191 P. 230 | Utah | 1920
This is an original proceeding commenced in this court by the plaintiff as a citizen, resident, and taxpayer of Cache county school district to prohibit the latter from issuing and selling its bonds voted at a special bond election held in said district February 17, 1920.
The question submitted at the election to the voters of the school district, in so far as may be necessary for consideration here, was:
“Shall the hoard of education of Cache county school district, Cache county, Utah, he empowered to issue and sell its negotiable bonds in the sum of four hundred thousand ($400,000.00) dollars for the purpose of purchasing school sites, building schoolhouses, supply the same with * * * furniture and the necessary apparatus, and improving buildings and grounds, said bonds to be issued in denomination of $1,000.00,” etc.?
At an election held pursuant to notice, 778 votes were cast in favor and 327 against the issuance of said bonds. The board of education of said district thereupon proceeded, after the necessary preliminary steps had been taken, to negotiate the sale of the bonds as voted for at said election.
" The plaintiff’s affidavit and petition for a writ of prohibition challenge the legality of the bonds and the right of issuance and sale thereof by the said school district upon three grounds, namely:
“(1) That the notice calling such election provided that the PQlls should be open between the hours of 1 o’clock p. m. and 7 o’clock p. m. of said day, and the polls were actually open only between said hours, whereas the laws of the state of Utah require that*432 at all elections the polls shall he open between the hours of 7 o’clock a. m. and 7 o’clock p. m. (2) That the resolution calling said election and the notice of election provided that the question of issuing said bonds should be submitted to the ‘qualified voters and taxpayers,’ whereas the laws of the state of Utah require that such question shall be submitted to the ‘registered voters residing in the district 'who shall have paid a property tax in the year preceding such election.’ (3) That the resolution calling such election and the notice of election as published and posted provide that a portion of funds to be derived from the sale of said bonds shall be used for the purpose of making improvements to existing schoolhouses, whereas there is no authority under the laws of the state of Utah whereby a board of education may issue .and sell bonds for any other purpose than purchasing school sites, building or purchasing one or more school houses, and supplying the same with furniture and the necessary appartus for improving the grounds, and for the refunding and redemption of all or any portion of the outstanding bonds in any district.”
To the plaintiff’s affidavit and petition the defendants have filed a general demurrer, thus testing the sufficiency of the grounds complained of by plaintiff as invalidating
1. The first question presented by the plaintiff, therefore, is whether or not the resolution of the school board calling the election and the notice of election as posted and published providing that the polls should be open between the hours of 1 o’clock p. m. and 7 o’clock p. m., and the fact that the polls remained open only during said hours, invalidated the election.
Cache county is a school district of the first class.
■ Practically all the laws of our state appertaining to the establishment and maintenance of our public school system are to be found under title 90, Comp. Laws, Utah 1917, as amended by the provisions of chapter 84, Laws Utah 1919. With respect to special elections for the purpose of bonding a school district of the first class, section 4627, Comp. Laws Utah 1917, provides that the board of education may submit the question of bonding to the registered voters who are taxpayers of the district. Section 4628 prescribes the manner in Avhieh such an election may be called and that the notice of the election shall contain, among other things, “the time
“At all elections, the polls shall he opened at seven o’clock a. m. and continue open until seven o’clock p. m. of the same day.” '
Both parties agree that by reason .of section 4628, supra, providing that the notice of the election shall, prescribe the timé during which the polls shall remain open, said section presupposes that the hours should be fixed, either by action of the board or by some statute in order to hold a valid election. That must be conceded.
The provisions of title 27, c. 1, supra, relied on by the plaintiff, deal with a “general election.” Under the aforesaid title and chapter, it is provided by section 2100 thereof that—
“There must he held throughout the state on the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November in the year 1898, and biennially thereafter, an election to he known as the general election.”
Section 2101 of the same chapter defines a general election to be “for the purpose of choosing in the proper years therefor as specified by the Constitution and the laws, one or more of the following officers, to wit,” (naming public officers and not including municipal or school officers). Sec. 2111, supra, provides that at all elections the polls shall remain open from '7 o’clock a. m. until 7 o’clock p. m. of an election day. A mere cursory reading of the provisions of chapter 1 under said title 27 ought to convince the most critical that the Legislature is there dealing with general elections held for the purpose of electing public officers as distinguished from all other elections. So, too, we think it is apparent that under title 90, supra, the Legislature is dealing solely and independently with matters concerning the public schools, under
2. We shall next consider whether the fact that the resolution calling an election and the notice of the election as published and posted providing that the question of issuing bonds should be submitted to the “qualified voters and taxpayers” render the election an illegal one.
The qualifications of the electors are prescribed by section 4630, Comp. Laws Utah 1917, which provides:
“Every registered voter residing in any school representative*435 district in which any election is held for the purpose of determining the question of issuing bonds for such school district, and who shall have paid a property tax therein in the year preceding such election, shall he entitled to vote at any such election. Challenges for cause by any qualified voter shall he allowed at such election, and promptly decided by the judges conducting the same.”
We think the term “qualified voters and taxpayers” as employed in the notice was equivalent to “registered voters, * * * who shall have paid a property tax, * * * as provided in the statute.” Necessarily a qualified voter and taxpayer must be one who has registered and paid a property tax. McLaurin v. Tatum, 85 S. C. 444, 67 S. E. 560; Whitmore v. Carbon County, 36 Utah, 394, 104 Pac. 222. Moreover, in the case last above cited this court held:
“The statute itself prescribes the qualification of such electors. It was not essential to set them forth in the notice. * * * The function * * * of the notice is not to notify the public * * * what the law is, but to notify them of the proposed action to be taken,” etc.
We find no merit in plaintiff’s contention that the submission of the question to be voted upon and the
3. Lastly, the plaintiff questions the validity of the bond issue for the purposes designated by the board of education in the resolution calling the election and in the notice posted and published.
It is provided by section 4627, Comp. Laws Utah 1917, that—
“The board of education may * * * call an election in each school representative precinct of the district, and submit to the taxpayers of the district whether bonds of such district shall be issued and sold for the purpose of raising money for. purchasing school sites, for building or purchasing one or more schoolhouses, and supplying the same with furniture and necessary apparatus, for improving the grounds, and for the refunding and redemption of all or any portion of any bonds outstanding in such district.”
The resolution passed and the notice posted and published designated, among other purposes expressly authorized by statute, the purposes of making “improvements to present schoolhouses” and also “for additions to present school-
After a careful review of the proceedings of the defendant board of education, and duly considering all the questions raised by plaintiff’s petition and the contentions made by his counsel, we have become convinced that the proposed issuance and sale of bonds by the defendant is legal. It is therefore ordered that plaintiff’s application for a writ of