9 A. 722 | N.H. | 1886
Section 5, c. 202, Laws of 1883, authorizing the town of Antrim to raise $10,000, by loan or taxation, "for the purpose of erecting a school-building," and to give a perpetual lease of the same to a corporation called Antrim academy "for school purposes without payment of rent," is to be so construed, if it reasonably may be, as to be consistent with a presumed legislative intent not to give an unconstitutional and void sanction to taxation for a private purpose. Opinion of the Justices,
Local education is a local purpose for which legislative power may be delegated to towns. State v. Hayes,
When not controlled by the exercise of judicial and executive power, the municipal and official management of free roads, as well as the corporate management of toll-roads, may infringe public rights of use; but as the possibility of such remediable wrong does not prohibit the legislative exercise of the power of eminent domain *287
for laying out, or the power of taxation for buying and building, such ways, so a possible violation of a public right of using the proposed public school-house in Antrim does not prohibit an appropriation of public money for the acquisition of the right. The common and equal privilege of use will be enforcible by adequate remedies. McDuffee v. Railroad,
The lessee of the proposed school-house will hold it in trust for the public service to which it will be devoted by the statute and the constitution, and the court cannot assume that the trustee's duty will not be promptly, constantly, and thoroughly performed. In the act authorizing the lease there is no evidence of an unconstitutional purpose, and there is no legal presumption of such a purpose on the part of the legislature, the town, or the academy corporation.
A reservation of all rights necessary to make this Antrim appropriation a constitutional expenditure of public money is naturally and reasonably implied. The corporation accepting the lease will accept it with the legal construction, and subject to all the conditions, necessary to give validity to the statute and the lease. They will voluntarily assume every fiduciary obligation required to sustain the enjoyment of the common and equal right essential to the public character of the use for which they, as public servants, will be entrusted with the possession of the building. They will be as firmly bound by the restrictions imposed by the proviso of art. 83, and all other constitutional requirements applicable to their trust, as if every item of their duty, established by the paramount law were expressly and fully set forth in the lease. Under their supervision the use of the property, conformed to all express and implied conditions, will be public and legal in every sense demanded by the property rights of tax-payers and the educational rights of all entitled to the direct and indirect advantages of the tax.
In E. Cemetery Association v. Beecher,
Our constitution does not contain such a prohibition of taxation for the support of other public schools than those under the exclusive superintendence of town authorities as was enforced in Jenkins v. Andover,
Private contributions added to a public appropriation for building a highway do not make the way private (Kelley v. Kennard,
Demurrer sustained.
BLODGETT, J., did not sit: the others concurred.