113 So. 818 | La. | 1927
Lead Opinion
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *206 On April 5, 1926, the St. Landry parish school board passed Ordinance No. 148, creating the Grand Prairie school district, consisting of territory entirely within the parish of St. Landry. The district, as thus created, is traversed diagonally by the Opelousas-Ville Platte gravel highway. That part of the district which is east of the highway is known as Grand Prairie, and that part of it which is west of the highway is known as Plaisance. The school board as the governing authority of the district, after creating the district, called an election to be held within it for the purpose of obtaining authority to incur debt and to issue negotiable bonds, in the sum of $60,000, for the purpose of building and equipping a schoolhouse in the district. The proposition submitted at the election failed to carry. The school board shortly thereafter at one of its sessions passed the following motion, to wit:
"Mr. Baillio, duly seconded, moved that Ordinance No. 148 passed at a meeting of the school board of the parish of St. Landry on April 5, 1926, creating the Grand Prairie school district No. 5 of St. Landry parish, comprising territory of the First and Fifth police jury wards of the parish of St. Landry, La., be and is hereby repealed."
This motion was unanimously carried. The school board thereafter, on the same day, passed Ordinance No. 150, creating another school district, bearing the same name and number and embracing the same territory as the former one, with the exception that the southern line of the former district was placed farther north so as to omit a part of *208 the territory of which that district had consisted, the part omitted being a part of the Plaisance section. The school board then ordered an election to be held in the newly created district on July 2, 1926, for the purpose of authorizing the issuance of bonds in the sum of $60,000 to erect and equip a school building in the district which was the same proposition as that submitted to the property taxpayers of the former district. On July 5, 1926, the school board met for the purpose of canvassing the returns and declaring the result of the election. The board found on that day that the proposition submitted to the taxpayers of the district, qualified to vote at the election, had carried by 63 votes in number, and by $104,675 in the amount of the assessed valuation of the property voted, and declared the result accordingly, and on the same day authorized the issuance of the bonds, and levied a tax of 5 mills on the dollar on the assessed valuation of all property, subject to taxation in the district, for the year 1926, for the purpose of retiring the bonds.
Within 60 days after the promulgation of the election, a number of property taxpayers of the district, who were qualified to vote at an election for the issuance of bonds therein, brought the present suit for the purpose of annulling Ordinance No. 150, creating the district, of annulling the election, and also the ordinance authorizing the issuance of the bonds, and the one levying the tax.
One of the grounds urged against the legality of Ordinance 150, creating the district, is that a district comprising the same and additional territory was created by Ordinance No. 148, and while the ordinance last mentioned was supposed to have been repealed by a motion made to that effect, yet that the ordinance could not be repealed by a mere motion, but only by a valid ordinance, regularly enacted, and hence that a district comprising the same territory, and more in addition, was already in existence when the district that voted the bonds was created. *209
When the law requires that in certain matters public corporations shall proceed by ordinance and requires ordinances to be enacted with certain formalities and procedure, an ordinance, of course, is necessary to accomplish the purpose intended, and when once adopted it may be repealed only by an ordinance. 28 Cyc. 385. Where, however, a public corporation is given power to legislate in regard to a particular subject-matter, and the law is silent as to the mode in which the power shall be exercised, an enactment by the public corporation is valid whether it is in the form of an ordinance or resolution, even if the enactment is of a permanent nature. It is only when the law provides that certain subjects shall be governed by ordinance and that certain formalities shall be requisite to the enactment of an ordinance that it is proper for the courts to set aside the vote of the governing body of a public corporation upon the ground that the enactment was a resolution when it should have been an ordinance. 19 R.C.L. § 195, p. 895. There is no substantial difference between a motion and a resolution. State of South Dakota ex rel. Wagner v. Summers,
It is also urged that Ordinance No. 150 is invalid because it is an attempt to contract the limits of the district that was created by Ordinance No. 148, when no authority for such action is to be found in the laws of this state, and because the action of the school *210 board in passing the ordinance was a mere scheme for eliminating a part of the residents and taxpayers of the former district who were known to be opposed to the bond issue, so as to make it possible for the bonds to be voted.
