Board of Education v. Mayor of Kingfisher

48 P. 103, 5 Okla. 82
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 12, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 48 P. 103 (Board of Education v. Mayor of Kingfisher) 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 v. Mayor of Kingfisher, 48 P. 103, 5 Okla. 82 (Okla. 1897).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Bierer, J.:

There are only two questions involved in this case.

First: As to whether the city council of a city of the first, class is bound to approve a tax levy regularly made by the board of education, and which is within the limitation of the law, on its being presented to the city council; or whether the city council may disapprove such levy because, for any reason, it deems the levy too high.

Second: Whether, if the city council is granted no discretion in the approval of the levy made by the board of education, it is any defense to an action to require the city council to approve such levy, that the levy is in excess of the actual needs of the board of education; and that the levy was made upon a basis of school population much larger than actually exists in the district, and that the school population was fraudulently exaggerated for the purpose of drawing from the territorial treasury an amount in excess of what the school district would be entitled to; and that the school board has employed teachers and rented rooms largely in excess of the actual needs of the school population of the district; and that it failed and neglected, in making the levy, to take into consideration the needs and conditions of the taxpayers of the district; and that by reason of the poor condition *84 financially of the inhabitants of the district, and the already great burdens of taxation placed upon them, a levy of fifteen mills, the full limit allowed by law, as made by the school board, would be oppressive and burdensome on the people of the district, and wholly unnecessary for the reasonable and proper maintenance of the schools.

These two questions are fairly raised by the pleadings in the case. The petition of the plaintiff alleges that the city of Kingfisher is a city of the first class, under the laws of the Territory of Oklahoma, and that the board of education is duly organized under the law, and that at the time required by law for the year 1896 it made a tax levy of fifteen mills on the dollar for the support of the schools of the city school district for the year next ensuing. The petition gives a statement of the outstanding indebtedness, and all the needs of the board of education, and from this it would appear that after the board had determined to maintain schools of the high grade and character mentioned in the petition that this tax would be necessary. The petition alleges presentation of this levy to the city council, and iis refusal to approve it.

The answer states facts sufficient to raise the question presented by the second proposition, and in addition thereto states that the city council offered to approve a levy of ten mills on the dollar, which, it alleges, would be a sufficient levy to carry on proper schools in the city of Kingfisher.

The first question arises under § 15, art. 7, ch. 73, of the laws of this territory, general § 5845, which reads as follows:

“That the board of education shall, on or before the fifteenth day of May of each year, levy a tax for the support of the schools of the city of the first-class for the *85 fiscal year next ensuing not exceeding, in any one year» fifteen mills on the dollar, on all personal, mixed and. real property within the district, which is taxable according to the laws of the Territory of Oklahoma, which levy shall be approved by the city council; and when so approved the clerk of the board shall certify to the county clerk, who is hereby authorized and required to place the same on the tax roll of said county, to be collected by the treasurer of the county, as are other taxes, and paid over by him.”

And the contention turns upon the construction to be given the words, “which levy shall be approved by the city council.”

Does this language mean that the levy is to be approved by the city council when presented to it, with a showing that the levy was made in due form and within the limitation of law; that is, when it is shown that the board was regularly in session at the time, or substantially the time, required by law; and that it ordered a levy of tax for the support of the schools of the city for the year, and that the levy did not exceed the limitation upon it? Or does this language mean that before this levy can become operative, and require the payment of the tax, it must meet the approval of the city council? A determination of this will settle the first, and principal, question in this case.

This section is a provision of the Kansas law, in force in that state for many years, but it seems never to have been given a construction there. No brief has been filed by counsel for the defendant, and the brief of the plaintiff’s counsel contains no case upon any statute similar to this; and by careful search within the limited time at our disposal, we have been able to find no case that appears to have any direct bearing upon the question, because all the cases that we have been able to find are upon *86 statutes so radically different that they render us no assistance.

The only case cited by counsel for plaintiff that is upon a similar question is that of People ex rel. School Dist. No. 2 v. County Commissioners, [Colo.] 19 Pac. 892.

In our effort to find authorities upon the question, we have observed the cases of Board of Education of City of Sacramento v. Board of Trustees of City of Sacramento, [Cal.] 30 Pac. 838; and Board of Education of City of Ogden v. Brown, [Utah] 42 Pac. 1109. But the statutes upon which those decisions were based are so very different as to deprive these cases of any material aid in the consideration of the statute now in question.

Under the law of this territory, a city and a school district, although they may comprise the same territory, are two distinct and separate entities, and controlled by two separate and distinct corporate bodies, one the board of education of the city, and the other the city council with its mayor, both being elected by the people for terms of equal duration; the school district being organized for the purpose of the education of its inhabitants, and the city for the purpose of looking after its municipal concerns.

The board of education considers and determines, entirely independent of any advice, assistance or control of the city council, all the matters of expenditures for school purposes; and the city council have a like management of these affairs for city purposes, equally as independent of any control by the board of education.

So far as we have observed, the provision in question is the only instance wherein the city council is given any supervision over the school board. What is that supervision ? Is it one that vests in the city council a discretion *87

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
48 P. 103, 5 Okla. 82, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-education-v-mayor-of-kingfisher-okla-1897.