220 P.2d 361 | Colo. | 1950
delivered the opinion of the court.
Plaintiff in error, which was plaintiff in the trial, court, sought an injunction restraining defendant from detaching a portion of its territory and annexing it to the contiguous Cherry Hills School District No. 36. A temporary restraining order and order to show cause was issued ex parte, subsequent to which, defendant filed her answer. After a trial, in which the facts were stipulated, the court found generally in favor of defendant and against plaintiff, dissolved the restraining order, and dismissed the petition.
Plaintiff, in seeking a reversal of the judgment, presents two specifications of points for our consideration: “1. That the Court erred in holding that defendant had authority to transfer a portion of plaintiff district, being a district of the first class, to contiguous Cherry Hills School District No. 36, without first submitting the question to a vote of plaintiff’s electors at an annual election. 2. That the Court erred in holding that defendant had not acted arbitrarily, capriciously, and in abuse of discretion by failing and refusing to grant a reasonable continuance of the hearing upon the petition for transfer of a portion of plaintiff district so that plaintiff might be afforded a full and complete hearing thereon, or by failing and refusing to follow the opinion of the Attorney General regarding division of school districts of the first class.” We discuss these specifications in the order adopted by plaintiff.
This matter first arose when twenty-one residents of a part of Cherry Hills Village, apparently being all of the legal voters resident within that portion of School District No. 1 which is involved in this controversy, filed their petition with the then County Superintendent of Schools asking that the territory in question be detached from Englewood School District No. 1 in Arapahoe county and that it be annexed to the contig
The County Superintendent had in her possession an opinion of the State Superintendent of Public Instruction, specifically noting that the transferring of a portion of a school district is not subject to a vote of the electors.
The position of plaintiff school district is that the respective detaching and annexing ordered by the County Superintendent cannot be accomplished except upon a vote of electors of Englewood School District No. 1. Reliance is placed upon a portion of section 62, chapter 146, ’35 C.S.A. This section deals with the organization of school districts and contains four provisos, the third of which reads as follows: “provided, also, that no city or town shall hereafter be divided into two or more districts, nor shall the districts of the first class be divided, except upon a vote of electors of the district, submitted at an annual election, a majority of all votes cast being in favor of such division;” It is contended that plaintiff is a school district of the first class, and that it is being divided by the action of the County Superintendent alone. An opinion of the Attorney General, issued just preceding the detachment and annexation, supports the view of the Englewood School District.
The General Laws of Colorado 1877, section 2475 (being section 29 of the School Act, later to become section 63, chapter 146, ’35 C.S.A.), provided for the consolidation of two or more contiguous school districts, and for the detachment from one district of a segment and the annexation of such segment to a contiguous district. In both cases a vote of the qualified electors in each district was required.
Two years later, by S.L. 1879, pp. 164, 165, section 6, the approving vote of the electors of the districts affected, when two or more contiguous districts are to be united into one district, was retained, but the requirement for a vote of the electors was omitted when a fractional portion of one district was sought to be detached from the district and annexed to a contiguous district. The new provision reads as follows: “A portion of unorganized territory may be annexed to a school district, or a portion of one district may be detached from said district and annexed to a contiguous district by the county superintendent, upon petition, in either case, of a majority of the legal voters resident within the territory to be so annexed.”
In the Session Laws of 1887, p. 385, section 13, this provision was re-enacted, with the clause at the end: “subject always to the limitation provided in section 28.”
Section 28, being section 2474, G.L. ’77, later to become section 62, chapter 146, ’35 C.S.A., read as follows: “The qualified electors of such proposed new district, when assembled in accordance with the notice above required shall organize by electing a chairman and secretary. Every legally qualified elector, and none other, shall be entitled to vote at such meeting. After the organization of such meeting as above mentioned, a vote shall be taken by ballot, on the question whether or not the proposed district shall be organized. Those in favor of or
Section 28 was amended by section 1, page 333, Session Laws 1889. The last proviso was amended to read: “Provided, also, That no city or town shall hereafter be divided into two or more districts, and districts of the first class shall not be divided except upon a vote of
Session Laws 1903, page 427, chapter 168, section 1, amended section 29, making provision for a new board of directors when a first class district is joined with district or districts of a lower class, and retained the rest of the section as set forth in Session Laws 1887.
We conclude that there was no need for holding an election of the voters in the two school districts involved in this case for the following reasons:
1. The legislature, once having such a provision requiring an election (1877) repealed it in 1879 and gave the power to the county superintendent to detach a fractional portion of a school district and annex it to a contiguous school district. The provision orginally found in section 29, requiring a vote of the electors upon the detachment of a fractional portion of one district and its annexation to a contiguous district, has never been re-enacted.
