In a declaratory relief action plaintiff appeals from a judgment declaring invalid an election increasing the maximum tax rate of the district.
Question Presented
Was the election invalid because of failure to publish notice of the election %
Record 1
Plaintiff district is an elementary school district in San Mateo County. For five years the district has operated its five schools on a maximum tax rate of $1.99 on each $100 of assessed valuation, authorized in an election held pursuant to section 20803, Education Code. This authorization expired June 30, 1963. Unless the election herein considered is valid, on that date the tax rate reverted to 90 cents (see Ed. Code § 20751). The district for the last few years has, in fact, used the full $1.99 rate.
On February 5, 1963, the governing board of said district (hereinafter referred to as the board) adopted resolution 59 calling for the holding of an election to increase the maximum tax rate of the district to $2.16, and consolidated the election with the election for members of the board to be held April 16, 1963, as provided for in section 20805. The election for members of the board was called for and held in compliance with all the statutes applicable to such election. Notice of the election of board members was published in compliance with section 942, Education Code. The election *78 on the proposition to increase the maximum tax rate was called and held in conformity with all the statutes applicable to such elections, except that the notice of this election was not published in a newspaper of general circulation in the county as required by section 20803, Education Code. However, notices of said election were posted in three public places. 2 Notices of the election stating the purpose of the election and the time and place thereof were mailed with a sample ballot by the county clerk to each registered voter eligible to vote in said election.
At the election held on April 16, 1963, the proposition to increase the maximum tax rate carried. 3
Section 20803 requires the county superintendent of schools to approve the budget of each school district and file one copy with the county auditor, and one copy with the board of supervisors, together with a statement showing the amount of school district taxes required by each district. Because of the failure to publish the notice above mentioned, the county superintendent refused to approve any budget requiring a tax rate in excess of 90 cents.
Thereupon plaintiff district filed this action seeking judgment declaring the election valid and requiring the defendant county superintendent of schools to certify to the board of supervisors that the maximum tax rate of the district has been increased to $2.16. Defendant answered, denying the validity of the election. This ease was tried upon an agreed statement of facts similar to the one presented to this court. The trial court entered judgment for defendant declaring that the failure to publish the notice avoided the election.
Failure to Publish The Notice
Plaintiff contends that the voters received adequate notice of the election; that the omission to publish did not affect the result of the election, and that therefore the failure to publish the notice did not invalidate the election. The notices of the election which the voters received are: the official notices posted, and the personal notices sent the voters by the *79 county clerk. Additionally there was extensive newspaper coverage of the election, including some ten articles on the election appearing in the newspaper in the district which plaintiff states would have published the official notice, had it been published. 4
Section 20803 provides that in elections to increase the maximum tax rate of a school district, notice of the election shall be published “pursuant to section 6063 of the Government Code” in a newspaper of general circulation in the county, if there is such. The section then provides that “in addition” to the published notice certain notice and a sample ballot be sent to each elector. This portion of the section was complied with.
As will hereinafter appear, the courts of California have been liberal in the application of the principle that it is the duty of the courts to validate an election if possible. The following cases so hold: In
People
v.
Brenham
(1851)
People
v.
Prewett
(1899)
Sanchez
v.
Fordyce
(1903)
In
Rideout
v.
City of Los Angeles
(1921)
In re East Bay etc. Water Bonds of 1925
(1925)
In
County of Sonoma
v.
Sanborn
(1934)
In
Ivanhoe Irr. Dist.
v.
All Parties
(1960)
The same principle is enunciated in
Veterans’ Finance Committee of 1943
v.
Betts
(1961)
In
Board of Supervisors
v.
Rechenmacher
(1951)
In
Cacheville etc. School Dist.
v.
Hiddleson
(1951)
Apparently the last case in California avoiding an election for failure to comply with statutory notice provisions is
Stumpf
v.
Board of Supervisors
(1901)
In addition to
Stumpf,
respondent relies on
Town of Cortlandt
v.
Village of Peekskill
(1939)
Respondent contends that in some of the cases hereinbefore cited the voters were chargeable with notice of the election by reason of the inclusion of the date of the election in the statute and argues that for that reason the failure to give the statutory notice became unimportant. Respondent then quotes from
Veterans’ Finance Committee of 1943
v.
Betts, supra,
The language quoted by respondent from Veterans’ Finance Committee reads (p. 401): “It is essential to the proper exercise of the elective franchise that the voters be informed of the offices to be filled and the measures to be voted upon at any election. Accordingly, where the voters are not bound by law to take notice of the time and the place of holding an election, and the officers to be chosen or.measures to be voted upon at such election, a failure to give the statutory notice vitiates the election.”
In our case we do not have a “failure to give the statutory notice ”; we have merely a failure to give a part of the statutory notice. A part of the required notice was given, namely, the notice by posting and the notice and sample ballots sent each elector by mail. We do not believe that the above quoted language was meant to cover or covers a situation where, as here, there is only a partial failure to give the statutory notice and where it appears that the substantial rights of the electors were in nowise affected. It applies only to situations where the statutory. requirement of notice was not complied with in any respect.
In the following cases (hereinbefore cited), the time and place of the election was not fixed by law and yet the election of which the notice was either defective or not given was held valid. In
People
v.
City of Carlsbad, supra,
*85 As bearing on the importance or lack of importance of publication of notice where the required posting and mailing has been done, is the fact that under section 20803 if there is no newspaper published in the county where the school district is situated, no publication is required. If in the latter instance, posting and mailing is sufBcient to give the district electors notice of the election, it would appear that the failure to publish notice where there is a newspaper in the county should not be fatal. Thus, the general rule quoted in Veterans’ Finance Com., supra, to the effect that a failure to give the statutory notice vitiates an election where the voters are not bound by law to take notice of the time and place of holding the election, cannot apply to the elimination of a part of the statutory notice, which part the Legislature has decreed need not under some circumstances be given.
“The test for determining whether an election is invalidated because of a failure to strictly comply with the notice provisions prescribed by the statute has frequently been stated to be whether the voters generally have had knowledge of the election and full opportunity to express their will, or whether the variance may have affected the result by- depriving a sufficient number of voters of the opportunity to exercise their franchise.”
(People
v.
City of Carlsbad, supra,
In our case there was evidence of actual notice and widespread publicity with respect to the date, place and purpose of the election given the residents of the district. Under the circumstances of this case to invalidate the election because of the failure to publish the notice would violate the rule set forth in East Bay, supra, at page 744: “The books are filled to overflowing with statements of the rule, in substance, that, wherever possible from a standpoint of legal justice to validate an election, it is the duty of the court to do so.”
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded with directions to the trial court to enter judgment declaring the validity of the election and granting the other relief prayed for, in accordance with the views herein expressed.
Sullivan, J., and Molinari, J., concurred.
Notes
There is no dispute as to the facts in this case. They appear in an agreed statement of the parties.
Seetion 20803 provides that "the eleetion shall be called, held, and conducted ... in as nearly the same manner as is practicable as are elections for the issuance of school district bonds ..." Section 21751, relating to school district bond elections, requires posting in at least three public places.
A prior eleetion held on March 20, 1962, to increase the maximum tax rate failed to obtain the necessary votes to carry the proposition.
PlaintifE points out that the vote in the district was higher than the vote in 18 of the 28 school districts holding elections on the same date and that on March 20, 1962, at an election in this district to increase the maximum tax rate, where proper notice was published, only 27 per cent of the eligible voters voted, while at this election 31 per cent voted. Also the proposition received a very substantial majority, 1,914 affirmative votes to 1,014 votes against.
