52 P.2d 673 | Wyo. | 1935
This case was submitted to the trial court upon the petition and answer thereto and an agreed statement of facts. The plaintiff, School District No. 2, is a duly organized school district in Teton County, offering courses of study up to and including the 8th grade. Jackson-Wilson High School District, defendant, is a duly organized high school district in that county, and the defendant Scott is the duly qualified County Treasurer. The plaintiff never maintained a high school within the district, and never offered any high school course to any of the children therein, and never provided any attendance at any other high school except in the defendant district. This high school district is the nearest, most accessible and only available high school in the county of Teton or in the vicinity of plaintiff district, at which any children could obtain the privileges of a high school education and courses of instruction. Commencing with 1924, to 1930 inclusive, the plaintiff district had arranged for the attendance of its school children who had completed the course of study offered in the district, at the defendant's high school at Jackson, and had paid the tuition fixed by the latter, without the requirement of any permission mentioned in Section 99-325, Rev. St. 1931. During and for the year 1931-32, however, the plaintiff made no such arrangement. The electors of that district *121
"had not then or at any other time levied any tax or made any other provision for payment to said defendant High School District of any tuition moneys for attendance in its schools of pupils resident in said plaintiff school district, nor had the trustees of said district ever consented to any such pupils resident therein attending said high school of defendant High School District at the expense of plaintiff school district, nor had the chairman or clerk of plaintiff ever made or executed nor did said pupils or any of them ever present to defendant High School District any written statements or permission signed by said chairman or clerk or either of them that said pupils or either of them so resident in said plaintiff school district could or should attend the schools of defendant High School District."
The plaintiff school district, accordingly, having failed to pay for the tuition for the pupils therefrom properly qualified to, and who did, attend the high school in defendant district, applied to the county treasurer of the county to pay the amounts due and owing, and the treasurer, acting under Section 99-825, R.S. Wyo. 1931, transferred of the funds in his hands belonging to the plaintiff district the sums alleged in the petition, namely, $549.49, $181.68 and $580.51, which is claimed to make a total of $1380.61, but which in fact is a total of $1311.68, although the amount of $1380.61 is agreed to be the proper amount, if legally chargeable; it is claimed, however, not to be legally chargeable and that the amount was illegally withdrawn from the funds of plaintiff district. The court entered judgment in favor of the defendants and against the plaintiff. From this judgment the latter has appealed to this court.
1. Section 99-325, Rev. St. 1931, provides as follows:
"The district board shall have power to admit pupils from other districts * * * and when pupils are admitted from other districts, the district board may, in their discretion, require a tuition fee for such pupils, *122 based on cost per pupil of said district; provided, that no pupils shall be admitted and tuition charged therefor unless they present written statements of permission signed by the chairman and the clerk of the district, in which said pupil resides, and when it appears to the satisfaction of the district board of any district that elementary school pupils can be better provided for in other districts, or in other schools in the same district, the district boards of the districts in which the pupils reside shall pay, from the funds of the district, tuition and shall have power to pay all or part of the board and room; provided, that in case payment of tuition is refused or neglected, the board of the creditor district shall file with the county treasurer of the county in which the debtor district is situated, an itemized statement of the amount of indebtedness certified by the chairman and clerk of the district, and the county treasurer of said county shall transfer the amount of such indebtedness from the funds of the debtor district to the funds of the creditor district."
Section 99-825 provides as follows:
"All school districts within the state of Wyoming which do not maintain a four year high school shall pay tuition for pupils of such district who have completed the course offered therein and who desire to attend high school in another district. The cost of tuition as hereinafter set forth shall be paid by the district in which the pupil resides from the funds of such district; provided, that in case payment is refused or neglected, the board of the creditor district shall file with the county treasurer of the county in which the debtor district is situated an itemized statement of the amount of indebtedness, certified by the chairman and clerk of the district, and the county treasurer of said county shall transfer the amount of such indebtedness from the funds of the debtor district to the funds of the creditor district."
Section 99-826 fixes the rate of tuition, and the following section, 99-827, provides in part as follows:
"Every high school within the State of Wyoming subject to the general school laws of the state shall *123 receive non-resident pupils upon the basis above set forth except when it would work a hardship upon the district maintaining such high school; * * *"
It may be noted that section 99-325, supra, provides among other things that no pupils shall be admitted to attend in another district, or tuition charged, unless they present written statements of permission signed by the chairman and the clerk of the district in which such pupils reside. Such permission was not obtained. Plaintiff contends that this is fatal to defendant's claim; that such written permission was essential to hold plaintiff district liable, and it relies upon our decision in the case of State ex rel. v. School District No. 12,
"Nevertheless, it seems to us, under this law, they (the officials) would have the right to decide whether they should send their high school students to another district where the expense per pupil is much higher than in a second adjoining district equally reasonably available for the purpose. Any other interpretation of this statute applicable to the situation presented, as we hold it is, would make it possible for a majority or even more of the pupils fitted for high school training to select the most expensive high school available and thus cast a most unreasonable financial burden upon the district wholly unable to bear it."
