Allen v. State

785 A.2d 901, 147 N.H. 243, 2001 N.H. LEXIS 201
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedNovember 26, 2001
DocketNo. 2000-435
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 785 A.2d 901 (Allen v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allen v. State, 785 A.2d 901, 147 N.H. 243, 2001 N.H. LEXIS 201 (N.H. 2001).

Opinion

Dalianis, J.

This is an interlocutory transfer without ruling from the Superior Court (Hampsey, J.), see Sup. CT. R. 9, asking whether, for the purposes of Part I, Articles 1, 2 and 12 and Part II, Article 5 of the New [244]*244Hampshire Constitution, cooperative school districts are the appropriate taxing districts for taxes assessed to pay for educational services beyond those paid for with State funds. We answer the question in the negative. The parties have also transferred a question concerning the petitioners’ right to attorney’s fees. In light of our ruling, this question is moot.

“We accept the statement of the case presented in the interlocutory transfer.” Trovato v. DeVeau, 143 N.H. 523, 524 (1999). The formation and operation of cooperative school districts are governed generally by RSA chapter 195. Every cooperative school district has one or more formulas by which the district apportions its costs among the pre-existing school districts (ie., towns). By statute, these formulas are determined by the voters in the towns that comprise the cooperative school district. See RSA 195:7, :8 (1999) (applying to cooperative school districts organized before July 1,1963); RSA 195:18, IH(e), (g), :18, VI-VIII (Supp. 2000) (applying to cooperative school districts organized under RSA 195:18). Most cooperative school districts use formulas that rely upon a combination of equalized property valuation and average daily student membership in the constituent towns. For instance, in the Contoocook Valley (Con-Val) Cooperative School District, half of the district’s costs are apportioned on the basis of equalized property valuation in each town and half are apportioned on the basis of average daily student membership in each town. As a result of formulas that use factors other than the value of real property, local education tax rates may vary among the towns within a cooperative school district. Property of identical value in adjacent towns within a cooperative school district may be taxed at different rates, depending upon the workings of the formula.

Each of the petitioners resides in one of the towns that make up either the Con-Val Cooperative School District or the Mascenic Cooperative School District. They initiated this action in 1996, alleging that the differing tax rates within the Con-Val and Mascenic cooperative .school districts violated the “proportional and reasonable” requirement of Part II, Article 5 and the equal protection provisions of Part I, Articles 1, 2 and 12 of the New Hampshire Constitution. The State moved to dismiss the action, which the court granted. The trial court framed “the decisive issue” as “whether the individual towns or the cooperative school district is the taxing class or district.” In ruling for the State, the court determined that the individual towns were the taxing districts and held that tax rates could vary from town to town within a cooperative without implicating the New Hampshire Constitution. For the purposes of this interlocutory transfer, we treat this ruling as a nullity.

The petitioners appealed, and while their appeal was pending, we decided Claremont School District v. Governor, 142 N.H. 462 (1997) [245]*2450Claremont II). In Claremont II, we held that “the present system of financing ... public education in New Hampshire is unconstitutional.” Id. at 465. We then remanded the petitioners’ case to the superior court for proceedings consistent with Claremont II.

In June 1998, the superior court ruled that Claremont II required a finding that the statutory scheme at issue was unconstitutional. The trial court reasoned that the scheme was unconstitutional because it was part of the education funding scheme we held unconstitutional in Claremont II. In May 2000, the superior court ordered the parties to frame the outstanding issues in the case and to submit a proposed order to transfer these issues without ruling to this court. This interlocutory transfer followed.

Part II, Article 5 of the New Hampshire Constitution requires that “all taxes be proportionate and reasonable — that is, equal in valuation and uniform in rate.” Id. at 468 (quotation omitted). “The test to determine whether a tax is equal and proportional is to inquire whether the taxpayers’ property was valued at the same per cent of its true value as all the taxable property in the taxing district.” Id. (quotation and brackets omitted). Thus, determining whether it is constitutionally permissible for tax rates to vary from town to town within a cooperative school district depends upon whether the cooperative school district or the town is the taxing district. If the town is the taxing district, then it is permissible for tax rates to vary among the towns that comprise the cooperative school district. On the other hand, if the cooperative school district is the taxing district, then the tax rates within the cooperative must be uniform. For the purposes of this interlocutory transfer, the parties agree that the taxes at issue are local, and are not State taxes. The sole issue is which local entity is the appropriate taxing district.

In Gilsum v. Monadnock School District, 105 N.H. 361 (1964), and Monadnock School District v. Fitzwilliam, 105 N.H. 487 (1964), we implied that the taxing district for Part II, Article 5 purposes is the town and not the cooperative school district. We see no reason to depart from these cases today.

At issue in Gilsum was the allocation of costs to operate a regional school within the Monadnock Regional School District. The Monadnock Regional School District had been subtracting from the entire district budget the amount it received in State foundation aid before allocating to each town its share of costs. Gilsum, 105 N.H. at 363. The towns of Gilsum and Sullivan objected to this procedure, arguing that under this approach, they received less State foundation aid than they were entitled to receive and had to raise more money through taxes than they would have had to raise had they received all of the State foundation aid to which they were entitled. Id. at 363-64. Gilsum and Sullivan argued that the school district [246]*246should have first determined each town’s share of costs without regard to the State aid and then credited each town with the full amount of State aid to which the town was entitled. Id. at 363.

We agreed, observing that the legislature intended “that a town which is a part of a cooperative school district should benefit from foundation aid to the same extent that its pre-existing school district would have benefited if it still existed.” Id. at 365. Thus, we held that the State foundation aid paid to the cooperative school district “because of and measured by the needs of a pre-existing school district,” had to be credited to the town which constituted the pre-existing school district. Id.

In Fitzwilliam, 105 N.H. at 489-90, four of the towns in the Monadnock Regional School District asserted that the other towns in the district, by agreeing to the method the district used to allocate foundation aid, were estopped from arguing both that this method was contrary to the Gilswm decision and that the district should adopt the Gilswm method in the future. These four towns also claimed that their constitutional rights to proportional taxation and equal protection would be violated if the district were to adopt the Gilswm method. Id. at 494-95.

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Related

Town of Acworth v. Fall Mountain Regional School District
857 A.2d 1265 (Supreme Court of New Hampshire, 2004)
State v. Barnes
849 A.2d 152 (Supreme Court of New Hampshire, 2004)

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Bluebook (online)
785 A.2d 901, 147 N.H. 243, 2001 N.H. LEXIS 201, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allen-v-state-nh-2001.