Act 152 of 1920 authorizes parish school boards to create school districts in connection with the exercise of the power of special taxation. Since a school board has such authority, it has, by implication, the power, where circumstances permit, to abolish a district created under this authority, and since the power expressly granted is a continuing one, to create, if it sees proper, another district of smaller area, which does not include some of the territory of the one abolished, or, if it deems best and circumstances permit, to amend an ordinance creating a district, so as to contract or enlarge its boundaries, avoiding, however, the creation of overlapping districts. See Moore v. Board of Directors,
We held that Ordinance No. 148, creating the former district, was repealed. There was no legal reason why that district should not have been abolished, and a new one with somewhat different boundaries created. It does not appear that the district had contracted any indebtedness, and it appears that within 60 days after it was created it refused to sanction the bond issue submitted to it. Hence there was no reason for continuing the district in existence. If a majority of the property taxpayers residing in a smaller area were apparently willing to vote the bonds for the purpose of erecting and equipping a schoolhouse, there was no reason why, after abolishing the former district, a new district of smaller area should not be created to enable them to have the schoolhouse by voting *211 the bonds. Our conclusion, therefore, is that plaintiffs' position in this respect is not well founded.
Plaintiffs also urge that the creation of the school district by Ordinance No. 150 is invalid, because, aside from the other questions raised, which we have considered, the school board flagrantly abused the discretion vested in it by creating the district, and that to annul the creation thereof would result in the taking of their property without due process of law. This contention is based on the position that the entire width of the district is transversed by a low-lying terrain, or natural basin, which is inadequately drained, and that the roads intersecting it are impossible during a greater part of the year, and that this condition makes it impossible for plaintiffs' children to attend school, during a considerable part of the session, at Grand Prairie, where the school building, it is said, is to be erected.
Considerable evidence has been offered in support of this position. While our examination of the evidence impresses us with the fact that the road leading from the Plaisance settlement to the Grand Prairie settlement is not during and immediately following rainy weather what it should be, especially at and near Bayou Carron, yet, on the other hand, it must be confessed that the record discloses that during the session of 1925-26, a motor driven transfer was operated by the school board from the Plaisance settlement to the present schoolhouse in Grand Prairie, at the request of a number of residents of Plaisance, so that children in the higher grades might attend the Grand Prairie school, and that, out of 172 days on which the transfer was to operate, only 8 days were lost on account of both rains and bad roads. It would require proof of a gross abuse of discretion to justify a court in interfering with the creation of a school district. Drouin v. Board of Directors,
Plaintiffs also urge that the election held for the voting of the bonds is null and void. One of the grounds upon which this contention is based is that the district consists of a part of precinct 4 of the Fifth police jury ward, a part of precinct 1 of the same ward, and a part of precinct 2 of the First police jury ward, and that, although the district is composed of parts of three precincts, lying in two wards of the parish, the school board provided and gave notice of only one voting place, which was at the Grand Prairie schoolhouse, in precinct 4 of the Fifth ward, whereas it should have provided and given notice of a voting place in each precinct, and that, as a result of this failure, some 57 taxpayers, who were voters residing in precincts 1 and 2, were deprived of the right to vote in said election.
The Grand Prairie schoolhouse is in the district, and notice that it was the voting place established was given. None of the 57 taxpayers, mentioned above, offered to vote, and, so far as the record discloses, no property taxpayer residing in the district, and qualified to vote, was denied the right to do so, because he resided in either the First or Second precincts. But the question is whether they had, in this election, a legal right to vote at the Grand Prairie schoolhouse in the Fourth precinct of the Fifth ward, and hence, whether the law required them to go there to vote?
Section 1 of article 8 of the Constitution of 1921, in fixing the qualifications of an elector in an election by the people, so far as relates to residence, omitting only that part of this qualification relating to removal from one precinct or parish to another, reads:
"He shall have been an actual bona fide resident of the state for two years, of the parish *213 one year, of the municipality in municipal elections four months, and of the precinct, in which he offers to vote, three months next preceding the election. * * *"
With reference to taxpayers, as voters, on questions submitted to them, section 3 of the same article provides that:
"Upon all questions submitted to the taxpayers, as such, of any municipal or other political subdivision of this state, the qualifications of all such taxpayers as voters shall be those of age, residence, poll tax payment, and registration prescribed by this Constitution without regard to sex, and there shall be no voting by proxy."
