176 Ky. 841 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1917
Opinion op the 'Court by
Affirming.
The single question presented for decision by this appeal.is whether the appellants, Weil, Roth & Company, shall be compelled, under their contract' to that effect, to accept and pay for, at their face value, $46,000.00 of bonds issued by the city of Paris for use in the erection and equipment of additional school buildings for the white and colored children of the city. Appellants express their willingness to take and pay for the bonds as agreed, but claim that it would not be safe for them to do so because the election at which the voters of-the city .authorized the issuance of the bonds was held June 2, 1917, instead of on the day a regular election was required by law to be held. In other words, it is their •contention that the holding of the election on June 2, 1917, instead of on a regular election day, rendered it ¡illegal and void. -They cite in support of this conten
“The first objection has been answered by this court in Belknap, etc., v. City of Louisville, etc., 99 Ky. 474, where it was held (Judge Landes dissenting) that-the submission of such questions to the voters, must be at a regular'election. It may be observed here that the notice for the election and the manner of conducting the same seem to have been in substantial accordance with the requirements of the constitution and the statutes. The vote stood, for the issual of the bonds, 925, and against it, 185, out of a total vote at the election of 1,226, The proposition, therefore, carried under section 157 of the constitution, as construed in the case cited. ’ ’
It will thus be seen that the court rested its decision solely upon the case of Belknap, etc., v. City of Louisville, etc., supra, although the bonds under consideration in that case were not school bonds, but were bonds to be issued for the purchase and maintenance of parks, the issuance of which could only be authorized by vote of the people of the city of Louisville at an election on the regular election day, as required by the provisions of the constitution, referred to in the opinion. The election in the instant case, however, was held in accordance with section 155 of the constitution, which does not require such elections to be held on the regular election, day. Section 155, Constitution,' is as follows:
“School Elections — Exceptions In Favor of. The provisions of section 145 to 154, inclusive, shall not apply to the election of school trustees and other common school district elections. Said elections shall be regulated by the General Assembly, except as otherwise provided in this constitution.”
Sections 145 to 154, inclusive, referred to in section 155, treat of elections other than elections respecting'
Paris is a city of the fourth class, and section 3588, Kentucky Statutes, confers upon cities of this class the power to maintain a system of public schools, and provides for the election of a board of education, to which shall be entrusted the control of the public schools of the city, and the property and funds thereunto belonging. Section 3588a empowers such cities to organize a system of free graded schools, for the education separately of the white and colored pupils of the city; authorizes the city council to appoint a board of trustees for such schools and to levy such a tax from time to time as shall be necessary to erect necessary buildings and maintain the schools. Section 3606, Kentucky Statutes, provides:
“.Any city of the fourth class in which said system of public schools shall be established and maintained shall constitute one common school district, and the superintendent of public instruction shall pay each year, out of the common school fund of the state to the white board of education, the same amount per capita for each white child of pupil age in said district, and to the colored board of education the same amount per capita for each colored child of pupil age in said district, as he shall pay to each child of pupil age in other school districts in the state. . . .”
Section 3490, sub-sections 2-34, more specifically define the powers of the council of cities of the fourth class with respect to the levy and collection of taxes, sub-section 2 giving authority to levy and collect for-municipal purposes an annual ad valorem tax not exceeding 75 cents on every hundred dollars of all property made taxable by law for state purposes; in addition, a tax not exceeding 50 cents on the hundred dollars’ worth of property taxable for state purposes, for the maintenance of public schools-or the erection -of buildings for public purposes; also a tax not exceeding 50 cents “to meet the principal and interest of any bonded debt hereinafter authorized, and not exceeding $1.00, to meet the principal and interest on, and provide a sinking fund for -the extinction of, any bonded debt contracted before the adoption of the present; constitution, provided
It appears from the record before us that the election here involved was held in accordance with the requirements of the several sections of the statutes referred to and it is conceded that it was ordered by a proper resolution and notice passed and given by the board of council of the city of Paris, in pursuance of a request of the board of education of the city contained in a written. l’eport setting forth'the needs of the common schools of the city, and the necessity for the city’s incurring the indebtedness to the amount represented by the bonds in question; and while none of the provisions of the statutes to which reference has been made, in express terms,
“But it is contended that the election should have been held on the regular election day, and that a graded school election does not come within the exception in section 155 of the Constitution, providing that the provisions of sections 145 to 354, inclusive, of the- Constitution, 'shall not apply to the-.election of school trustees and-other common school district elections. ’ But this contention is purely technical and it attempts to draw an unwarranted distinction between a common school district and a graded school district. Section 155 clearly manifests a purpose to take all character of school elections out of the operation of the rules prescribed for and limitations placed upon all other elections. Crook v. Bartlett, 155 Ky. 311.”
Formerly, elections to take the sense of the voters of a graded common school district in the matter of incurring indebtedness by the issuance of bonds was required by section 4464, Kentucky Statutes, to be ordered by the county judge of the county upon the written petition signed by at least twenty-five per cent, of legal voters, taxpayers in the district to be affected. Under the provisions of that section the county judge was authorized to cause the election to be held either at the next regular state, town or city election to be held in the county, “or on any other day fixed by said judge in said order.” And while by a later legislative act the power to order an election for school purposes in a city of the fourth class seems to have been taken from the county judge and vested in the board of council of such city, the provision of section 4464, permitting the election to be held on a day other than the day of the regular election, manifested the legislative intent to bring such elections within the exception authorized by section 155, Constitution ; and in none of the acts respecting common schools-passed by the legislature since the enactment of that section, have we been able to find any provision repealing the authority it gives to hold an election, affecting a graded common school district, on a day other than that of the regular election.
“Nor is this election invalid because it was held upon a day other than the regular election day provided by law. ’ ’
It follows from what has been said that in holding the ■election on the question of voting bonds for school purposes, the city of Paris had the same right as any other graded common school district to hold it on any day selected by its board of council. Hence, there can be no doubt of the validity of the election held June 2, 1917. The case of City of Ashland v. Culbertson, 103 Ky. 161, in so far as it conflicts with the conclusion herein expressed, is hereby overruled.
For the reasons indicated, the judgment of the circuit court, requiring appellants to accept and pay for the bonds is affirmed.