165 Iowa 731 | Iowa | 1914
I. The plaintiff brings this action for himself and other persons having a common interest against the county treasurer of Monroe county and the independent school district of Albia, to enjoin the collection of taxes levied in favor of the school district. The ground upon which the action is based is that the territory on which the challenged taxes were levied was not within the limits of the Albia school district.
In October, 1909, the incorporated city of Albia, through its city council, passed a resolution to extend its city limits from its then area of 1,737 to 5,760 acres; the added .territory including much land used only for agricultural purposes. Following the adoption of the resolution by the city council, the question of the extension of the corporate limits was submitted to the voters residing within the territory, and at a special election held on November 22, 1909, the proposition was carried. After the determination of the result of the special election, the mayor of Albia issued a proclamation of the result, and declared the limits of the city extended as proposed and voted upon. The proceedings for the extension of the corporate limits were conducted in compliance with the provision of the Code, section 615, and no question is raised as to the regularity of that action. As a result of the action thus taken, the independent school district of Albia assumed jurisdiction of the added territory, not theretofore a part of the district, under the provision of Code Supp., section 2793: “When the corporate limits of any city or town are extended outside the existing independent district . . . the boundaries of said independent district . . . shall be also correspondingly extended.”
Shortly after the conclusion of the proceedings for the extension of the city corporate limits, L. W. Stason and others, residents and owners of property in the annexed territory, commenced a proceeding against the city of Albia for severance of all the territory in the included area, based upon the averment that no rights nor liabilities against the city had
II. The claim of the plaintiff is that the school tax for 1911, is illegal and void, for the reason that all of the property and territory thus sought to be taxed was outside of the bounds of the school district of Albia for the following reasons:
(1) That said property is all embraced within that part claimed to have been added to the school district of Albia by the acts of the city officials and as a result of the election to extend the city limits, and is now outside of the city limits as fixed by the order in the Stason case.
(2) That, so far as relates to the territory involved in this action, the said extension was illegal and void from its inception, because unreasonable and unwarranted.
(3) That the district court of Monroe county, Iowa, in its judgment and order in the Stason case, adjudicated that •said territory was never legally within the city limits of Albia, and that the extension was an unreasonable and unwarranted exercise of the right to extend city limits as conferred by the statutes under which said city acted.
(4) That the provisions of Code Supp. section 2793-a, that the extension of the corporate limits of a city or town outside existing independent district shall work an extension of the boundaries of the district, and that the reduction of the boundaries of a city or town shall not affect the boundaries of an independent district, are null and void, because of being in conflict with the statutes of Iowa relative to the organization and boundaries of school districts, and the jurisdiction of school officials.
(5) That the question submitted to the voters, being that of extending the city limits, was not the exact question they were to determine, and the acts of extension following such vote were null and void.
(6) That the quoted portion of the statute is incongruous matter, in conflict with its title, and with the part of the act immediately preceding it.
(8) That the law under which the corporate limits were extended and outside property transferred to the independent school district of Albia is in violation of .article 1, section 9, Constitution of Iowa, in that under it plaintiff and the district township of Troy are deprived of property without due process of law.
(9) That the quoted portion of the statute is void, because the act of which it is a part embraces more than.one subject; that such matters are not properly connected with the subject expressed in the title; and that the subject covered by that part of the act is not expressed in its title.
The defendants, not admitting the legal conclusions relied upon by the plaintiff, pleaded affirmatively, by way of estoppel and laches, that after the extension of the boundaries children* residing in the territory in question attended school in the independent district withorit paying tuition; that estimates for school purposes were made in 1910, and that taxes for the independent district were collected upon this property in 1911; that at the school election in 1911 many of the persons living in the territory voted; that in 1911 a special election was held in the school district to pass upon the question of issuing bonds to build a new schoolhouse, and at said election many of the electors now represented by the plaintiff voted, thereby acquiescing in the acts of the defendant school district; and that, following such, expenditure of money had been made towards erecting a new building.
The trial court held that, as one of the issues in the Stason case was that the extension was unwarranted and unreasonable, by mailing a settlement by -which certain property was severed, there was a confession that it was so, and that the settlement had the effect of an adjudication against the city on that question; and that the city limits not having been legally extended beyond that settled as the boundaries in the Stason
III. Code Supp. section 615, prescribes a method by which an incorporated city or town may extend its boundaries. No question is raised in the present case but that which was done in extending the corporate limits of the city of Albia followed in all respects the requirements of the law, and as to that branch of the case we need give no further attention, excepting in its relation to the extension of the boundaries of the independent school district of Albia, which is the real subject of contention.
