Board of Supervisors v. Cothran

191 P.2d 506, 84 Cal. App. 2d 679, 1948 Cal. App. LEXIS 1255
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 31, 1948
DocketCiv. 7481
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 191 P.2d 506 (Board of Supervisors v. Cothran) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Board of Supervisors v. Cothran, 191 P.2d 506, 84 Cal. App. 2d 679, 1948 Cal. App. LEXIS 1255 (Cal. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

ADAMS, P. J.

By this proceeding the Board of Supervisors of the County of Merced and the Merced Union High School District seek a writ of mandate to compel respondent, who is the county clerk of Merced County, to sign certain bonds in the sum of $800,000, which bonds were voted at a special election held by the Merced Union High School District on May 16, 1947, for the purpose of securing authorization to issue the aforesaid bonds. The purposes for which said bonds were proposed to be issued, as stated in the notice of the election, was to raise money for

(a) The purchase of a school laboratory farm.

(b) The building or purchase of school buildings.

(c) The making of alterations or additions to the school building or buildings other than such as may be necessary for current maintenance, operation, or repair.

(d) The repairing, restoring, or rebuilding of any school building damaged, injured, or destroyed by fire or other public calamity.

(e) The supplying of school buildings with furniture or necessary apparatus of a permanent nature.

(f) The permanent improvement of the school grounds.

The voters at said election voted in favor of the issuance of said bonds, but respondent has refused to sign them for three *681 reasons; (a) that one of the purposes for which said bonds were voted, to wit, “the purchase of a school laboratory farm,” does not conform to the purposes for which a school district may issue bonds as set forth in section 7401 of the Education Code, and that a school district is not authorized to incur indebtedness or to issue and sell bonds for such a purpose; (b) that two separate polling places were established for one election precinct, to wit, precinct No. 18, and that all of the votes cast in said precinct should be rejected and that upon such rejection said bond issue failed to carry by the required two-thirds of all of the votes cast at said election; (c) that different polling hours were fixed in the different precincts into which said district was divided for the purpose of said election contrary to sections 7403 and 7404 of the Education Code in that the hours during which the polls should have remained open should have been uniform through said district and in each and every precinct thereof for the purpose of said bond election.

The law seems to be well settled in this state that where any one of the stated purposes for which bonds are issued is an unauthorized purpose and a single aggregate sum is specified for all of the purposes, the whole must fail since it is impossible to separate the good from the bad. Our own Supreme Court has so held in City of San Diego v. Potter, 153 Cal. 288, 292 [95 P. 146], and Streator v. Linscott, 153 Cal. 285, 287 [95 P. 42], In the latter ease one of the declared purposes for which certain school district bonds were issued was “for the purpose of raising money for purchasing school lots, for building one or more school houses, or insuring the same. ...” The court said that the act of 1893 (the statute then in force) did not authorize the issuance of bonds for the purpose of insuring sehoolhouses or other property, and that therefore the bonds were void. In Santa Ana School District v. Talbert, 19 Cal.App. 104,107 [124 P. 872], there was added to the declaration of purposes for which school bonds were voted, the words “and afford better facilities for educating the school children within said school district.” The court held that said phrase did not in itself amount to a declaration of a purpose and should therefore be disregarded; but it also said that if, as contended by respondent, the bonds were issued and sold for purposes not contemplated by the statute, the invalidity of the bonds was conceded. In Allard v. Board of Education, 101 Ohio St. 469 [129 N.E. 718], the board of education submitted to the electors the question of a bond issue for three *682 specified purposes, one of which was the purchase of motor trucks and wagons. In an action brought to enjoin the issuance of the bonds, it was held that the purchase of motor trucks and wagons was not one of the purposes for which authorization for the issuance of bonds was given by statute, and that therefore the entire bond issue must be enjoined. In 56 Corpus Juris, page 577, section 696, it is said: “The purposes for which bonds may be issued are generally fixed by statute, and where so fixed bonds may not be issued for any other purpose, nor may bonds be issued to raise funds for matters otherwise provided for by statute, and bonds issued for an unauthorized or improper purpose are void.”

The question, then, is whether “the purchase of a school laboratory farm” is a purpose for which the issuance of bonds by school districts is authorized by statute. Section 7401 of the Education Code provides and limits the purposes for which such bonds may be issued and sold, the only one pertinent here being: “(a) The purchasing of school lots.”

Petitioners contend that the term ‘ ‘ school lots ’ ’ is sufficiently broad to include a “school laboratory farm.” We have not been enlightened as to what is meant by a school “laboratory” farm, but we are satisfied that in the general acceptation of the word “farm” it is not analogous with the word “lot,” nor do the words “school lots” connote a “school farm.” A farm is generally defined as a tract of land used for raising crops or rearing animals—one devoted to agriculture, stock raising or some allied industry. (See 16 Words and Phrases (perm, ed.), pp. 248-252; 25'C.J. 670-672; 35 C.J.S. 746-747; Hagenburger v. City of Los Angeles, 51 Cal.App.2d 161, 164 [124 P.2d 345].) And the word “farming” in both the popular and legal meaning of the term is the cultivation of the soil for the production of crops therefrom; the act of cultivating the land; the business of tilling the soil.

The word “school” is variously defined as an institution or place for instruction or education; a place for learned intercourse and instruction; a place for acquiring knowledge and mental training; a place for the instruction of children; a place where instruction is imparted to the young; an educational establishment. (See 56 C.J. 167, and note 3; State v. Boyd, 217 Ind. 348 [28 N.E.2d 256, 264] ; Board of Education v. Ferguson, 68 Ohio App. 514 [39 N.E.2d 196, 198].)

Traditionally the practical farming and the operation of a farm have not been a' part of the curricula of our common schools, nor farms a part of their school property; nor does the *683 word “lot” suggest to the mind the word “farm,” though it may not necessarily exclude it. But in order to justify the issuance of bonds for the acquisition of a farm by a common school district, something more than the authority to issue such bonds for.the acquisition of “school lots” is essential.

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191 P.2d 506, 84 Cal. App. 2d 679, 1948 Cal. App. LEXIS 1255, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-supervisors-v-cothran-calctapp-1948.