Board of Education of Dependent School District No. 23 Osage County v. Allen

1980 OK 124, 615 P.2d 1009, 1980 Okla. LEXIS 311
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedAugust 7, 1980
DocketNo. 55453
StatusPublished

This text of 1980 OK 124 (Board of Education of Dependent School District No. 23 Osage County v. Allen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Board of Education of Dependent School District No. 23 Osage County v. Allen, 1980 OK 124, 615 P.2d 1009, 1980 Okla. LEXIS 311 (Okla. 1980).

Opinion

OP ALA, Justice:

This contest over the sufficiency of a petition to abolish a school district presents a controversy over two unsettled dimensions. One of these mathematically uncertain dimensions is the size of the “electorate” applicable by law to the school district in question. The other dimension — legislatively set as equal to 60 per cent of the electorate we must yet define — is the numerical and legal sufficiency of the signatures counted as valid.

At the very first we are called upon to ascertain the number of persons who are eligible electors in the affected school district. To identify these persons we must define with precision their legal qualifications. Only then can we determine whether the petition under challenge here does in fact contain the requisite number of signatures1 to do away with a school district. The issue thus thrust upon us for initial resolution is: Was there a vitiating infirmity in the petition initiated under the terms of § 8-1062 to “dispense with” Dependent School District No. 23 [Indian Camp School District], because the percentage of required signatures was calculated on the number of “registered voters” rather than on the number of all the eligible “electors” in that district? If there was no infirmity in the approach taken, there remains but one dispositive challenge to the petition’s sufficiency: Did the county superintendent of schools — who held the petition sufficient — err as a matter of law when he considered three names to have been reinstated by the signer’s telephone request made after an earlier withdrawal of the signature?

We hold that: [a] an “elector”, within the meaning of § 8-106, is one who possesses the very same qualifications as those required of an initiative or referendum petition signer and, additionally, has a “child eligible to attend school in the grades offered” in the school or school district sought to be abolished and [b] an oral request to reinstate one’s signature, which had been previously withdrawn in writing from a § 8-106 petition, must be effected in writing, i. e., with the very same formality as that required by law for signing the petition originally. The completed withdrawals, all made in writing, must hence be regarded as unaffected by the subsequent ineffectively-executed oral reinstatement requests. Without the reinstated signatures, the petition under challenge here fails to contain the requisite number of signators to effect an abolition of Indian Camp School District.

[1011]*1011In May of 1980 a petition was circulated among the residents of Indian Camp School District to abolish the school district and to transfer the students to another district or cause the annexation by other school districts.3 The petition was filed with the superintendent of schools [superintendent], together with a list of persons believed to represent all the school district electors who are qualified by statute to sign the petition. No less than 60 percent of the school district’s electors with children eligible to attend school in the grades offered by the school district must sign the petition to make it legally sufficient. The superintendent is the official statutorily charged with the responsibility to pass upon the validity of a § 8-106 petition and to notify the State Board of Education of his decision within five days after filing of the petition is effected.4

The superintendent ruled that the signatures approved by him as effective represented 60.27 percent of the qualified electors and hence the petition was legally sufficient to abolish the school district. The challenger here and below is the Board of the school district sought to be dispensed with. In the district court the Board sought a writ declaring the petition ineffective. The trial court sustained the superintendent’s demurrer to the Board’s evidence and this appeal followed.

I

The Indian Camp School District is composed of several partial precincts. The county election board cannot from its records readily identify which voters registered in the several precincts live within the Indian Camp School District. The election records do not reflect whether any voter in the district has children eligible to attend school in that district. There is no established procedure for making the statutorily-contemplated determination of eligibility.

In order to ascertain that the total number of signers represented the requisite 60 percent of qualified electors, the superintendent was first called upon to determine the total number of “electors” to be dealt with. A list of electors believed to represent the totality stood submitted as an exhibit to the petition. The superintendent made that exhibit available to the Board. It was free to suggest additions or deletions of names.

Before the statutory five-day review period had ended and before the initial hearing date, several changes in the list came to be effected. All names of those who were found not to be registered as voters were removed. The names on the petition were then checked against school records and school transfer records. This helped to verify that the signer was a parent of children currently enrolled in school.

In § 8-106 two methods are provided for disestablishing a school district: [1] by majority vote of school district electors at an annual or special election or [2] by petition signed by 60 percent of school district electors. Our sole concern here is, of course, with the second method.

The Board contends that the term “elector”, as used in § 8-106, is not the same as that of “registered voter”. If this be true, the petition and the accompanying list are invalid because “registered voter” restriction prevented others from being counted as “electors”. The Board asserts that “nonregistered” school district electors should be deemed legal voters although they have not complied with registration requirements for the exercise of their right to vote. Want of registration, we are urged, does not prohibit a person from exercising one’s statutory right of petition nor from being included in the total count of qualified electors.

We find the Board’s argument unpersuasive. A person qualified to vote in a school district election “must be registered with the county election board at an address located within the geographical boundaries of the district.” 70 O.S.Supp. 1974 § 2-[1012]*1012102.5 A school district elector — in order to exercise the right to decide by election or petition whether a school should be dispensed with — must also have “children eligible to attend school in the grades offered in a school district.” § 8-106.

Although § 2-102 does not expressly deal with the qualifications for signing a school-related petition, we view the statute as clearly intended to govern, with equal force, the qualifications for signing § 8-106 petitions, as well as for eligibility to cast a vote in any school election. The petition under consideration here bears an unmistakable analogy to initiative or referendum process. This is because it initiates a legal process which, if successful, operates to transform the initial step into a perfected legal act. A signator of an initiative or referendum petition must be a registered voter.6 The law surely did not intend to empower a nonregistered elector to set in motion any machinery or process which he or she is ineligible to affect at the ballot box.

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Bluebook (online)
1980 OK 124, 615 P.2d 1009, 1980 Okla. LEXIS 311, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-education-of-dependent-school-district-no-23-osage-county-v-okla-1980.