Nor can it be seriously questioned that under Code' Supp. section 2973-a, the result of the extension of the city limits was also to extend the boundaries of the independent district of Albia, unless, for one or more of the reasons relied upon by appellee, the statute or the acts done which came within its provisions were void. And it is equally true that under that section a subsequent reduction in the territory of the city did not have the effect of automatically reducing the independent district to a territory concurrent with that of the reduced city boundaries, providing it be found that the original extension was valid, and that the statute which, Avithout further action, enlarged the school district boundaries was constitutionally enacted, and was a valid exercise of legislative power.
IY. The act in question was passed by the twenty-seventh General Assembly, being chapter 89, and is entitled “An act to empower boards of directors of school corporations to change boundary lines between such corporations in certain cases,” and, as enacted, appears in Code Supp. section 2793-a, as follows:
When the boundary line between a school toAvnship and an independent city or town district is not also the line between civil townships, such boundary may be changed at any time by the concurrence of the boards of directors,; but in no ease shall a forty-acre tract of land, by the government survey,
We think it must follow that, as against the school district, the former proceeding was not an adjudication, even though it should be held that the entry of judgment upon the stipulation was as between the parties an adjudication of all questions raised in the case, and inherent in the final order of judgment. Whatever may have been the issues, this court has held that in such cases the question as to how the territory came to be annexed is immaterial. Hanson v. Cresco, 132 Iowa, 533.
The title of the act in question was “An act to empower boards of directors of school corporations to change boundary lines between such corporations in certain cases.” As printed in the Code Supp. section 2793-a, it is preceded by the designation or catch words ‘ ‘ corporation limits changed. ’ ’ The particular claim is that the last two sentences treat of a subject not embraced in the title of the act, in that they provide as to the effect which the extension or reducing of city limits shall have upon school boundaries, without any action by the boards of
The purpose of this provision of our fundamental law was stated in Cook v. Marshall County, 119 Iowa, 396. ‘ ‘ The end sought to be obtained by the constitutional provision invoked by the appellants ‘was to prevent the union in the same act of incongruous matters and, of objects having no connection, no relation.’ And with this it was designed to prevent surprise in legislation by having matters of one nature embraced in a bill whose title expressed another.”
In Beaner v. Lucas, 138 Iowa, 215, this court held, in accordance with the prevailing rule, that “the language . . . employed should not be given a narrow or illiberal construction”; and in State v. Judge, 2 Iowa, 280, it was held that the power to declare a law unconstitutional is not to be resorted to, unless it becomes necessary in a clear decisive ease, but recognizing that, when a ease clearly comes within the inhibition of the Constitution, the courts should so declare.
With these statements of the law as a base, we consider whether the objection now made to the statute, is of such force as to require at our hands a holding that the criticised sentences are invalid. The rule of the Constitution is that the subject of the act shall be expressed in its title, and that the act itself shall contain but matters properly connected therewith. In Beaner v. Lucas, supra, this court quoted with approval the rule announced in Ritchie v. People, 155 Ill. 98 (40 N. E. 454, 29 L. R. A. 79, 46 Am. St. Rep. 315), that “all matters are properly included in the act, which are germane to the title”; and that “the Constitution is obeyed, if all the provisions relate to the one subject indicated in the title, and are parts of it, or incident to it, or reasonably connected with it, or in some reasonable sense auxiliary to the object in view.” The same mile is adhered to by this court in State v. Forkner, 94 Iowa, 1; Cook v. Marshall County, 119 Iowa, 384; State v. Edmunds, 127 Iowa, 339; Sisson v. Board of Supervisors, 128 Iowa, 464; State v. Fairmont Creamery Co., 153 Iowa, 702.
X. We need give no extended consideration to the questions of laches and estoppel other than to say that the record shows that the plaintiffs exercised reasonable diligence in the assertion of their rights, and that from it we do not find facts Avhich support the plea of estoppel.
Finding that the school boundaries were lawfully extended,. it follows that the decree of the trial court must be, and it is, — Reversed.