143 Minn. 433 | Minn. | 1919
Certiorari to review a proceeding for the consolidation of two school districts in the city of Granite Falls. The proceeding was under chapter 453, p. 757, Laws of 1917. The statute was followed, and if the statute is valid the consolidation proceeding is valid. The contention is that the statute violates section 33, article 4, of the state Constitution which prohibits local or special legislation “regulating the affairs of * * * any * * * school district” and that it is void.
The pertinent language of the statute is:
“When an incorporated village or a city of the fourth class contains two or more school districts of any kind situated wholly or in part within the corporate limits of such village or city, when only one of such districts maintains a state high school, such district may be consolidated and form one district in the manner hereinafter provided.”
The particular contentions are that the language of the statute is such that, at present, it can have application only to the city of Granite Falls, and that by its terms it cannot become applicable to any city or village which may hereafter come into the same class.
A law is general if the class to which it applies requires or justifies legislation peculiar to itself in the matters covered by the law. State v, Cooley, 56 Minn. 540, 58 N. W. 150. It is special if the classifica
The classification in this case does not seem to us an arbitrary one. There is no apparent impropriety in placing in a .class by themselves villages and fourth class cities, having, wholly or in part, within their limits, two or more school districts, one of them a high school.
If it be true that this statute can only apply to the city of Granite Falls, this fact is not decisive of its character. The fact that there is only one city now in the,class is no objection to the classification, if it is otherwise proper. State v. Sullivan, 72 Minn. 126, 75 N. W. 8; Marwin v. Board of Auditorium Commrs. 140 Minn. 346, 168 N. W. 17. If the classification is a proper one and the statute is so framed as to apply automatically to other cities and villages as they may acquire the characteristics of the class, then the statute is general and not special. State v. Rogers, 97 Minn. 322, 106 N. W. 345. This statute is plainly of this character. The language “when an incorporated village or a city of the fourth class contains two or more school districts” etc., is of future as well as present application.
The conclusion is that the statute is constitutional and the proceeding under it is valid, and the writ of certiorari was properly quashed.
Judgment affirmed.