ORLEANS PARISH SCHOOL BOARD
v.
CITY OF NEW ORLEANS.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Orleans.
*281 S. Roccaforte, New Orleans, for appellee.
Henry B. Curtis and Grady C. Durham, New Orleans, for appellant.
REGAN, Judge.
This is an appeal by the defendant, City of New Orleans, from a judgment ordering it to transfer to plaintiff, Orleans Parish School Board, one hundred and seventynine parcels of improved and unimproved property dedicated exclusively to school purposes, title to which is presently registered in the name of the City of New Orleans.
During the course of the regular session of the Louisiana Legislature of 1948, the members thereof passed a joint resolution designated as Act No. 535, which was subsequently ratified by the electorate and thence adopted as an amendment to Section 12 of Article IV of the Constitution of Louisiana relative to "the funds, credit, property or things of value of the State, or of any political corporation thereof". The amending provision subjected to this attack reads as follows:"And provided, further, that the City of New Orleans, through its mayor, is hereby authorized and directed to transfer to the Orleans Parish School Board title to any and all school property, excepting all property of the Isaac Delgado Central Trades School, now or hereafter standing in the name of the city and dedicated exclusively to school purposes."
In pursuance of this amendment, plaintiff requested defendant to comply with the provisions thereof. Defendant declined to comply therewith until such time as the constitutiоnality of the amendment had been judicially determined. Hence plaintiff instituted this "friendly" action of mandamus to facilitate and expedite the execution of the transfer in conformity with the amendment to the constitution.
The original and supplemental petitions addressed to the Court, a qua, by the plaintiff herein, excluded all of the property of thе Isaac Delgado Central Trades School and all property acquired by the City of New Orleans for school purposes pursuant to and by virtue of the existence of any trust. Defendant's original and supplemental answers admit all of the pertinent allegations of the plaintiff's original and supplemental petitions, but, in the final *282 analysis, simply deny that рlaintiff is entitled to the remedy afforded by the writ of mandamus.
This matter was tried in its entirety on the pleadings, and the alternative writ of mandamus issued herein was made peremptory by the judge, a quo.
Title to the property, according to the Supreme Court, which transferred the case to us, is not in dispute, and, therefore, we are relegated to the only question which is now posed for our consideration by virtue of the foregoing pleadings, and that is whether plaintiff, the Orleans Parish School Board, has a right to compel the defendant, City of New Orleans, by mandamus proceedings, to transfer certain improved and unimproved properties, dedicated exclusively to school purposes to the plaintiff, in conformity with the provisions of Article IV, Section 12 of the Constitution of Louisiana as amended in 1948.
Defendant, City of New Orleans, opposes the transfer of the properties and maintains that (a) "mandamus is not a proper remedy where the act to be performed would be illegal and impossible of performance"; (b) "Act 535 of 1948, which purports to amend Section 12, Article IV of the Constitution of Louisiana covers a multiplicity of subjects and is unconstitutional"; (c) "The amendment deprives the City of New Orleans of property without due process of law in violation of the United States Constitution"; (d) "the amendment is not self-executing and requires additional legislation to make it operative."
In support of its contention designated hereinabove as (a) defendant argues that, in view of the fact that the amendment contained the phrase "authorized and directed" it was not a mandate issued to the Mayor to transfer the properties; that the Legislature was merely permitting the Mayor to transfer the school properties and was not making that conveyance mandatory. A fortiori, there exists by virtue of the words used in drafting the amendment, that element of discretion which would make mandamus an improper remedy.
We are of the opinion that the very terminology of the amendment "that the City of New Orleans, through its mayor, is hereby authorized and directed to transfer" is a mandate to the City of New Orleаns to transfer to the Orleans Parish School Board, title to any and all school property "excepting all property of the Isaac Delgado Central Trades School, now or hereafter standing in the name of the city and dedicated exclusively to school purposes."
It is obvious that the Legislature did not intend to devolve upon the Mаyor of the City of New Orleans a mere exercise of his discretion, but to impose a positive and absolute obligation.
It may not be amiss to note in this instance, because of the elaborate alternative contentions of respective counsel as to the ramifications of the phrase "authorized and directed" that words are intermediary between thought and things. We express ourselves not merely through words, which are only signs, but through what they signifythrough things. Words per se are colorless and sometimes meaningless; but the thing that a word stands for has a meaning of its own (such as "directed") and usually a meaning charged with associations of ideas (such as "command") and most often this associative meaning is the рrimary and important one in its use.
Defendant, in support of its adverse contention designated hereinabove as (b) relies principally on the case of Graham v. Jones,
In the Graham case [
In the Graham case the constitutional amendment consisted of several separate and distinct amendments. The amendment now involving our consideration is but a single amendment which amends only one section of one article of the Constitution, namely, Section 12, Article IV, and there is but one modificatiоn, the transfer of school property from the City of New Orleans to the Orleans Parish School Board. The form in which this constitutional amendment was drafted is the same form in which all constitutional amendments are drafted; that is, the whole section was reproduced as amended.
We are of the opinion that the constitutional amendment and its joint resоlution, Act No. 535 of 1948, does not violate the provisions of Section 1 of Article XXI of the Constitution.
