28 Cal. 254 | Cal. | 1865
By the Court,
This is an action to recover taxes levied for school district purposes in the County of San Mateo, in pursuance of the provisions of section thirty-seven of “An Act to provide for the maintenance and supervision of common schools,” passed April 6th, 1863. (Laws 1863, p. 203.) The question is, whether said section thirty-seven is repealed by section nine of “An Act to define and limit the compensation of officers, and reduce public expenses in the County of San Mateo,” passed February 6th, 1864, and section twelve of “ An Act to provide for the continuance and election of a Board of Supervisors in the County of San Mateo, and to define and limit the powers and duties of said Board in certain cases,” approved March 24th, 1864. (Laws 1864, pp. 51, 240.)
Section thirty-seven of the Act of 1863 provides, that “the Board of Trustees of any school district may, when in their judgment it is advisable, call an election and submit to the qualified electors of the district the question whether a tax shall be raised to furnish additional school facilities for said district, or to keep any school or schools in such district open for a longer period than the ordinary funds will allow, or for building an additional school house or houses, or for any two or all of these purposes.” It points out the mode of submitting the question to a vote of the people of the district, and in case the proposition is adopted, it further provides, that “ The Trustees shall issue certificates of election, and the Assessor shall, on receiving his, forthwith ascertain and enroll, in the manner provided for County Assessors, all the taxable persons and property in the district, and within thirty days he shall return his roll, footed up, to the Trustees. The Trustees, upon receiving the roll, shall deduct fifteen per cent therefrom for anticipated delinquencies, and then, by dividing the sum voted, together with the estimated cost of assessing and collecting added thereto, by the remainder of the roll, ascertain the rate per cent required; and the rate so ascertained (using the full cent in place of any fraction) shall be and it is hereby levied and assessed to, on, or against the persons or property named or described in said roll, and it shall be a lien on all such property until the tax is paid; and said tax, if not paid within the time limited in the next succeeding section for its payment, shall be recovered by suit, in the same manner and with the same costs as delinquent State and county taxes.” (Laws 1863, p. 203.)
This is a special local tax, levied not upon the property of the county at large, but confined to the school district, and
The Revenue Act of 1861, section one, before authorized the Board of Supervisors to levy “ a tax for county expenditures not exceeding sixty cents on each one hundred dollars,” and “such additional special taxes as the law of the State may authorize or require.” One of those special taxes subsequently authorized by the Act of 1863 was the county school tax, provided for in section sixty-three, before referred to. But section twelve of the Act of 1864, just cited, has been substituted for all these provisions, and doubtless limits the tax for the County School Fund to twenty cents on the hundred dollars, instead of twenty-five, the limit prescribed by section sixty-th'ree of the Act of 1863. It is inconsistent in this respect with said section sixty-three, and as that section refers to matters pertaining to the county under the control of the Supervisors, it is to that extent, doubtless, repealed. But with the special school district tax, authorized by section thirty-seven, the Board of Supervisors have nothing more to do now, than they had before the passage of the several Acts of
The judgment for the taxes levied under it must therefore be affirmed, and it is so ordered.