120 S.E. 202 | N.C. | 1923
Prior to 1 October, 1921, several districts having an equal rate of special school tax were consolidated and designated Seventy-first Consolidated School District. By virtue of Public Laws, Extra Session 1920, ch. 87, the board of commissioners on the first Monday in October, 1921, ordered an election to be held in the consolidated district on the question of issuing serial bonds not exceeding $40,000 and levying an annual tax for the purpose of erecting, enlarging and equipping a school building or buildings in said district; but before the election was held a controversy arose among the voters as to the location of the proposed building, and thereupon the board of education expressed its purpose to place the building as near the geographical center of the district as was practicable, all things considered.
The election was carried in favor of the bonds and the special tax, but it would have failed if the board of education had not given assurance as to the location of the building. After the election, Clifton was chosen as the site, and R. H. Owen, a taxpayer residing in said district, brought suit against the board of education and the school committee, alleging that Clifton was not near the geographical center of the district, that the preelection agreement had been disregarded, and that the board had abused its discretion in fixing the location. A preliminary restraining order was issued but was dissolved at the hearing. Upon appeal the Supreme Court affirmed the judgment vacating the injunction but retained the cause for final hearing. See
After the election was held, as herein set out, the board of education thought that Galatia School District should be included in the Seventy-first, and in order finally to determine the question, called into consultation the school committee of the Seventy-first Consolidated District, and the committee unanimously recommended the consolidation of the two districts; whereupon the board of education, in the exercise of its discretion, effected the consolidation. After doing so, the board submitted a referendum to the taxpayers of the Seventy-first Consolidated District as to the location of the building, and 201 votes were cast in favor of Glendale and three in favor of Clifton.
Before taking final action in the matter the board of education caused an election to be held in the Galatia District to ascertain whether the taxpayers therein would assume payment of their part of the taxes necessary to maintain the school and pay the bonds and interest, and said election resulted in favor of assuming the debt and consolidating the districts. This outline is not intended to represent all the facts found by the lower court.
The object of the present action is to determine whether the proposed bonds may be issued and by whom; to enjoin the board of education from changing the location of the school site from Clifton to Glendale; and to require the immediate sale of the bonds and the erection of the building.
Judge Sinclair issued a temporary restraining order, and the case was heard by him at the September Term, 1923. By consent, this case and Owen v.Board of Education were consolidated, a jury trial was waived, and the presiding judge found the facts and rendered the following judgment:
It is ordered, adjudged and decreed:
(1) That a bond issue in the amount of $40,000 of Seventy-first Consolidated School District, in denominations of the terms, etc., as specified in the order and notice of election hereinbefore set out, has been legally authorized, and when issued will be and constitute a valid and binding obligation upon the Seventy-first Consolidated School District as described in said order and notice, and the subjects of taxation therein can thereafter, in the manner provided by law, be taxed for the payment of said bonds and the interest thereon.
(2) The board of education is estopped from changing or attempting to change the location of the proposed school building from Clifton to Glendale, and its attempt so to do under the facts in this case is in excess of any authority vested in it by law, and is so unreasonable as to amount to an oppressive and manifest abuse of discretion, is of no effect and void, and said board is hereby perpetually restrained and enjoined from attempting to locate or erect said building at Glendale. *646
(3) Clifton has heretofore been selected, determined upon and designated by the board of education in the judicious exercise of its discretion as the location of the proposed building, and the board of education and the board of trustees of the district are hereby directed in the manner required by law to immediately erect and equip said building at Clifton as soon as the money can be realized from the sale of said bonds.
(4) The Board of Education of Cumberland County is hereby adjudged to be the proper body to issue and sell said bonds, and it is hereby directed forthwith to do all things needful and proper in the immediate issuance and sale of said bonds, and sell the same and apply the proceeds therefrom as above directed to the erection of said building at Clifton.
(5) The cost of this action, to be taxed by the clerk, is adjudged against the defendant board of education.
The cardinal question presented in the argument here is whether the board of education had the legal right to change the site of the proposed schoolhouse from Clifton to Glendale. His Honor found as a fact that in making the change the board was actuated by no improper motive, but he held as a legal inference that upon the facts in the case the change was ultravires, or if not, that it amounted to an oppressive and manifest abuse of discretion. This conclusion, we presume, was based chiefly on the finding that the potential factor in the election of 17 November, 1921, was the board's assurance that the building should be erected at or near the geographical center of the district, and that a majority of the qualified voters would not have voted for the bonds if such assurance had not been given. If the record showed nothing more in regard to the change of site these facts would raise the serious question whether approval of the bond issue had not been submitted as a conditional proposition by which the defendants are bound (McCracken v. R. R.,
While his Honor's findings of fact are comprehensive and in the main supported by the evidence, they are subject to review in a suit of this character (Lee v. Waynesville,
His Honor adjudged that the bonds when issued will be a valid obligation upon the Seventy-first Consolidated School District as described in the order and notice of election, and that the subjects of taxation therein shall be taxed for the payment of the bonds and interest. To this extent the judgment is correct; but if at an election duly held a majority of the qualified voters in the Galatia District pledged the faith and loaned the credit of the district for their proportionate part of the tax necessary to pay the bonds and interest, as provided in the Constitution, Art. VII, sec. 7, the bonds when issued will be a valid obligation upon the Seventy-first Consolidated School District, including Galatia.
In substance, the plaintiffs have also applied for a mandatory injunction to compel the immediate issuance of the bonds, and a question has arisen as to the body by whom they are to be issued. It is admitted that the election upon the bond issue was held under the provisions of chapter 87 of the Public Laws of the Extra Session of 1920. In the second section of that act it was provided that bonds authorized for a school district should be issued in the corporate name of the school district as provided by chapters 143 and 308 of the Public Laws of 1919. At the session of 1923 the General Assembly repealed chapter 87 of the Public Laws of 1920 (Extra Session) and made the following provision for bonds previously authorized: "If bonds or indebtedness have heretofore been voted under any act, and have not yet been issued or incurred, they may be issued or incurred pursuant to the provisions of the act under which they were voted." P. L. 1923, ch. 136, sec. 265. This section seems to be controlling.
His Honor's judgment as it appears of record is set out in the statement of facts. The first section thereof is modified to the extent of including Galatia District since its consolidation with Seventy-first Consolidated District, and as thus modified is affirmed. The second, third, and fifth sections are reversed, and the fourth section is reversed as to the corporate name in which the bonds are to be issued and sold and as to the direction that the schoolhouse be erected at Clifton; but the bonds should be issued and the proceeds applied as provided by law.
In part reversed.
In part modified and affirmed. *649