It might be assumed without so saying that the Constitution does not undertake to create precincts throughout the state, but has left that matter to the Legislature. The Legislature by Act 130 of 1916, which is the general election law, has established precincts by making each police jury ward in every parish in the state, except the parish of Orleans, which has no such wards, a precinct, and at the same time has authorized each police jury to modify this provision by subdividing a ward, in accordance with certain directions, into precincts, the number of precincts which may be established in a ward being dependent upon the number of polling places that may be properly established therein. Act 130 of 1916, §§ 38 and 39. But the provisions of this act, as appears from the first section thereof, are not applicable to elections for the issuance of bonds, but are confined to elections to elect public officers, to elections upon propositions to amend the Constitution, and to municipal elections in towns having a population of 2,500 or more. We are aware of no express provision of law providing for or authorizing the creation of precincts for elections on propositions to authorize the issuance of bonds or the levy of special taxes, but, as such elections are sanctioned both by the Constitution and by statute, the authority to create precincts, in order to hold them, must *214 exist. We think that the power to create precincts for the purpose of a bond election is to be found in section 12 of Act 46 of 1921 (Extra Session), reading as follows:
"The governing authority ordering the election, shall designate the polling places; provide the ballot boxes; ballots; valuations of property, and compiled statement of the voters in number and amount, and fix the compensation of the election officers. It shall appoint for each polling place, three commissioners and one clerk of election (all of whom shall be registered voters)."
This act, among other things, provides for the holding of elections on propositions to vote bonds, called by school boards for school districts and by the governing bodies of other political subdivisions of the state for their respective subdivisions. There is implied, we think, in the power to name the polling places and to hold the election, delegated in the act, the power to define the precinct for each polling place named, whether by adopting the precincts, or parts thereof, within the district, created by the police jury for general election purposes, or by defining new precincts therein; and also think that when the school board, in calling the election, names but one polling place, it necessarily makes the district one precinct for the purposes of the election. All who have resided in the territory, comprising a precinct thus created, for three months, and who are registered voters from that territory and possess the additional qualifications required, are entitled to vote in the election at the polling place named by the school board for their precinct, whether the entire district be made one precinct or not, and although, in order to vote, it is necessary for some of them to vote in a precinct different from one created by the police jury for general election purposes, for in so doing, quoad the special election, they are not voting outside of their precinct.
In our opinion, the views here expressed do *215
not conflict with the rulings in Milton v. Lincoln Parish School Board,
Our conclusion is that the entire district, in this instance, was legally constituted one precinct, and that all who had resided in *216 the district and precinct for three months, and who were registered from that territory and possessed the remaining requirements to entitle them to vote, had a right to vote at the polling place named therein, and hence were not deprived of their votes.
It is also urged by plaintiffs that the list of those entitled to vote at the election, together with the assessed valuation of their property, furnished the commissioners of election, was not prepared by the registrar of voters or by any one connected with his office under his direction. The evidence discloses that the superintendent of schools employed Roy D. Edwards, an abstracter, to prepare a list of those owning real property. The list prepared by him was delivered to the superintendent, after which the names of those in the district owning personal property, together with the assessed valuation of their property, were added, and the list was then delivered to the registrar of voters, who, after adding a few more names of the owners of personal property and the assessed valuation of their property, signed the list, after which it was delivered to the commissioners of election. The presumption is that the registrar found the list correct after adding the names added by him, otherwise he would not have approved it by signing it. We think that the evidence shows a substantial compliance with the law. Section 14 of Act 46 of 1921 (Extra Session). Moreover, by the section cited, no defect or irregularity in, or omission from, the list of voters furnished by the registrar is sufficient to affect the validity of the election, unless it be established that voters were thereby deprived of votes sufficient in number and amount to change the result of the election. No such showing has been made here. The facts in this case differentiate it from Elkins v. Board of School Directors,
Plaintiffs also urge that 16 votes were cast and counted for the proposition submitted to the taxpayers when those casting them had no right to vote, and that 3 votes, which were legally cast against it, were not counted, because it was erroneously considered that they were spoiled ballots. It is unnecessary, however, for us to pass upon the validity of these votes. Should we allow plaintiffs, as to them, all that they contend for and deduct the alleged illegal 16 votes cast for the proposition from the total of the votes cast and counted for it, and add to the votes cast against it the 3 rejected ballots voted against it, there would still remain a clear majority in number and amount in favor of the proposition.
