350 Mich. 327 | Mich. | 1957
The plaintiff board of education of Kent county seeks our writ of mandamus to compel honor by the defendant Kent county tax allocation board of its first annual special education budget; such budget having been prepared and delivered in pursuance of sections 314 and 315 of the school code of 1955 (PA 1955, No 269 [CLS 1956, §§ 340.314, 340.315, Stat Ann 1955 Cum Supp §§ 15.3314, 15.-3315]). As to such budget the defendant board has refused, and now declines, to act in accordance with the apparent requirements of said section 315. Its reason for such declination will presently appear.
Urgent representations having been made that the processes of special education in Kent county will fail—during the initial year for which the budget was prepared—absent immediate relief by way of our writ,
A majority of the school electors of the Kent county school district, utilizing the statutory (section 319 [CLS 1956, § 340.319, Stat Ann 1955 Cum Supp § 15.3319]) form of ballot, duly voted—“at the several annual school elections in the constituent school districts”—to “come under” the provisions of “sections 309 to 327, inclusive,!” ? of the mentioned school code of 1955. The ballot specified, by its proviso, that the annual tax levied for administration
“Mr. Walstrom moved that the allocation board refuse to allocate any tax rate in the Kent county school district for the purposes according to [sections] 309 through 327 of the school code of 1955 as amended until such time as the question of increasing the tax limitation has been submitted to the electors and approved by them, based upon the opinion of the civil counsel. Supported by Mr. DeVries.
“Motion carried by the following vote: Yeas: De-Vries, Ulberg, Walstrom and Romyn. Nays: Clark.”'
The decisive question is whether the school electors, having voted to effectuate the ballot-identified sections of the code and having provided that “any annual property tax levied for administration shall' be limited to 1/2 mill,” thereby voted legal authorization of an annual tax — in addition to the constitutionally permissible 15 mills — for the purposes of the mentioned sections of the code. To this question we give affirmative answer and refer in support to the key to legislative intent as found in the proviso of said section 315. The proviso reads:
“Provided, That such allocations shall not be made within the 15-mill limitation and may not exceed the limit authorized by the election at which these sections are placed in effect.”
The broad and, we think, clear purpose of sections 309 through 327 was that of providing and financing special education for the handicapped (defined in
The so-called 15-mill amendment (Constitution-1908, art 10, § 21, as amended in 1948) is not offended by the conclusion reached here. The legislature has authorized, by this duly-adopted charter of' a municipal corporation (Hall v. Ira Township, 348 Mich 402), that which is expressly excepted from restrictive scope of the amendment. The charter and its procedure, rather than the amendment, ceils and limits the tax which is to be levied for the purposes of . sections 309 through 327.
The writ will issue. No costs.
The need is that of spreading the herein approved special education tax on the respective tax rolls in time for collection commencing December 1st of this year.