Baldwin v. Board of Education

33 N.W.2d 473, 76 N.D. 51, 1948 N.D. LEXIS 59
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 2, 1948
DocketFile 7106
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 33 N.W.2d 473 (Baldwin v. Board of Education) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baldwin v. Board of Education, 33 N.W.2d 473, 76 N.D. 51, 1948 N.D. LEXIS 59 (N.D. 1948).

Opinion

*54 Christianson, Ch. J.,

The plaintiff, a taxpayer and resident of the city of Fargo, seeks to enjoin the defendant from offering for sale, selling, executing, or delivering certain bonds for the purpose of obtaining funds to erect, enlarge, improve, furnish and equip school buildings in the territory under the jurisdiction of the defendant. The sole question in controversy is whether the defendant is a public corporation, having a legal entity separate and distinct from the city of Fargo, or is merely a board or department of the government of the city of Fargo. It is conceded that if the defendant is a separate and distinct public corporation, that is, a school corporation separate and distinct from the municipal corporation, the city of Fargo, and has the power to incur indebtedness up to the limit fixed for such school corporation under the laws of the state that then it has authority to issue the bonds in question and the indebtedness created thereby will not be in excess of the legal debt limit of the defendant. If, on the other hand, the defendant, the Board of *55 Education of the City of Fargo, is merely a board or department of the city of Fargo so that the bonds which the defendant is about to issue and sell will be in fact and in law the bonds of the city of Fargo, then the indebtedness created will exceed the debt limit of the city.

The question thus posed involves legislation originating before statehood and the construction that has been placed thereon for more than 60 years. An examination of the applicable statutes convinces us that the defendant is a public corporation wholly separate from the city of Fargo and that while the defendant corporation operates within the same territory as the city of Fargo it is in no sense a board or department of the city of Fargo.

The defendant, the Board of Education of the City of Fargo, was created by act of the legislature of the Territory of Dakota approved March 4, 1885. See 1925 Supplement to ND Comp Laws 1913, § 1321a1-1321a25; ND Rev Code 1943, Chapter 15-51. The act provided: “The board of education shall be a body corporate in relation to all the powers and duties conferred upon them by this act, to be styled “The Board of Education of the City of Fargo” and as such shall have power to sue and be sued, to contract and be contracted with, and shall possess all the powers usual and incident to bodies corporate as shall be herein given, and shall procure and usen common seal. A majority of the members of said board shall constitute a quorum for the transaction of business.” ND Rev Code 1943, 15-5107; 1925 Supp § 1321a7.

The act provided that the members of the Board of Education of the City of Fargo shall be elected at an election to be held each year, ND Rev Code 1943, § 15-5101, 1925 Supp § 1321a1, that the Board is authorized to fill vacancies until the next regular election, (ND Rev Code 1943, § 15-5105, 1925 Supp § 1321 a5), and is authorized to elect a secretary and fix his compensation, ND Rev Code 1943, § 15-5110,1925 Supp § 1321a10.

The act provided:

“The said Board of Education shall have power, and it shall be their duty to levy and raise from time to time by tax, such *56 sums as may be determined by them to be necessary and proper for any or all the following purposes: 1st. To purchase, exchange, lease or improve sites for school houses. 2nd. To build, purchase, lease, enlarge, alter, improve and repair school houses and their outhouses and appurtenances. 3rd. To procure, exchange, improve, and repair school apparatus, books, furniture and appendages, but the powers herein granted shall not be deemed to authorize the furnishing of class or text books to any scholar whose parent or guardian is able to furnish the same. 4th. To provide fuel and defray the contingent expenses of the board including the compensation of the secretary. 5th. To pay teachers wages after the application of public moneys, which may by law be appropriated and provided for that purpose.” ND Rev Code 1943, § 15-5111; 1925 Supp § 1321a11.

The act further provided:

“The treasurer of said city shall serve as treasurer of said Board of Education without compensation and shall give bonds to such Board of Education in such sums and with such conditions and sureties as they from time to time shall require in order to insure the safekeeping of the school funds, which shall be in addition to his other bonds, and the said treasurer and his sureties upon such bonds shall be accountable to the board for school moneys that came into his hands . . . ND Rev Code 1943, § 15-5115, 1925 Supp § 1321a16.

It further provided:

“The treasurer shall pay out the moneys authorized by this act and received by him upon warrants drawn by the president and countersigned by the secretary and attested by the seal of the Board of Education.” ND Rev Code 1943, § 15-5116, 1925 Supp § 1321a17.

The foregoing provisions have remained in force without any material change since their original enactment.

The act authorized and empowered the Board of Education to issue bonds for school purposes aggregating not to exceed $80,-000.' There was no requirement that the issuance of such bonds be authorized by the voters at an election. (Act approved March *57 4, 1885, § 14.) The Constitution of North Dakota (adopted in 1889) provided: “All laws now in force in the Territory of Dakota, which are not repugnant to this Constitution, shall remain in force until they expire by their own limitation or be altered or repealed.” ND Const Schedule, § 2. Accordingly, the act of the Territorial Legislature approved March 4, 1885, became a law of the State of North Dakota and has remained in force as originally enacted, with the exception of certain provisions subsequently repealed or amended. However, the special act which created the defendant, a body corporate, did not appear in any volume of the laws either of the Territory of Dakota or of the State of North Dakota until it was embodied as §§1321a1 to 1321a25 inclusive of the 1925 Supplement to the 1913 Compiled Laws of North Dakota. The Act of March 4, 1885, creating the Board of Education of the City of Fargo was amended by the Legislative Assembly of the State of North Dakota by Chapter 125, Laws 1915. 1925 Supp § 1321a14. By such amendatory act certain changes were made in the section (§ 14) relating to the issuance of bonds. The Act of 1885 empowered and authorized the Board of Education to issue bonds not to exceed in all $80,000, without submission of the question of issuance of such bonds to, and the approval thereof by, the electors of the school corporation. In said Chapter 125, Laws 1915, (1925) Supp § 1321a14), the provisions of § 14 of the Act of March 4, 1885, were amended so as to provide:

“that at no time shall the aggregate amount of such bonds, including all other indebtedness, exceed fifty mills on the dollar of valuation of the taxable property of such district, to be determined by the last city assessment; provided, further, that the board of education shall at no time issue and there shall not be outstanding, bonds in the aggregate in an amount to exceed one hundred and sixty thousand dollars unless the issuance of bonds in excess of that amount be first authorized by

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
33 N.W.2d 473, 76 N.D. 51, 1948 N.D. LEXIS 59, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baldwin-v-board-of-education-nd-1948.