Plaintiffs also contend that the ordinances of the school board levying the tax for the year 1926 and ordering the issuance of the bonds were prematurely adopted, because they were passed before the result of the election was promulgated by publication in a newspaper, as provided by section 22 of Act 46 of 1921. It appears that the publication in a newspaper was not made until three days after the passage of these ordinances. However, the result was published. It seems to us that it would be vain now to annul the ordinances, when they could be immediately passed again, the publication having been made. In fact, it is said, though it forms no part of the record, that since plaintiffs raised this point in the lower court the board has adopted another ordinance levying the tax.
Plaintiffs also suggest in their brief that the creation of the school district is null and void, because the district *218 overlaps another school district in contravention of section 2 of Act 152 of 1920. No such issue was raised in the pleadings, but plaintiffs contend that they have a right to urge the point, because defendant offered an ordinance in evidence which they claim establishes this fact. When evidence is admissible under the pleadings it does not have the effect of enlarging them so as to create a new issue. We are not prepared in this instance to hold that the issues were thus enlarged. Moreover, it does not clearly appear that an overlapping district was created. We would not feel justified in holding that such a district was created in the absence of a clear issue made in the lower court.
The trial court rejected plaintiffs' demands.
For these reasons, the judgment appealed from is affirmed.
O'NIELL, C.J., dissents and hands down reasons.
ROGERS, J., dissents for the reasons set forth in the dissenting opinion of the Chief Justice.
BRUNOT, J., dissents from the refusal of a rehearing.
Dissenting Opinion
I respectfully dissent from the majority opinion and decree which, in effect, maintains that section 12 of the Act 46 of 1921, providing that the governing authority of the taxing district "shall designate the polling places," has done away with the requirement in sections 1 and 3 of article 8 of the Constitution that the residence qualifications of a taxpayer as a voter in a special tax or bond election shall be that he shall have been an actual bona fide resident of the state for two years, of the parish for one year, and of the voting precinct, in which he offers to vote, for three months next preceding the election. That is the precise and simple language of the Constitution. The Legislature *219 was thereby forbidden to do away with any of the qualifications of a taxpayer as a voter.
The provision in section 12 of the act, that "the governing authority ordering the election shall designate the polling places," was not intended to allow the governing authority — the school board in this instance — to abolish the voting precincts established by the police jury, or to convert the entire taxing district into one vast voting precinct, with only one "polling place," where every taxpayer in the district would have to go to cast his vote — and at which "polling place" the voters residing in other voting precincts would be permitted to vote, in violation of the residence qualifications required by the Constitution and the statute itself; for the very next section (section 13) of the statute declares:
"Only property taxpayers qualified as electors under the Constitution and laws of this state shall be entitled to vote at any election hereunder. The qualifications of such taxpayers as voters shall be those of age, residence, poll tax payment, and registration as voters, as prescribed by the Constitution and statutes, without regard to sex. There shall be no voting by proxy."
I have italicized the important word residence, because, in that respect, one of the qualifications prescribed by the Constitution is that the taxpayer "shall have been an actual bona fide resident of the * * * precinct in which he offers to vote, three months next preceding the election." Why speak of three months' residence in the precinct in which the taxpayer offers to vote, if the governing authority calling the election can, in utter disregard of the Constitution, abolish the precincts in which the voters are, respectively, registered as being entitled to vote?
The reason why, in section 12 of the act, the governing authority calling the election "shall designate the polling places" is that the taxing district, as created for the purpose of levying the tax, may include only parts of the votingprecincts, as established by the police *220 jury, under authority of sections 38 and 39 of the Act 130 of 1916, pp. 301 and 302; and the part of a voting precinct embraced within a taxing district created for the purpose of levying a special tax might not take in the customary "polling place" theretofore designated by the police jury. The term "polling places" in the provision of section 12 of Act 46 of 1921, that the governing authority ordering a special election "shall designate the polling places," means the place in each voting precinct at which the polling booth is established and at which the election commissioners are assembled. The term "polling places" in section 12 of Act 46 of 1921 is not synonymous with "voting precincts" in sections 38 and 39 of the Act 130 of 1916. For example, section 71 of the act refers to "the officers whose duty it is to designate and appoint polling places." Those officers are not authorized to create voting precincts. By sections 38, 39 and 40 of the Act 130 of 1916, a voting precinct (even in New Orleans) must contain not more than 400 voters, "as nearly as practicable." In section 39 it is provided:
"The precincts and polling places, or any one of them, once established under this act, shall not be changed except by a vote of the police jury given in favor of said change, and then not within three months prior to a general election."
