2 A. 641 | N.H. | 1885
"The division of towns into school-districts heretofore existing is hereby abolished, and each town shall hereafter constitute a single district for school purposes: Provided, however, that districts organized under special acts of the legislature may retain their present organization." Laws of 1885, c. 43, s. 1. In the title of c. 89 of the same Laws, districts described in c. 43 as "organized under special acts" are called "special school-districts." Both acts took effect from and after March 1, 1886. Special districts retain their organization, and continue to exercise their corporate powers and perform their educational duties; but from and after the first day of March all other districts ceased to exist for general purposes, and were united in town districts. In these new town districts there are to be no superintending or prudential committees; but the duties heretofore performed by such committees devolve upon a school board of three persons chosen by ballot at the annual school-meeting of the town district.
Is the defendant district one of the "districts organized under special acts of the legislature"? In the revision of 1867 a new section was introduced in the chapter on high schools, providing that all statutes then in force, applying to particular places or districts, relating to schools, or to the committees or officers thereof, should remain in force. Gen. St., c. 82, s. 12. Statutes applying to particular places are generally called special acts. A corporation formed under a charter passed for no other purpose than its creation is organized under a special act, distinguished from the general organizing law. G. L., cc. 151, 152. The distinction between general and special legislation being indicated by the terms "organized under special acts," understood in their technical and ordinary legal sense, this distinction is to be taken as the test of the abolition of a school-district, unless competent evidence shows that a different test was intended by the legislature, and that the descriptive terms are to be understood in some other sense than that in which they are commonly used in the law.
In c. 43 there is evidence that the proviso of s. 1, saving special districts, was inserted after the original bill was drawn, without such clerical alterations as would make all the sections literally accurate when their meaning was modified by the proviso. But the evident verbal inaccuracy raises no difficulty of interpretation. Each section means what the whole act, taken together, shows the legislature understood it meant. The proviso being a saving clause that restrains the operation of the rest of the act within a certain limit, that limit is to be kept in view in reading the 2d, 4th, 5th, 6th, and 8th sections as well as the 1st. Section 2, providing for an equalization of school-house and other property by the assessment and remission of a tax, in terms requires the tax to be assessed "upon the whole town," when the meaning is that it shall be assessed upon the whole town district composed of abolished districts, and not upon a special district that retains its organization. *530 Section 5 requires the selectmen to call "the first meeting of such district so composed of the whole town," meaning the town district composed of abolished districts only. Section 6 requires "the said school board of each town" (meaning town district) to provide schools at such places and times "as shall give all the scholars of the town [meaning town district] as nearly equal advantages as may be practicable." It is the duty of the court to ascertain, from legal proof, the intention of the legislature, whose purpose, plainly manifested by the entire act, cannot be thwarted by a literal construction of particular passages. If it is found, upon competent evidence, that the proviso, or any other clause, taken in its strict, literal sense, would not express, but would defeat, the legislative will, it is to be construed with such liberality as will execute the proved design of the law-making power. As other clauses may be misunderstood if the proviso is disregarded, so the proviso, read without due consideration of subsequent sections, and the existing conditions of law and fact upon which it is to operate, may lead to error.
A clause of the second section provides for an apportionment of the property and debts of union districts belonging to different towns. Rumney v. Smart,
By the act of July 7, 1826, the principle of the ancient town district system, that had been only partially changed, was completely reestablished in Portsmouth. In 1840 Newington was exempted from the operation of the general law requiring towns to be divided into school-districts. Pickering v. Coleman,
Chapter 2231, Laws of 1859, recognized "Union School District in the city of Concord" as "a school-district duly organized under the statute of this state known as the Somersworth act." It authorized the district to combine the powers and duties of its prudential and superintending committees, the committee of combined powers and duties being called a board of education. On the adoption of this act by the district, and its election of the board, it was organized under two acts, — one general in an ordinary sense, and the other special. In some essential respects it was *532 under one, in some essentials it was under the other; and this was not the only district existing and acting by virtue of the joint operation of a general and a special law. As the new law does not expressly provide that a district, organized in part under a general act, is abolished, or that a district, organized in part under a special act, is saved, the mere technical distinction between general and special legislation would be so dubious and puzzling a test as to justify an inference that it was not prescribed. The legislature did not lay down an unintelligible rule, or one containing an ambiguity designed to produce a needless difficulty of application and involve the operation of the act in serious embarrassment.
