CITIZENS TO PROTECT PUBLIC FUNDS AND DUDLEY KIMBALL, PLAINTIFFS-APPELLANTS, v. BOARD OF EDUCATION OF THE TOWNSHIP OF PARSIPPANY-TROY HILLS, DEFENDANT-RESPONDENT.
Supreme Court of New Jersey
Argued June 8, 1953-Decided June 25, 1953.
13 N.J. 172
For the reasons herein expressed I would affirm the judgment of the Superior Court, Appellate Division.
WACHENFELD, J., concurs in this dissent.
For reversal-Chief Justice VANDERBILT, and Justices HEHER, OLIPHANT, JACOBS and BRENNAN-5.
For affirmance-Justices WACHENFELD and BURLING-2.
Mr. John H. Grossman argued the cause for respondent.
The opinion of the court was delivered by
WILLIAM J. BRENNAN, JR., J. Upon plaintiffs’ petition, in which defendant joined, we certified the judgment entered in the Law Division of the Superior Court dismissing plaintiffs’ amended complaint.
Defendant proposed a program for enlarging several school buildings and to issue bonds in the amount of $560,000 to finance the first half of the program. There being existing debt limitations, approval of the proposal, as required by
When the building program was authorized by resolution adopted August 27, 1952, the 1952-1953 school budget included an appropriation captioned “Current expenses, administrative, architecture fees, preliminary.” Some $358.85 of this appropriation was spent by defendant for “printing, artist‘s work and postage” to print and circulate an 18-page booklet entitled “Read the Facts Behind the Parsippany-Troy Hills School Building Program.” All but one page of the booklet depicts in graphic form, effectively illustrated to arrest the reader‘s attention, such facts as the growth of the grade school population (from 1945, doubled, and by 1956 to be tripled), the inadequacies of existing facilities, the proposed immediate additions, with architectural sketches, to two schools, other expansions planned to be deferred until 1955, the aggregate and annual costs, principal and interest, of the immediate program and the effect upon taxes of such cost. However, there also appears on the cover and on two of the pages “Vote YES,” and “Vote YES-December 2, 1952,” and an entire page which, except for an accompanying sketch, we reproduce:
“What Will Happen if You Don‘t Vote Yes?
Double Sessions ! !!
This will automatically CHEAT your child of 1/3 of his education (4 hours instead of 6)
Yearly school changing and hour long Bus rides will continue for many children.
Morning Session (8:30 - 12:30) Children will leave home 1/2 hour earlier
Afternoon Session (12:30 - 4:30) Children will return home 1 1/2 hours later (many after dark)
Children in some families would be attending different sessions (depending upon grade)
Transportation costs will increase (could double) with 2 sets of bus routes per day.
Temporary room rentals will continue ($4,000 per year)
Double use of equipment will necessitate more rapid replacement.
NOTE: Operating expenses will continue to rise as the enrollment increases (more teachers, more supplies and equipment for children. THIS WILL BE SO WHETHER WE BUILD OR NOT.)”
On the oral argument in this court we were told that the substance of what plaintiffs sought by the amended complaint was a judgment declaring that the project could not be legally consummated for failure of the defendant prior to the referendum to submit the building plans to the local planning board according to
The nature of the inquiry and the consequences of a disapproval by the State Commissioner of Education or the Local Government Board are very different. The State Commissioner concerns himself with the questions whether “existing educational facilities in such school district are or within five years will be less than eighty per centum (80%) adequate” and whether “the new educational facilities to be financed pursuant to such proposal or ordinance will within ten years be fully utilized,”
The contention that there was error in the denial of a declaratory judgment as to the legality of the expenditures for the printing and distribution of the booklet, and the exposure of school children to the radio broadcast is premised solely upon the assertion that the same things may be done or attempted by the defendant board in connection with the balance of the building program upon its submission to the electorate for adoption. It was conceded on the oral argument that the actions under attack, if improper, would not suffice to invalidate the election already held. But the actions taken, it is admitted, had particular relation only to the proposal before the electorate on December 2, 1952, and for aught that appears they seem to have spent their force. The booklet on its face shows that it is not intended for use in connection with future plans for completing the balance of the expansion program. Plainly, then, any issues as to both the booklet and the radio broadcast are moot and the resolution of new, or even similar, issues as to other actions attempted by the defendant for a similar purpose in the future must await the event.
Nevertheless, the importance of the question makes appropriate our comment upon the actions taken. Cf. United States v. W. T. Grant Company, 345 U.S. 629, 73 S. Ct. 894, 97 L. Ed. 1303 (1953).
Every school district is obligated to provide suitable school facilities and accommodations for all children who reside in the district and desire to attend the public schools therein.
There is no express statutory provision authorizing the expenditure by boards of education of public funds in the manner done by the defendant board for the printing and distribution of the booklet. The power, however, within the limits hereafter stated, is to be found by necessary or fair implication in the powers expressly conferred by
The power so implicit plainly embraces the making of reasonable expenditures for the purpose of giving voters relevant facts to aid them in reaching an informed judgment when voting upon the proposal. In these days of high costs,
But the defendant board was not content simply to present the facts. The exhortation “Vote YES” is repeated on three pages, and the dire consequences of the failure so to do are over-dramatized on the page reproduced above. In that manner the board made use of public funds to advocate one side only of the controversial question without
“It must be conceded that the electors of said city opposing said bond issue had an equal right to and interest in the funds in said power fund as those who favored said bonds. To use said public funds to advocate the adoption of a proposition which was opposed by a large number of said electors would be manifestly unfair and unjust to the rights of said last-named electors, and the action of the board of public service commissioners in so doing cannot be sustained, unless the power to do so is given to said board in clear and unmistakable language.”
