192 P. 627 | Utah | 1920
This is an original application to this court by the board of education of Carbon county school district, hereinafter called plaintiff, for a writ of mandate to require the defendants, as the board of county commissioners of Carbon county and the other defendants as officers of said county, hereinafter styled defendants, to levy a tax for school purposes in accordance with the estimate proposed and submitted by plaintiff as required by law.
The application is based on chapter 135, Laws Utah 1911, and especially on the section designated 1891x27 of that chapter, which, so far as material here, reads as follows:
“The hoard of education shall, on or before the first day'of May of each year, prepare a statement and estimate of the amount necessary for the support and maintenance of the schools under its charge for the school year commencing on the first day of July next thereafter, and for the purchase of school sites and the erection of school buildings, also the amount necessary to pay the interest accruing during such year, and not included in any prior estimates,'on bonds issued by said board; also the amount of sinking fund necessary to be collected during such year for the payment and redemption of said bonds; and shall forthwith cause the same to be certified by the president and clerk of said board to the officers charged with the assessment and collection of taxes for general county purposes in the county in which the district is situated, and such officers, after having extended the valuation of property on the assessment rolls, shall levy such per cent, as shall, as nearly as may be, raise the amount required by the board, which levy shall be uniform on all property within the said district as returned on the assessment roll, and the said county officers are hereby authorized and required to place the same on the tax roll. * * * Said taxes shall be collected by the county treasurer as other taxes are collected, * * * and he shall pay to the treasurer of said board, promptly as collected: * * * Provided, that the tax for the support and maintenance of such schools shall not exceed in any one year five and one-half mills on the dollar upon all taxable property of said district; and shall not exceed one and one-half mills additional on the dollar in one year, to be used exclusively for the purchase of school sites and the erection of school*81 buildings, but in case any funds collected for support or maintenance are not used witbin tbe school year for wbicb they were raised, they may be used for building purposes; provided, further, that the hoard of education in each county school district of the first class shall also, on or before the first Monday in May of each year, furnish the hoard of county commissioners an estimate in writing of school funds needed in their districts for the ensuing year for the payment of teachers, of expenses of the county institute, of compensation of the superintendent of schools, which estimate shall be taken by the board of county commissioners, as required by section 1864, Compiled Laws of Utah 1907, or in lieu thereof when there is no county superintendent, as a basis for the county school tax levy provided for in section eighteen hundred and sixty-five, Compiled Laws of Utah 1907.” (Italics ours.)
The plaintiff relies especially on the words we have italicized.
Section 1864, referred to in the foregoing quotation, reads as follows:
"The county superintendent shall, on or before the first Monday in May of each year, furnish the board of county commissioners an estimate in writing of the amount of school funds needed for the ensuing year.”
That section was repealed in 1915 (Laws Utah 1915, p. 98). It will be observed that the subject-matter of section 1864 is contained in wliat we have quoted from section 1891x27, supra, and has no application here. It will therefore not be noticed further.
The plaintiff sets forth all the necessary facts in its application to which the defendants have interposed a general demurrer. The plaintiff in substance alleges that, in order to raise sufficient funds to carry on the schools of Carbon county school district for the full school year of nine months, it is necessary that a tax of eight and five-tenths mills on the dollar be levied on all of the taxable property within Carbon county, and within said school district, the boundaries of which are coterminous with the boundaries of the said county. The defendants, in support of their demurrer, contend that they are prohibited from levying any amount of taxes in excess of seven mills on the dollar.
Counsel for plaintiff concede that according- to the express
With the foregoing observations in mind let us very briefly trace the history and purpose of section 1891x27, supra, and cognate sections. School districts of the first class were first created by chapter 107, Laws Utah 1905. It is in that chapter that section 1891x27 was first adopted. It was passed so as to make the law conform to the county school districts of the first class which were created by that act. In that section, after requiring the boards of education of the several county school districts to furnish an estimate to the county commissioners, as is the case in the present form of section 1891x27 which we have quoted, the language which we have italicized is also incorporated. The same section was carried forward into Comp. Laws Utah, 1907, as section 1891x27. As we have seen, the section in its present form is found in chapter 135, Laws Utah 1911, as quoted herein. In all of the different amendments of the section, however, the limitations are the same, except that in one instance the limitation' is a little less, but the language we have italicized is substantially the same. In 1913 (chapter 96, Laws Utah 1913) the law was amended so as to fix an arbitrary property limitation, which limitation was enlarged in 1915 (Laws Utah 1915, page 195). The limitations there made were, however, held invalid by this court in the case of Board of Education v. Hunter, 48 Utah, 373, 159 Pac. 1019; Board of Education v. Hanchett, 50 Utah, 289, 167 Pac. 686; Board of Education v. Stillman, 55 Utah, 124, 184 Pac. 159, and Board of Education v. Smith, 55 Utah, 125, 184 Pac. 160. While the two cases first referred to applied only to cities of the first
The question therefore arises, Why was the language retained'through all of the several amendments of the law creating and governing county school districts of the first class if it was meaningless and was not to be given any force or effect ? There is afiother phase of our school legislation which has some bearing at least on the question now before us. Before the county school districts of the first class were
It is contended, however, on behalf of the defendants, that the incongruity is more apparent than real, because the Legislature in 1915 required all property to be assessed at a higher valuation than it had been assessed theretofore. There would bé much force to that contention were it not for the incontrovertible fact that the limitation of seven mills is found many years prior to 1915. Indeed, defendants rely on chapter 135, Laws U^b 1911, where the limitation is found. The limitation, however, existed long before that date. In view of those facts is it not more reasonable to assume that the Legislature intended that the portion of section 1891x27, supra, which we have italicized, be given some force and effect, and that seven mills is not to be taken as an absolute and inflexible limitation?
There is still another cogent reason, however, why we are inclined to the view that the lawmaking power in creating county school districts of the first class did not intend to place so low a limitation upon the power of those districts to raise funds as to unduly limit the length of the school year. This is pointed out in the case of Board of Education v. Hunter, supra, and it is there shown that by chapter 29, Laws Utah 1911, a “high school fund” was created, which, according to the rules adopted by the state board of education, can be apportioned only among such school districts as shall maintain high schools for a period of nine months in each year according to the standard required by said board. It is also contended by plaintiff, and conceded by defendants, that the right to participate in that fund depends upon the condition that the high school of Carbon county be maintained for a period of nine months and according to the standard fixed by the state board of education. It is alleged under oath on behalf of plaintiff, and admitted by defendants, that plaintiff cannot maintain its high school for a period in excess of seven months if the limitation of seven mills is imposed. It is further conceded that such is the case with a considerable number of county school districts of the first
In view, therefore, of the matters herein referred to, and others to which we shall not pause to refer, we feel' constrained to hold that the language of section 1891x27, supra, is not so clear and free from-doubt as to authorize us to overturn all the levies that have been made pursuant
In concluding this opinion we feel constrained to add that in arriving at the foregoing conclusion we have also kept in mind the fact that there is now pending before the people of this state a proposed amendment to the Constitution which, if adopted, will provide for reasonable • and logical
It follows from what has been said that a peremptory writ of mandate should issue, requiring the defendants to make a levy of eight and five-tenths mills on the dollar upon all of the property of Carbon county as shown by the assessment rolls for the year 1920 and in accordance with the estimate prepared by the plaintiff and filed with the defendants.
Such is the order.