Board of Trustees of Demossville Graded Common School District v. Board of Education

236 S.W. 1038, 193 Ky. 502, 1922 Ky. LEXIS 31
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 24, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 236 S.W. 1038 (Board of Trustees of Demossville Graded Common School District v. Board of Education) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Board of Trustees of Demossville Graded Common School District v. Board of Education, 236 S.W. 1038, 193 Ky. 502, 1922 Ky. LEXIS 31 (Ky. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Chief Justice Hurt

Affirming.

Oil May 4, 1914, George R. Oetzel, Benjamin Daniel and William Bryan, who were legal voters and property owners of the common school district, known as Butler, in Kenton county, sought by a proceeding to have the territory embraced by their farms, upon which they resided, annexed to and made a part of the Demossville graded common school district, which is situated in Pendleton 'county. The territory attempted to be annexed lies adjacent to the above named graded common school district, the boundary of-which, upon that side, is the line which separates Pendleton and Kenton counties. In March, 1921, the appellant, Board of Trustees of Demossville Graded Common School District, by this action sought a writ of mandamus against the appellee, Board of Education of Kenton County, to compel it to enter upon its records an order as of May 4, 1914, defining the limits of the Butler common school district, leaving out of the description the territory which was attempted to be incorporated into the Demossville graded common school district, and, also, to prohibit the appellee from assessing the property and persons within the alleged annexed territory for taxation for school purposes within Kenton county, and from collecting such taxes, as well as from enumerating' the children within the school age within such territory. G. R. Oetsel, Herbert Schroder and O. H. Williams who aver that they are residents of and taxpayers within the alleged annexed territory, became plaintiffs in the action, and sought the same relief as that prayed by the Demossville graded common school district. A general demurrer was sustained to the peti[504]*504tions as amended, and the petitions dismissed. Prom the judgment the Demossville graded common school district, alone, has appealed.

The greater part of.the relief sought is purely injunctive and cannot toe granted for the reason that the appellee, board of education, does not assess the property within its county for taxation, and neither levies nor collects taxes for the purposes of the schools. An injunction will not lie against one unless he is doing or threatening an act which will be injurious to the one seeking the injunctive relief. Section 8 of chapter 36, Session Acts of Í920, makes it the duty of the tax commissioner to assess the property within the county subject to taxation for school purposes, and for that purpose, and the duty of levying the tax is imposed upon the fiscal court, which is authorized to levy such taxes upon the property and polls of the county, exclusive of the property and polls within the territory of graded common school districts, and upon the sheriff is imposed the duty of collecting the taxes levied by the fiscal court. The board of education of the county submits a budget to the fiscal court stating the sums necessary to be raised by local taxation, and has nothing to do with the assessing, levying or collecting the taxes. Section 8, chapter 36, supra. The enumeration of the children in the county within the school age is a duty required of the subdistrict trustees under the supervision of the county superintendent. Section 14, chapter 36, Session Acts 1920. An officer, or the members of a board created for governmental purposes may be required by writ of mandamus to perform a duty which is enjoined upon him or them by law, but such a writ cannot be invoked unless there is a legal duty which the officer or board is neglecting or refusing to perform. Lowe v. Phelps, 14 Bush 642; Louisville Home Telephone Co. v. Louisville, 130 Ky. 611. It is, also, necessary to relief, by a writ of mandamus, that the person desiring it must have a right to have it performed, and the same rule applies to injunctive relief. The statute regulating the procedure necessary and required, when an addition was made to a graded common school district which is situated in one county, by the addition to it of territory in an adjoining county, at the time the alleged annexation, in the instant case, was made or attempted to be made, did not make it the duty of the board of education in the latter county to male any order in reference [505]*505to it. In fact the half-baked legislation which regulated such proceeding's at that time did not require any notice of such proposed annexation to be given to any of the authorities of Kenton county, or imposed any duty upon them after annexation was consummated, and the duty of refraining from taxing the property and persons within the annexation, for county school purposes and the enumeration of the children has to be implied. Trustees of Slaughterville. Graded School v. Brooks, 163 Ky. 200. The annexation in the instant case was not attempted under the provisions of section 4464, Kentucky Statutes, as now constituted, as averred in the petition and insisted by the appellant, because that section as now providing did not become a law until after May 4, 1914, when it is alleged that the annexation was attempted. That section, as now constituted, was enacted at the legislative session of 1914, and was enacted without an emergency clause, and for such reason did not go into effect until ninety days after the adjournment of that legislative session, and the adjournment of it occurred on the 17th day of March, 1914, and hence the act could not have been in effect on May 4, 1914'. It seems from the procedure that the annexation was attempted under section 4464, Kentucky Statutes of 1909, and such section did not have application when an increase in the limits of a graded school district which was already established, was attempted. That section contained the provisions as amended by an act of May 26, 1897, but the manner of adding territory to a graded common school district, already established, was changed from the.manner prescribed by section 4464 as amended by act of May 26, 1897, by an act of the legislature which became a law in March, 1906, and was designated as section 4464b, Kentucky Statutes, 1909. It was held in Hopkins County v. Givens, 147 Ky. 837, that section 4464b, as to the manner of adding additional territory to a graded common school district repealed the provisions in regard to that subject as prescribed in section 4464, Kentucky Statutes, 1909, and it was held in Trustees of Slaughterville Graded Common School v. Brooks, supra, that section 4464b, repealed all conflicting provisions of section 4464a. Section 4464b, Kentucky Statutes, 1909, was a statute which controlled the manner of adding additional territory to a graded common school district, being the law in force upon that subject on the 4th day of May, 1914. It ap[506]*506pears that the attempted annexation in this case was made under the terms of section 4464, Kentucky Statutes, as amended by act of May 26, 1897, which at that time had been repealed by section 4464b. 'Section 4464b, Kentucky 'Statutes, was also repealed by the act of 1914, which amendment changed .section 4464 into its present form, but at the time of the attempted annexation the statute of 1914 had not gone into effect, and the validity of the annexation must be tested by the provisions of 4464b, supra. The latter statute which was an act of 1906, provided that the board of 'education of the county, or the trustees of a graded 'common school district might enlarge the territory of such a district by extending its limits so as to include such desired territory, with the written consent of a majority of the legal voters within the territory proposed to be annexed.

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Bluebook (online)
236 S.W. 1038, 193 Ky. 502, 1922 Ky. LEXIS 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-trustees-of-demossville-graded-common-school-district-v-board-of-kyctapp-1922.