The reason for the three-months' limit is, manifestly, that one of the qualifications required of a voter is that he shall have resided in the precinct in which he offers to vote, three months next preceding the election. By section 12 of the Act 46 of 1921 the governing authority in a special tax or bond election may, for the reasons which I have stated, change the polling place in any precinct, but it takes a vote of the police jury to change a voting precinct.
We must bear in mind that sections 1 and 3 of article 8 of the Constitution apply as well to parishes and municipal corporations as to other political subdivisions. According to *221 the majority opinion in this case, the police jury of a parish having the ordinary length and breadth of about 35 or 40 miles, or the municipal council of New Orleans, Shreveport, Baton Rouge, or Monroe, could provide for only one voting precinct in the case of a special tax or bond election. It will not do to say that the courts would have authority in such case to annul the election if the courts were of the opinion that there were not enough voting precincts provided for the convenience of the taxpayers desiring to vote; for that would be a matter for the governing authority of the parish, municipality, or other political subdivision to determine.
In Milton v. Lincoln Parish School Board,
"Under Const. 1913, art. 197, § 1, and article 199, requiring an elector to have been a resident of the parish for one year, and of the precinct for six months, where there was only one voting precinct in a school district embracing territory lying in two parishes, and voters from one parish went to the precinct in the other parish and voted at a bond election, their votes were improperly counted."
In Whatley v. La Salle Parish School Board,
"Where, in a suit to set aside a school tax election on the ground that no election was held in one of the voting precincts, the evidence showed that the number of voters and the amount deprived of right to vote was sufficient to overcome the number of votes and amount of taxes carried at other precincts, the tax was a nullity."
In Shautin v. Board of Commissioners of St. Landry-St. Martin Gravity Drainage District,
*222"Where drainage district embraced territory in two parishes, and voting on bond issue was only in one, votes cast by voters of other parish were illegal, and though bond issue had a majority in the number of votes it was defeated where, had such illegal votes, which were for the bond issue, been voted in their proper parish and against the issue, the vote for the issue would have lacked majority in amount of property voted."
An attempt is made in the majority opinion in this case to distinguish it from the three cases cited, but the reasons for which those cases were decided as they were decided are also applicable to this case. The constitutional requirement that a voter shall have resided for twelve months in the parish in which he offers to vote is not more emphatic than the constitutional requirement that he shall have resided three months in the voting precinct in which he offers to vote. According to the majority opinion, if the governing authority calling a special tax or bond election sees fit to consider the whole taxing district, or parish or municipality, as the case may be, as one gigantic voting precinct, any taxpayer who has resided within that area for three months next preceding the election — and who has the other qualifications required by the Constitution and the statutes — is entitled to vote, no matter how often or how recently he has changed his residence from one voting precinct to another within the taxing district, or parish or municipality, as the case may be.
If that is so, the ballot boxes will have to be enlarged to accommodate the voters coming from the many miles around. According to sections 38, 39 and 40 of the Act 130 of 1916, a ballot box, even in New Orleans, is made to hold approximately 400 ballots — 400 being approximately the maximum voting population of a precinct. The average area of the voting precincts in the country parishes is about 25 or 30 square miles. The statute requires that, in designating the polling places in the several voting precincts, the officers intrusted with the duty — the school board in this instance, the chief of police in New Orleans — shall see that they are centrally located, or as nearly so as practicable. The idea is to make it equally convenient for the voters throughout each voting precinct to enjoy the franchise.
The obvious reason why the Constitution *223 forbids an elector to vote outside of the precinct in which he resides and is registered as qualified voter is that the commissioners of election, being also residents of the precinct, are acquainted with and can identify those who are entitled to vote. That is just as important in a special tax or bond election as it is in the election of public officers. At any rate, the writers of the provisions in the Constitution and the statutes on the subject thought so.
The 57 taxpayers who did not vote in this election — for want of a polling place in their voting precinct — and whose votes might have changed the result of the election, were warranted in their belief — if they knew that an election was going on in the other precinct — that they had no right to vote in that precinct, where they were not registered as qualified voters.