191 Ind. 502 | Ind. | 1922
This was an application by the relators, Benjamin F. Wissler and Elbert Huddleston as members of the board of trustees and Huddleston as treasurer of the board of the consolidated schools of the school town of Cambridge City and Jackson school township, for mandate to compel appellant as trustee of Jackson township to pay Huddleston as treasurer, certain speciñed school funds aggregating $3,121.10 theretofore received by appellant as such trustee from the treasurer of Wayne county, Indiana, and to require him to otherwise perform his duties as one of the trustees of such consolidated schools as commanded by an act of the general assembly. Acts 1917 p. 545, §6482h et seq. Burns’ Supp. 1918; Appellant, upon the overruling of his demurrer to appellees’ amended complaint, refused to plead fur
The parties to this appeal have confined themselves to the single question, that is to say; does the 1917 act, authorizing the consolidation of schools create a taxing district or school corporation in which the method therein provided for taxation for the maintenance of such schools, violate our constitutional provision requiring a “uniform and equal rate of assessment and taxation?” §1, Art. 10, Constitution.
The 1917 act, supra, in substance provides: Section 1, that the school trustees of any incorporated town or city of the fifth class located wholly within any township, and. the school trustee of such township may “consolidate the elementary schools or high schools, or both, of said corporations or to furnish consolidated school facilities for children of school age of both school corporations in the manner and upon the conditions hereinafter prescribed.”
Sections 2 and 3 require joint action on the part of the school trustees of such city or incorporated town and the school trustee of the township, and prescribes
Section 4 has reference to the preliminary control of consolidated schools.
Section 5 provides that such consolidated schools shall be under the control and management of a school board composed of three school trustees, two of whom shall be elected by the board of trustees of the town, or the common council of the city, as the case may be, and the persons so elected, together with the township trustee, shall constitute the school board of such consolidated schools. However, it is made the duty of the township trustee to perform the clerical work and bookkeeping for the board.
Section 6 provides that: “Said school board shall perform the duties and shall have all the powers vested in the school boards of towns and cities of the fifth class under the law of this state. The cost of maintaining such consolidated schools'shall be apportioned between the city or town and the township in the territory outside such city or town in proportion to the number of children of school age enumerated in each corporation. Taxes to meet such cost shall be levied by said school trustees and collected in the city or town and the township in the same manner as other taxes are levied and collected.”
Section 7 empowers such trustees when necessary, to build new buildings or make repairs on old ones, purchase building sites and apportion the cost thereof between the city or town and the township.ki the territory outside such city or town, in the ratio that the taxable property in such city or town and the territory outside such city or town bears to the whole amount of the taxable property of such city or town and township. Such trustees are also given “sole power to issue bonds of the separate corporations comprising said eonsoli
By §8 any school house constructed by such school trustees becomes the joint property of both corporations in proportion to the amount paid by each for the construction thereof, and it further provides that the school houses and school sites of either school corporation, or both, may be used for consolidated school purposes.
Section 9 has to do with the transportation of pupils to such consolidated schools and requires each school corporation to bear the expense of transporting its pupils, but where “by reason of conditions of roads or streams, or distance, it would not be advantageous for certain children of school age to be transported to any consolidated school established and maintained under this act, then said school board may maintain separate schools and provide school houses for such children so affected by conditions of roads, streams, or distance to consolidated schools.”
Section 10 declares an emergency.
The question here involves the taxing provision of the act, supra, or rather the uniformity of distributing the cost for the maintenance of consolidated schools. If by the consolidation of schools under this act an independent school corporation thereby results, then the tax levy throughout the district thus included must conform to the rule requiring “a uniform and equal rate of assessment and taxation.” But shall the act be so interpreted?
The provision, §7, relative “to the issue of bonds of the separate corporations comprising said consolidated school district” is the only one in which, and the only time the word “district” appears in the act. As a part of the phrase “consolidated school district” the word
Directing our further consideration to the act as a whole, we know that at the time it was passed, and now, we had, and have school cities, school towns, and school townships, which are bodies corporate and each coextensive with its particular political subdivision of the state. These bodies differ somewhat in the machinery for their control and management, but each is maintained in part by taxes levied and collected on the property subject to taxation within its jurisdiction, namely, the civil city, incorporated civil town, or civil township. The manner of levying and- collecting taxes for school purposes other than for the maintenance of consolidated schools has never been challenged in this state for lack of uniformity.
Judgment affirmed.