295 N.W. 302 | Minn. | 1940
In substance the complaint alleges that because tax values have declined and tax delinquency increased, appellant's authorized income cannot meet the costs of maintaining its physical plant or the salary schedules of the employes, by reason of which the health and safety of the school children and the morale of the teachers is in grave danger, all of which creates an emergency in the Minneapolis school system making impossible the maintenance of a "thorough and efficient system of public schools." Minn. Const. art.
In our opinion the lower court may be sustained without any extended review of authorities or argument. In essence, the problem is this: Does legal justification exist for the attempted disregard by the board of a clear provision of law which restricts its power to levy property taxes to 22 mills? Appellant, for two reasons, supports the affirmative. First, an emergency exists in the *41 Minneapolis school system, the termination of which requires more revenue; second, any charter provision which operates to cause, through a restriction of its taxing power, the conditions described in the complaint is invalid or inoperative.
Implicitly present in both grounds thus advanced to justify disregard of established law is the assumption that the maintenance of a "thorough and efficient system of public schools," by taxation or otherwise, is the obligation of and mandate to the board of education. Also, whenever in its judgment the existing revenues are insufficient to provide the kind of a system which it regards as "thorough and efficient," an emergency exists, or, if not, the restrictions of law do not operate.
We think the statement of these premises refutes the appellant's entire case. By our constitution the mandate of establishing a general and uniform system of public schools was directed to the legislature. Minn. Const. art.
With respect to Minneapolis, the education system was directed and financed through the functioning of a board of education established by Sp. L. 1878, c. 157, as amended. However, in 1920 pursuant to Minn. Const. art.
When this mill limit was fixed by the charter amendment of 1921, the electorate of Minneapolis apparently regarded this outside limit as sufficient to raise funds for all school purposes. Allegations in the complaint contend that today this limit is too restrictive. But we are not authorized in law or inclined on principle to sanction a self-assumed power to expand this limit. Application for the desired relief must be made to those with capacity to act. Clearly, courts have no power to grant the relief requested.
Through the city charter, legislative power over education has been delegated by the legislature to the electorate of Minneapolis. Though such delegation of power is entirely permissible, the legislature's plenary power of legislating in this as in other fields is not thereby limited or impaired. See State ex rel. Board of Education v. Erickson,
No concept of emergency power, however modern, can justify this attempted departure by a governmental agency from fixed limitations upon its taxing power imposed by its creator.
Order affirmed. *43