Chapter 100, Laws of 1875, c. 140, Laws of 1876, and c. 147, Laws of 1877, are special laws, authorizing the first district of Laconia, the fifth district of Meredith, and the thirteenth district of Gilford to work under the Concord act. Apparently weary of extending that act by special laws, the legislature passed c. 39, Laws of 1877, extending the Concord act to any other district, having certain qualifications, that should choose to work under it. G. L., c. 87, ss. 17-22. The inclusion of this Concord district with those saved by the law of 1885 because it chose to be partly organized under the Concord act at a time when no other district could follow its example, and the exclusion of others from the Concord class because they chose to be wholly organized under the same act at a time when others could adopt it, present the same incongruity that arises from a similar classification under the Portsmouth and Somersworth acts.
Suppose a town of two ordinary, subordinate districts, equal in territory and taxable property; the north half of the town to be No. 1, and the south half to be No. 2; the school property of No. 1 worth $1,000, and of No. 2, $2,000; and the school money to be raised by the town, $1,000. There would be assessed a school property and school tax of $4,000, one half of it on each half of the town. The $2,000 assessed on the south half would be remitted. Of the $2,000 assessed on the north half, $1,000 would be remitted and $1,000 collected. If the legislature had intended to apply this method to the large specially independent districts organized under general laws within a single town, there is some reason to think more than one year would have been expressly allowed for equalization, as in the case of an abolished union district belonging to different towns.
The general purpose, indicated by the title of the new law (c. 43), is to reestablish "the town system of schools," with that union of town district territory town district property, and town district organization which did not begin to be dissolved until 1805, and to extend the unity of town district action in the employment and payment of teachers that has always existed in some part of the state, now exists in a considerable part of it, and was not abolished in any part till the state had been settled more than *533
two hundred years. School-District v. Sherburne,
Seeking, in the school law of former times, a criterion on which the legislature probably acted in abolishing some districts and leaving others, we find, not the distinction between general and special legislation, but uniform independence and completeness of organization. The undivided management, which was a material element of the school system of so many generations, is restored, within the limit of the proviso, by reuniting the subordinate districts of a town in one independent town district, and permitting others, specially independent, to remain as they are. All come into a consistent plan upon the test of autonomy practically equivalent to that of a town district.
By s. 2 of c. 89, Laws of 1885, power is given to continue the school, and preserve the advantages of an abolished union district belonging to different towns, without unreasonable discriminations that would infringe equal rights. It being the duty of school boards to exercise all their powers in a manner that will "best subserve the interests of education," they are not required to disturb existing arrangements without cause, or to disregard contracts for the purpose of raising questions of authority. Upon them is imposed a service of high responsibility in the most important department of the government. The foundation of society is largely committed to their charge, not for mere alteration, but for improvement, which the legislature thought could be effected through increased efficiency of administration, decreased inequality of educational rights, and the extinction of prolific sources of strife and litigation. In the improvements intended to be made by the return to the ancient practice, there is nothing tending to show a legislative purpose to except from the saving operation of the proviso such specially organized districts as were equipped with corporate powers equal to those of a town district.
The distinction the legislature had in view related to the substantial character of the district organization, and not to an immaterial name of its charter. The whole or a part of a town, being a school-district under acts, either general or special, that gave it a special, independent, and complete organization, and officers of its own having exclusive authority for the superintendence and government of its schools, and the administration of all its school affairs, is one of the "districts organized under special acts" within *534 the meaning of the proviso, and is not abolished. Districts organized under laws, general or special, by which their schools were subjected to the supervision of other officers than their own, have ceased to exist. There may be exceptions, founded on laws or circumstances, that do not come into consideration in this case; but the general rule is based on the distinction between districts that were special in the sense of being by law specially independent, and fully officered for the supervision and management of their schools, and others that were subordinate in the sense of being subject to school supervision by officers not peculiarly their own. It follows that the mere establishment of a high school, or of graded schools, or a mere union of districts, under general or special law, did not exempt a district from abolition, and that districts organized under the Portsmouth, Newington, Somersworth, or Concord acts, in their special or general forms, or under Gen. Laws, c. 86, ss. 2, 3, or c. 87, ss. 16-22, retain their organization, unless they choose to abandon it and unite with the town district.
Injunction refused.
CARPENTER, J., did not sit: the others concurred.