2. When the legislature in 1887, at the conclusion of section 29, added the clause, “subject, always, to the limitation provided in section 28,” it could only have referred to section 28 as it existed at that time, which section did not contain the proviso upon which plaintiff relies. We believe that the re-enactments of sections 28 and 29 by subsequent sessions of the legislature did not change the limitation to which reference is made in section 28, in so far as it applied to section 29.
In Schwenke v. Union Depot & R. R. Co., 7 Colo. 512, 4 Pac. 905, this court adopted the principle that a statute which refers to, and adopts the provisions of, another statute is not repealed by the subsequent repeal of the statute adopted. In 50 American Jurisprudence, page 58, section 39, appears this confirming statement: “It is a general rule that when a statute adopts a part or all of another statute * * * by a specific and descriptive reference thereto, the adoption takes the statute as. it
3. The construction which we have just adopted was actually accepted as the correct interpretation by our court in Gorrell v. Bevans, 66 Colo. 67, 179 Pac. 337. In that case, speaking through Mr. Justice Denison, we said:
“First: The only parts of §5908 (28) that can accurately be called limitations and are applicable to a case of transfer of territory are contained in the provisos as to area and number of children. It is not contended that these conditions are not fulfilled in the present case.
“Second: The other provisions of this section consist of requirements for elections and other proceedings for the formation of a new district, and some of such requirements, necessary for that purpose, are not in §5908 (28) but in §5907 (27).
“Third: The language of §5908 as to meeting, election, etc., does not fit the case of a transfer of territory but the formation of a new district.”
4. The legislature in 1921, being the first session after the decision had been announced in Gorrell v. Bevans, supra, amended section 29 to cure a procedural defect that had been pointed out in Judge Denison’s opinion and added the requirement that, “Upon the presentation of such petition the county superintendent shall fix a time for the hearing of the same and shall thereupon give written notice thereof to the districts affected, which notice shall be served by delivery of a copy thereof to the secretary or to any member of the board of directors.” S.L. ’21, c. 217, §1. In this amendment the legislature also added the italicized words, “in his discretion,” in the sentence reading as follows: “A portion of unorganized territory may be annexed to a school district, or a portion of one district may be detached from said district and annexed to a contiguous district, by the county superintendent, in his discretion, upon petition, in either case, of a majority of the legal voters resident within the territory tó be so annexed, subject, always, to the limitation of section twenty-eight (28).” S.L. ’21, c. 217, §1. We believe that in the re-enactment of the statute in 1921, after our decision in the Gorrell-Bevans case, the legislature adopted the construction previously given it by this court. Harvey v. Travelers Insurance Co., 18 Colo. 354, 32 Pac. 935; Lyons v. Egan, 110 Colo. 227, 132 P. (2d) 794.
5. The third proviso which counsel would apply in this case, it seems to us, deals with a different subject providing, as it does, “that no city or town shall hereafter be divided into two or more districts, nor shall the districts of the first class be divided, except upon a vote of electors of the district, submitted at an annual election, a majority of all votes cast being in favor of such division.” The division to which reference is here made would appear to be not a matter of detaching a segment to be annexed to some other school district, but a division in the sense of splitting into two or more school districts. Thus Julius Caesar, in his Commentaries, referred to all Gaul as being divided into three parts. Likewise, in the biological sense, “division” into two separate organisms occurs in an amoeba in the process or reproducing its species. “Division,” as used in the third proviso of section 28, seems to be a more basic process than a matter of detaching a segment from one school district and annexing it to another. The latter would appear to be more the method made familiar by Luther Burbank, of cutting a branch or twig from one tree and grafting it upon another. It is the latter process and not the former that the legislature has entrusted to the discretion of county superintendents.
It is our opinion that the trial court did not err in holding that defendant county superintendent had authority to transfer a portion of plaintiff district, being a district of the first class, to contiguous Cherry Hills School District No. 36, without first submitting the question to a vote of plaintiff’s electors at an annual election.
Under these circumstances we believe the trial judge was correct in ruling that the county superintendent had not abused her discretion in not continuing the hearing
We also believe that the county superintendent was not arbitrary, willful or capricious in obeying the laws of the state of Colorado by refusing to follow an opinion of the Attorney General, and by following the contradictory opinion of the State Superintendent of Public Instruction. Section 20, chapter 146, ’35 C.S.A., contains the provision that it shall be the duty of the county superintendent to obey the legal instructions and decisions of the state superintendent of public instruction. Section 14, chapter 146, ’35 C.S.A., provides that the state superintendent of public instruction “shall decide all points touching the construction of the school laws, which - may be submitted to -him in writing by any school officer, teacher or other person in the state, and his decisions shall be held to be correct and final until set aside by a Court of competent jurisdiction, or by subsequent legislation.”
The judgment of the trial court is accordingly affirmed.
Mr. Justice Alter dissents.