex rel. &c. v. Rogers et al., 107 Ala. 444, 453.)
The former judgment restraining the collection of the tax of 1908 is not an adjudication of the validity of the tax levied under authority of the act of 1909. (Shepherd v. Kansas City, 81 Kan. 369.)
The sufficiency of the title of the curative act of 1909, although not directly referred to in The State v. Pauley, 83 Kan. 456, was involved in the decision. It is “an act concerning high schools.” The precise matter treated in the body of the act is plainly indicated in the title. It is said that as the act relates to proceedings under the former statute it is retroactive, and that this feature is not suggested by the title. A like claim was made in Leavenworth v. Water Co., 69 Kan. 82, but was not sustained. . (Syl. ¶ 6.)
A vigorous and able argument is made in support of the claim that the Barnes law and the act of 1909 are both unconstitutional. The reasons urged in support of this contention were considered in Board of Education v. Allen County, 82 Kan. 782, and in The