Under our holding in the case just cited, it was necessary, *124
in order that the defendant district here could charge tuition, to have permission from the officials of the plaintiff district. The proper course, in case permission was refused, would have been an action in mandamus, and the pupils and the defendant district should not have taken the law into their own hands. 38 C.J. 743; Salt Lake City v. Bernhagen,
2. Counsel for appellant claims that section 99-825, supra, is unconstitutional. He refers to Article 16, Sections 2 and 4. The provisions thereof declare that no debt in excess of the taxes for the current year shall in any manner be created except by a vote of the people. Counsel argues that the effect of section 99-825, supra, is to permit the creation of an indebtedness in violation of the foregoing provisions of the constitution by pupils attending school in another district. Circumstances may arise where that is possible, and if in such case a suit were brought to recover tuition, it might be defeated on that ground. Palmer v. School District,
"The matter of education is one of public interest, which concerns all the people of the state, and is therefore subject to the control of the legislature. Municipal organizations are the creations of state authority, and all within legislative control. While education is a matter of state interest and public concern, the high school being especially beneficial to the people of the community in which it is established, the burden of maintaining it may be rightfully cast upon them * * *. If the obligations which the municipalities are required to assume and discharge for institutions and necessities of purely public concern, and for which taxes may ordinarily be levied, the power of the legislature in respect to them is supreme, and its determination, if reached by constitutional methods, is not subject to review."
In Carey v. Board,
"It (the school district) is an auxiliary organization of the state, and all of its powers and rights have been acquired from the state, and it can only exercise them in accordance with the conditions annexed by the legislature. It is subordinate to the legislative will, and it may require school districts to impose taxes, erect buildings, employ teachers, and fix the conditions upon which pupils shall be admitted to the schools. The matter of the maintenance of common and high schools is not a matter of mere local interest but is one of state concern, and the legislative power in respect to such schools is supreme." *127
In Fiske v. Huntington,
"The only other question is whether the statute is constitutional. That some proper provision for the education of children in high schools and other public schools may be required of towns by the legislature, is not questioned. It is equally clear that in the making of such a provision, payment of tuition by a town in a school where tuition is charged, is within the general purposes for which money may be raised by taxation, unless there is some special constitutional prohibition of such payments."
We cannot, accordingly, hold the provisions of the law, requiring a district to provide for a high school education, or payment of tuition to another district for that purpose, to be in violation of the constitution.
We come then to the consideration of that part of Section 99-825, supra, (and Sec. 99-325) which provides that the county treasurer may, upon presentation of an itemized statement, transfer the funds of a district without high school to another district with a high school at which qualified persons from the former attend. That provision is distinct and separable from the first part of the section, and we shall consider it only in so far as necessary to determine whether or not the principle of equity heretofore mentioned should be applicable herein. The statute authorizes the transfer of any and all funds of a district no matter how they may be derived. But it goes too far. Section 13 of Article 15 of our Constitution provides that "no tax shall be levied except in pursuance of law, and every law imposing a tax shall state distinctly the object of the same, towhich only it shall be applied." Kansas has a similar constitutional provision, with a meaning the same as ours, reading: "No tax shall be levied except in pursuance of law, which shall distinctly *128
state the object of the same, to which object only such tax shall be applied." And from an early day, and in numerous cases, this provision has been construed to mean that no fund of a school district or local community, raised by taxation for a specific purpose, can be diverted to any other purpose, except only when the purpose has been fully subserved, and a surplus remains. The National Bank v. Barber, Treasurer,
"Section 5, Art. 7 of the constitution provides, `no tax shall be levied except in pursuance of law, and every law imposing a tax shall state distinctly the object of the same, to which only it shall be applied.' This is an elementary doctrine in taxation, and without the constitutional declaration, it has been held almost uniformly that there could be no diversion of moneys collected by taxation for a special purpose, and placed in a fund created for such purpose. Section 2702, 1 Hill's Code, evidently imposed the duty upon the county treasurer to pay, out of any moneys belonging to the school district in the special interest fund for payment of interest upon bonds, any moneys in such fund, on presentation of interest bonds, and *129 can go no further. Notwithstanding its express declaration, that section, in so far as it purports to command the treasurer to pay interest coupons from moneys raised by taxation for another purpose, is unconstitutional and therefore void."
And in State ex rel. v. Henry,
"From this last section of the constitution it seems almost too plain for argument that the funds of the county raised by taxation for general county purposes cannot be applied to the payment of assessment of costs against school lands improved in a local assessment district."
So In re Opinion of the Judges,
"Secondly, with particular reference to the possibility of employing moneys (either state or county) now on hand or to accrue under present levies for the furnishing of feed or making of feed loans, article 11, Sec. 8, Constitution of the State, provides: `No tax shall be levied except in pursuance of a law, which shall distinctly state the object of the same, to which the tax only shall be applied.' Under this section we are of the opinion that moneys now on hand (or hereafter to be received) as the result of payment of taxes * * * already levied, and the proceeds of which have been appropriated, must be applied to the purposes for which they were levied * * * and we think that the same could not now be diverted, even by legislative action, to any other purpose."
The court cites White Eagle Oil Refining Co. v. Gunderson,
No showing of that kind has heretofore been made. The judgment of the trial court must, accordingly, be reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
Reversed and remanded.
KIMBALL, Ch. J., and RINER, J., concur.