And in Elsenau v. City of Chicago, 334 Ill. 78, 165 N. E. 129, 131 (Ill. Sup. Ct. 1929), appears the following:
“The conduct of a campaign, before an election, for the purpose of exerting an influence upon the voters, is not the exercise of an authorized municipal function and hence is not a corporate purpose of the municipality.”
We do not mean that the public body formulating the program is otherwise restrained from advocating and espousing its adoption by the voters. Indeed, as in the instant case, when the program represents the body‘s judgment of what is required in the effective discharge of its responsibility, it is not only the right but perhaps the duty of the body to endeavor to secure the assent of the voters thereto. The question we are considering is simply the extent to and manner in which the funds may with justice to the rights of dissenters be expended for espousal of the voters’ approval of the body‘s judgment. Even this the body may
We acknowledge that the limits here pronounced are not suggested in the decision of the former Court of Errors and Appeals in City Affairs Committee of Jersey City v. Jersey City, 134 N.J.L. 180 (E. & A. 1946). We are persuaded, however, that simple fairness and justice to the rights of dissenters require that the use by public bodies of public funds for advocacy be restrained within those limits in the absence of a legislative grant in express terms of the broader power.
We note one other irregularity of the defendant board in this connection. The appropriation for “Current expenses, administrative, architecture fees, preliminary” plainly is not a “statement so itemized as to make the same readily understandable” within the requirement of
Finally, as to the plaintiffs’ contention that the exposure of the school children to the radio broadcast of December 1st violated
Judgment affirmed.
HEHER, J., concurring. Once it is conceded that the local board of education is empowered to submit the merits of the issue to the electorate at public expense, the judicial supervisory jurisdiction is concerned only with the limitations of the power and the containment of its exercise within
The mode and manner of the performance of the local function, if directed to an end within the allotted sphere of action, is not a justiciable question. Action transcending the dictates of reason constitutes an excess of power correctible by the judicial process; but mere matters of policy, propriety, expediency, taste and delicacy in the way of action for the attainment of a lawful end are not subject to the least judicial superintendency. Debatable questions as to reasonableness of policy and procedure are not for the courts but for the local authority. We do not substitute our judgment in this regard for the discretion of the local administrative body, reasonably exercised; the judicial function is the correction of arbitrary and unreasonable action and abuse of power. Salisbury v. Borough of Ridgefield, 137 N.J.L. 515 (Sup. Ct. 1948). This is fundamental in the separation of powers; the judicial province is to confine the local agency within its delegated sphere of action. If the question of reasonableness be fairly arguable, then the doubt is to be resolved in favor of the action taken. If the object in view be lawful, the choice of means to that end rests in the sound discretion of the administrative authority; and there can be no judicial interference unless the mode of execution itself be contrary to law or palpably unreasonable or wanting in good faith. N. J. Good Humour, Inc., v. Board of Com‘rs of Bradley Beach, 124 N.J.L. 162 (E. & A. 1940).
There can be no doubt that the thing done here was designed to and did in fact serve an essential public purpose. The local board of education is under a peremptory duty to provide “suitable school facilities and accommodations for all children who reside in the district and desire to attend the public schools therein,” including “proper school buildings, together with furniture and equipment, convenience of access thereto, and courses of study suited to the ages and attainments of all pupils between the ages of five and twenty
It was conceded on the oral argument that 90% of the brochure constituted a fair presentation of the facts, and was unexceptionable. Complaint is directed to the “exhortation” to vote “yes,” as in the nature of advocacy and therefore beyond the function of the administrative body. The court deems objectionable this and what is termed over-dramatization of “the dire consequences of the failure so to do,” as the use of public funds for advocacy of “one side only of the controversial question without affording the dissenters the opportunity by means of that financed medium to present their side.” The court distinguishes between “the presentation of facts merely” and “arguments to persuade the voters that only one side has merit,” suggesting that the funds entrusted to the local authority “belong equally to the proponents and opponents of the proposition.” “Presentation of facts” is within the implied power; but “arguments to persuade the voters” are not.
I consider this an arbitrary differentiation at variance with the realities and the essential content of the power. If the board may present the “facts” bearing upon the merits of the submission, on what consideration is it to be restrained from giving expression to its experienced judgment as to the existence of a public exigency and the course that will serve the need? It is all for the enlightenment of the electorate in aid of the just determination of an issue related to the public interest. There is no element of compulsion; it is purely informative. I cannot accept the proposition that there may be a presentation of the facts bearing upon the need, but not their assessment by the authority to whom the administration of the school system has been entrusted and whose judgment is informed by actual experience in the performance of the statutory duty. And was it not proper for the board to conclude with the statement that,
If there is to be a declaratory judgment denying the power as here exercised, I dissent. I would affirm the judgment of dismissal.
HEHER, J., concurring in result.
For affirmance-Chief Justice VANDERBILT, and Justices HEHER, OLIPHANT, BURLING, JACOBS and BRENNAN-6.
For reversal-None.
