School District No. 35 v. Holden

151 P. 702 | Or. | 1915

Mr. Justice Burnett

delivered the opinion of the court.

Section 4021, L. O. L., ordains a procedure to be observed in changing the boundaries of school districts, the details of which it is not necessary to rehearse, because no question was made at the argument that they were not observed in this instance. The sole contention presented by the plaintiff is that the district boundary board, deriving its powers, as it does, from the legislative assembly, has no authority to change the boundaries of a school district, because that is tantamount to the amendment of the charter of a municipality within the inhibition of Section 2, Article XI, of the state Constitution. Stated otherwise, the plaintiff maintains that a change in the boundaries of the plaintiff district can only be accomplished through the initiative power described in Section la, Article IV, and Section 2, Article XI, of the state Constitution. These portions of the organic law, so far as applicable to the question in hand, read thus:

Section la, Article IV:

“ * * The initiative and referendum powers reserved to the people by this Constitution are hereby *269further reserved to the legal voters of every municipality and district, as to all local, special, and municipal legislation, of every character, in or for their respective municipalities and districts. The manner of exercising said powers shall be prescribed by general laws, except that cities and towns may provide for the manner of exercising the initiative and referendum powers as to their municipal legislation. * * ”

Section 2, Article XI:

“Corporations may be formed under general laws, but shall not be created by the legislative assembly by special laws. The legislative assembly shall not enact, amend, or repeal any charter or act of incorporation for any municipality, city, or town. The legal voters of every city and town are hereby granted power to enact and amend their municipal charter, subject to the Constitution and criminal laws of the State of Oregon. ’ ’

Speaking of school districts, Mr. Justice Moore, in School District No. 48 v. School District No. 115, 60 Or. 38 (118 Pac. 169), said:

“These divisions are vested with certain powers, which they can employ in the particular manner prescribed. As agencies of the state, they have no vested right to the property which they may acquire, but hold it in trust for the general public, and such quasi corporations may be changed at the.will of the power creating them. * * A school district sustains no higher relations to the state than a county occupies, and the rule is settled that the legislative department may divide counties at pleasure, apportioning the assets and burdens in such manner as may be deemed just and reasonable.”

Writing about the excerpts from the organic act above mentioned in Kiernan v. Portland, 57 Or. 454, 467 (112 Pac. 402, 403, 37 L. R. A. (N. S.) 332), Mr. Justice King used this language:

*270“It will be observed from tbe first sentence in Section 2 that no restriction is placed upon the legislature with respect to the enactment of general laws; the exception being that no special laws creating or affecting the municipalities shall be enacted by the legislature. Under all the rules of construction, this exception reserves to the legislative department the right, whether by the people directly through the initiative, or indirectly through the legislature, to enact general laws upon the subject, making it clear that the inhibition in the next sentence has reference to special laws. * * Our holding is that the state may, by constitutional provisions, directly delegate to municipalities any powers which it, through the legislature, could formerly have granted indirectly. All the prerogatives attempted to be exercised by Portland in the construction of the Broadway bridge formerly could have been granted by the legislature, and the power to provide therefor, having- been delegated to the city by amendment to our organic laws, is valid, and the right to exercise such powers will continue until such time as changed by general enactments of the law-making department of our state, provision for which may be made by the legislature by general laws, applying alike to all municipalities of that class, or by the people through the initiative, by the enactment of either general or special laws on the subject.”

Further, in State ex rel. v. Port of Tillamook, 62 Or. 332, 341 (124 Pac. 637, 640, Ann. Cas. 1914C, 483), Mr. Justice Bean says:

“Such municipal corporations are always subject to the control and regulation of the lawmakers of the state in the manner directed by the Constitution: City of McMinnville v. Howenstine, 56 Or. 451, 456 (109 Pac. 81). While these public corporations are capable of adopting and amending their charter, they still continue to be agencies of the state. A general control is left in the legislative assembly.”

*271Again, Mr. Justice Eakin, in Riggs v. Grants Pass, 66 Or. 266, 271 (134 Pac. 776 (778), says:

“Article XI, Section 2, of the Constitution confers power and authority upon cities to form their own charters and make their own laws within their municipal needs; that is, in local and special municipal legislation. Authority beyond that must come from the sovereign, namely, the legislature, by general laws or by the people by general or special laws.”

Referring to Section 2, Article XI, of the Constitution, it is said in State ex rel. v. Gilbert, 66 Or. 434, 439 (134 Pac. 1038):

“This provision of the fundamental law does not in any way infringe upon the right of the legislature to make general laws for the formation of corporations. The inhibition of that section is directed solely against action by the legislature affecting only a particular municipality, city, or town.”

If we concede that the quoted utterances of this court are judicial heresies as the plaintiff’s argument proceeds, and that school districts are full-fledged municipal corporations, having each an autonomy all its own, it still remains to consider whether they have charters within the meaning of Section 2, Article XI, of the Constitution, and whether the procedure described in the complaint constitutes an amendment of such an instrument. Dismissing for the moment the idea that a municipal charter is a special legislative act conferring upon a particular municipality powers and privileges peculiar to itself, we must find a charter for the plaintiff, if at all, in the general laws enacted by the legislative assembly affecting school districts, for it is not pretended that any other rule of action affecting the plaintiff has been established either by the people of the state at large through the initiative *272process or by similar legislation enacted by the legal voters resident within the boundaries of the plaintiff school district. It is manifest that a school district’s rule of existence, operation and treatment is found in the statutes hitherto enacted by the legislative assembly in the exercise of its constitutional’ authority to ‘‘provide by law for the establishment of a uniform and general system of common schools”: Section 3, Article VIII, of the Constitution.

In substantially the present form the rule for changing the boundaries of school districts through the action of a district boundary board has been in existence from a date prior to the adoption of the amended form of Section 2, Article XI. It is one of the essential features of the constituent law of school districts. From the viewpoint of the plaintiff it might be called one of the terms of its charter. For all that appears in the complaint, the procedure described whereby the plaintiff was deprived of part of its territory was in strict accordance with the statute. No enactment from any legislative source whatever has in any manner prescribed the boundaries of the plaintiff district. In this respect the case in hand is easily differentiated from such as Cooke v. Portland, 69 Or. 572 (139 Pac. 1095); Thurber v. McMinnville, 63 Or. 410 (128 Pac. 43); McKeon v. Portland, 61 Or. 385 (122 Pac. 291); State ex rel. v. Port of Tillamook, 62 Or. 332 (124 Pac. 637, Ann. Cas. 1914C, 483). In all those cases the constituent act establishing the municipality in question described in explicit terms the boundaries in question. The delimitation of its exterior lines was part and parcel of its charter in each instance. In the case of school districts the constituting act has in no wise ever described the boundaries of any particular district, but has committed the establishment and control *273of them to a district boundary board. That body, in making snch changes, simply administers, and does not amend the laws under which the plaintiff district exists even though we may style those general enactments the charter of the complainant here.

Much was forcefully said at the argument about the evils of gerrymandering as exemplified in the boundaries of the districts named in the complaint; but we have nothing to do with such administrative questions. We have before us in this instance only a question of authority and not of the manner in which it is exercised. The proceedings described in the complaint are not open to the objection urged against them by the plaintiff.

The decree of the Circuit Court is affirmed.

Affirmed.

Rehearing Denied.

Mr. Chief Justice Moore and Mr. Justice Benson concur. Mr. Justice Harris concurs in the result.
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