Hickman College v. Trustees Colored Common School District A

111 Ky. 944 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1901

*946Opinion of the court by

JUDGE O’REAR

Affirming.

The town of Hickman, Fulton county, constitutes common school district No. 16 (white) of that county. From the allegations of the petition in this case we infer that colored common school district A, embraces the same territory. Prior to the adoption of the present Constitution the Legislature, by special acts, created the common school district No. 16 into a graded school, under the name of “Hickman College,” and authorized it to levy and collect a specific ad valorem tax on all the property of white persons and corporations in that territory, for the use of appellant. It is alleged, and not denied, that there was levied against the property of the Nashville, Chattanooga & St. Louis Railroad Company (corporation) in that district, and collected, for the years. 1891 to 1897, inclusive, the sum of $1,535.38, all of which was collected by and turned over to appellant, and that for the year 1898 a tax from the same corporation amounting to $194.81 was collected by the county superintendent, which he refused to apportion between the two districts, but was proposing to pay over to appellant. It was alleged that the colored children within the school age, resident of the district, were thirty-seven per cent, of the total number of children within the school age resident in that territory for the years 1891 to 1894, inclusive, and forty per cent, for the remaining years. Appellees sued appellant to recover $583.93, their proportion of the railroad tax collected as above stated, and to require the county superintendent to pay to them (appeliees) forty per cent, of the taxes assessed and collected for the year 1898. The^ circuit court allowed appellees’ claims, holding that appellant did not take the exclusive right to such taxes under the special *947acts referred to. The town of Hickman is a city of the fifth class.

In Mayor, etc., v. Wilson, 20 Ky. Law Rep., 29 (45. S. W., 82), this court held: “Charters of cities of the fifth class make no provision for public education or the establishment of schools therein, and it follows that matters connected with this subject are controlled either by provisions of the common school law, or by old charters under which they were governed at the time- of the passage of the common school law. Section 4433, Kentucky Statutes; Roberts v. Clay City, 19 Ky. Law Rep., 1047 (42 S. W., 909). . . . The fact that the Legislature has delegated to cities of the first, second, third, and fourth classes power to provide for public education therein, and has failed to confer this power upon cities of the fifth and sixth classes, plainly .indicates that it was the intention that these municipalities should be controlled by the provisions of the common school law on this subject.” This case was followed and approved in trustees of Common School District No. 8 v. City of Vanceburg, 20 Ky. Law Rep., 369 (46 S. W., 1). In Harrodsburg Educational District. No. 28 v. Trustees Colored School District. No. 1, 20 Ky. Law Rep., 1487 (49 S. W., 538), this court had before it the identical question presented here; that is, as to the apportionment between the colored and white districts of the railroad tax levied by the white school district. We there held that such tax, when so levied and collected, must be divided between the two districts, white and colored, in proportion to the number of children within the school age of each to the whole number. In so holding we followed the express provision of section 4101, Kentucky Statutes, —the only authority for levying and collecting such a tax. In the case of Roberts v. Clay City, supra, construing *948section M33, Kentucky Statutes, we held that special acts concerning school' districts in towns and cities of the fifth class were not repealed by the general law relating to common schools. But this must necessarily be understood as relating to such subjects as were not put in conflict by the general law7, as opposed to the special act in question. Otherwise section M33 would be in conflict with section 59, subsection 25, of the State 'Constitution, which prohibits the General Assembly from passing any local or special act “to provide for the management of common schools.” For,- although a private or special act relating to common school districts may remain ixx force till it is repealed, if the General Assembly should attempt to exexnpt it or its subject-matter from the operation of a general law in conflict with a special one, that would be, in effect, to provide by special act for the management of the common school in question. And on the subject of taxation for school purposes the rule herein announced should apply, for the additional reason that section 171 of the Constitution provides: “. . . Taxes shall be levied and collected for public purposes only. They shall be uniform upon all property subject to taxation within the territorial limits of the authority levying the tax; and' all taxes shall be levied and collected by general laws.” Now7, if we were to hold that the Legislature could, ixx spite of the plain mandate of the Constitution, authorize an unequal taxation upon property in a territorial limit, and direct or permit its collection by virtue and under authority .of special laws, which it attempted by genexml enactment to continue in force, wre would be wholly disregarding both the letter and spirit of the constitutional requirements quoted. The courts will not give such construction to an act of Legislature that will make *949it violative of the Constitution, when its language is susceptible of another. It is therefore that we conclude that the Legislature did not mean by section 4433 to continue in force such parts of special acts relating to common schools as would be in plain conflict with the general law then adopted covering the same subject. In Board of Education of Somerset v. Trustees Colored School District No. 1, 18 Ky. Law Rep., 103, (35 S. W., 549), and Harrodsburg Educational District, No. 28 v. Trustees Colored School District No. 1 105 Ky., 675 (20 Ky. Law Rep.), 1487, (49 S. W., 538), the result at which we arrive in this opinion is apparently reached by the court. The recent cases of Board of Education, 110 Ky., 932 (23 Ky. Law Rep., 376), (62 S. W., 1125), and Chambers v. Adair, 110 Ky., 942 (23 R., 373) (62 S. W., 1129), indicate the class of instances in which the doctrine announced in Roberts v. Clay City, supra,, are applicable, and in harmony with the construction here given as to the relation of such special acts to the Constitution.

At first glance it might appear that the answer in some-minor particulars had tendered an issue of fact as to the per cent, of colored children in the district, compared to the whole number. We can not see, though, that an issue of fact was intended to be or was- tendered by this pleading; and, as it is not discussed in the argument of appellant’s, brief, we treat the important legal question involved as> the sole ground of complaint here.

Judgment affirmed.

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