186 Ky. 657 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1920
Opinion of the Court by
Reversing.
Lebanon is a city of the fourth, class, and there having been organized, therein, a system of free graded common schools for the education of the white and colored pupil children of the city, under the management of a board of education, the general council adopted an ordinance as provided by section 3588a, Kentucky Statutes, by which the system of schools was separated into a free white graded common school for the white pupil children of the city, and a free colored graded common school for the colored children of the city. In other words, the ordinance established two free graded common school districts, each with the same limits as the city, one of which was for the use of the white pupil children, and the other,
For the year, 1915, the council of the city, by an ordinance, levied a tax for general school purposes, which we assume, means the ordinary expenses of the maintenance of a school, upon the property of white persons and corporations, other than railroads and bridge corporations, within the district, of fifteen cents upon each one hundred dollars of the assessed value of the property, and upon the same property, a tax of fifteen cents upon each one hundred dollars of its assessed value for the purpose as expressed in the ordinance to be used solely for building an additional room to the school buildings of the white district.
For the year, 1916, the council adopted an ordinance levying the same taxes, and for the same purposes as for the year, 1915, upon the assessed value of the property of the white persons and corporations, other than railroads and bridge corporations within the district, the ordinance specially providing, that fifteen cents of the tax, levied, was for general school purposes, and fifteen cents upon each one hundred dollars of the assessed value of the property, was levied for the purpose, and to be
For the year, 1917, the council adopted an ordinance, which levied a tax of thirty-seven and one-half cents upon each one hundred dollars of the assessed value of the property of white persons and corporations, other than railroads and bridge corporations within the district, but, the ordinance specially provided, that twenty-two cents of this levy was for ordinary school purposes, while fifteen and one-half cents upon each one hundred dollars, of the assessed value of the property, was levied, and should be used; for the purpose of paying the interest upon the $75,000.00 in bonds, which had been issued, by the white school district, for the erection of school buildings for the use of the white district, and to create a sinking fund to pay the principal of the bonds at maturity.
The foregoing taxes were collected, and the portion of taxes, collected for each of the years, named, for ordinary school purposes, from the corporations within the district, were divided into two portions in the proportion as the number of the white’and colored pupil children, in the city, bore to the entire number of the pupil children, both white and colored in the city, and the portion of it, which was in the proportion, that the number of colored children in the city bore to the entire number of children, both white and colored, was paid by the trustees of the white district, to the trustees of the colored district. The taxes, levied and collected under the ordinances, which provided, that the taxes were levied for the purpose, and to be used solely for the purpose of repairing and adding to the school buildings of the white district, were retained by the trustees of that district, and the money, received from th© levy of fifteen and one-half cents for the year, 1917, and which was. levied for the purpose as designated by the ordinance, to be applied to the payment of the interest and principal of the bonded indebtedness of the white district, was paid over to the sinking fund commissioners, who had been appointed theretofore, tc manage and control such fund.
It further appears from the agreement as to the facts on file, that, for the years, 1914, 1915 and 1916, there was no levy for taxes made, nor taxes collected upon the property of colored persons in the colored district, for repairs, or making of additions to the school buildings in that district, nor was a levy of taxes for such purposes sought;
The amount, arising from the taxes, levied and collected from the corporations in the city, other than railroads and bridge corporations, for the years, 1914, 1915 and 1916, for the specified purposes of repairing and adding to the school buildings in the white district, and the tax of 15% cents for the year, 1917, to pay the interest on the bonded indebtedness of the white district, to which the colored district would be entitled, if it was awarded such a sum of the-money as the number of colored pupils in the city, bears to the total number of children within the school age both white and colored, in the city, is the sum of $717.26, of which sum $507.88 is in the hands of the trustees of the white district, and $209.38 is in the hands of the sinking fund commissioners, appointed for the white district.
The circuit court adjudged, that the trustees of . the colored district recover of the trustees of the white district, the above mentioned sum of $507.88, and of the sinking fund commissioners, the sum of $209.38, which is in their hands, and from this judgment, the trustees of the white, free, graded, common school district have appealed, and the sinking fund commissioners have made a motion before this court, to grant them an appeal from the judgment rendered against them.
(a) In Trustees of Graded Free Colored Common Schools of Mayfield against Trustees, of Graded Free White Common Schools of Mayfield, 180 Ky. 574, it was held, that so much of section 3588a, Kentucky Statutes, as authorized a taxation of the property of corporations m cities of the fourth class, wherein a system of graded free common schools had been organized as provided by section 3588a, supra, for the purposes of the white district alone, and denied to the schools of the colored.district, any part of such taxes, was void as being in contravention of the constitutional guaranties, as the corporations were neither white nor colored, and as the stockholders therein might be white, colored, or both, to give all of the taxes, which might be levied upon and col
(b) Although the imposition and collection of the taxes sued for, for the benefit of the white district, were not authorized, the trustees 'of the colored district, who were the plaintiffs below, are not entitled to recover, unless the colored district has a legal right to the funds arising from such collection. The ordinances, which levied the taxes, in controversy,, and by the authority of which they were collected, as provided by section 181, of the Constitution, stated, specifically, the purposes for which they were imposed, and hence, the funds, arising from the taxes, can not, lawfully, be appropriated by the trustees of the white district to any purposes, other than the one for which they were levied, but, this would not authorize the levy and collection for the benefit of the white district, a tax upon property, which was not subject to taxation for its benefit. However, the only claim of right to the funds made by the trustees of the colored district, is, that it was levied and collected as a tax from property, which was subject to taxation for the benefit of the colored district, and that the colored district would be entitled to it, if such a tax had been imposéd for the benefit of the colored district, but which had not been done. As heretofore stated, the agreement as to the facts upon which the case was tried, fails to show that for either of the years in which the taxes, in controversy, were levied or collected, that there was any tax levied or sought to be levied upon the property, subject to taxation, in the colored district, for any of the purposes for" which the taxes, in controversy, were levied, and in fact, it does not appear, that the colored district had any need of the imposition of taxes for any purposes, for which the taxes, sued for, were levied and collected. It would seem that a district would not be entitled to taxes, which must come to it through a levy for that purpose, unless a levy had been made and the colored district would not
(c) We therefore conclude, that the court erred in adjudging, that the appellees should recover and the judgment against the trustees of the white school district, is reversed, and the motion for an appeal upon the part of the sinking fund commissioners, is sustained and the judgment against them, reversed and the cause remanded with directions to set aside the judgments and to dismiss the action.