Defendant further insists that the aforesaid Act No. 535 of 1948 and the amendment to Section 12 do not make reference to any other provisions of the Constitution, although the amendment is clearly amendatory of several other sections thereof, namely, Section 16 of Article XII, Section 11 of Article XII and Section 24.14 of Article XIV. In our opinion there is no merit to this contention. The act and amendment are not repugnant to nor specifically amendatory of the aforesaid articles. The fact that they relate to matters concerning the City and the School Board does not invalidate the amendment, otherwise an endeavor to amend the constitution would require the use of absurd intellectual gymnastics.
Defendant, in support of its adverse contention designated hereinabove as (c) insists that "there is no question but what the City of New Orleans, being a municipal corporation and, therefore, a creature of the State Legislature, mаy have its charter amended, changed, or even abolished, except as protected by the Constitution of the State or of the United States. Trustees of Dartmouth College v. Woodward Dartmouth College Case,
In State ex rel. Kemp v. City of Baton Rouge,
It cannot now be seriously disputed that the operation and administration of the public schools of the State of Louisiana are for the benefit of the public welfare in general and, therefore, subject to Legislative control. As long ago as 1845, the several constitutions of this State provided that "the legislature shall establish free public schools throughout the State, and shall provide means for their support by taxation on property, or otherwise." This provision is contained in Article 134 of the Constitution of 1845. The administration of public schools is not of prime concern of the City of New Orleans, but, is the principal function of the Orleans Parish School Board, a political subdivision of the State, which has been invested with the power, control and administration of public education in this municipality. It, therefore, may be enunciated as a corollary that school properties are possessed solely for the public use and welfare.
McQuillan on Municipal Corporations, Secs. 46.02, Vol. 16 of the 3rd Edition, states: "* * * Generally, however, the common or free school system of education in this country has been organized, fostered by constitutional provisions and legislative enactments as a primary and distinct function of the state and held under state control. * * * It is not a part of the local self-government inherent in the town, township, or incorporated community, except insofar as the Legislature may choose to make it such."
Section 4.20 of this same text states: "* * * Municipalities are protеcted by the due process clause against legislative alienation of their property and the transfer of it to a private person, but with this exception on the due process clause in the constitutions is of little importance so far as legislative control of municipal corporations is concerned."
An analagous condition exists in the City of New Orleans with reference to its public schools. Title to the school properties herein sought to be transferred is possessed by the City of New Orleans. Yet, the administration of the public schools is exercised by the Orleans Parish School Board. The constitutional amendment in ordering the transfer of the properties, which are the subject of this litigation, to the Orleans Parish School Board, is not diverting the use of the property from its original objective, it simply transfers the ownership thereof to the Orleans Parish School Board, which the people think, as evidenced by this constitutional amendment, is the proper state agency to possess these properties and it is not within the province of the judiciary to attempt to substitute its wisdom for that of the people, who are, in the final analysis, under our established system of government, supreme.
Further pursuing the foregoing subject, McQuillan on Municipal Corporations, Sec. 4, 133, Vol. 2, states: "It is generally held that transferring property and authority by act of the legislature from one class of public officers to another where the property is still devoted to its original purpose, does not invade the vested rights of the city. A statute authorizing the transfer of the use and possession of a municipal airport to an airport commission created by the Legislature, without compensation to the City, has been held to not violate the due process clause of the Federal Constitution." *285 Cited are Monaghan v. Armatage,
It is our considered opinion that in view of the established jurisprudence, as we interpret it, no rights, private or proprietary of the City of New Orleans are invaded or extracted from it by giving effect to the amendment, Section 12, Article IV of the Constitution of Louisiana.
We have observed that counsel for defendant urged in their supplemental answer that the constitutional amendment "would deprive the City of New Orleans of property held in trust", but has not either in brief or in oral argument before this Court endeavored to substantiate this allegation. The various properties involved herein were not acquired pursuant to or by virtue of the existence оf any trust. We must, therefore, assume that the defendant has abandoned this adverse contention and we shall not discuss it.
Defendant, in support of its adverse contention designated hereinabove as (d), insists that the amendment is not self-executing and required additional legislation to make it operative, and cites in support of this theorem State ex rel. Nоe v. Knop, La.App.,
It is also our opinion that there is no merit to this contention in view of the existing jurisprudence and, by the same token, the very terminology of the amendment leads only to the conclusion that it is self-operative, complete and sufficient unto itself. It "authorized and directs" the City of New Orleans, through its Mayor, to transfer to the Orleans Parish School Board, title to any and all property, excepting all property of the Isaac Delgado Central Trades School. No additional enabling legislation is required to give effect to the amendment. In State v. Knop, supra, [
In State ex rel. Curtis v. Ross,
The Angelle and Coguenham cases, supra, also hold that constitutional amendments are self-executing and support the legal conclusions of the plaintiff herein.
We are of the opinion that the peоple have spoken through the medium of this constitutional amendment; that the defendant has failed to overcome the presumption in favor of the constitutionality of the joint resolution, Act No. 535 of 1948 and the constitutional amendment to Section 12 of Article IV of the Constitution; and that the overwhelming weight of the jurisprudence sustains the constitutionality of the amendment.
For the reasons assigned the judgment appealed from is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
