Boatwright v. McElmurray

146 S.E.2d 716, 247 S.C. 199, 1966 S.C. LEXIS 242
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedFebruary 7, 1966
Docket18455
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 146 S.E.2d 716 (Boatwright v. McElmurray) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boatwright v. McElmurray, 146 S.E.2d 716, 247 S.C. 199, 1966 S.C. LEXIS 242 (S.C. 1966).

Opinion

Brailsford, Justice.

This is a class action for declaratory judgment as to the validity of a three million dollar bond issue, which the defendant Board of Trustees of the School District of Aiken County proposes to sell to finance a school construction and renovation program, and as to the legality of the expenditure of a portion of the proceeds of the bonds outside of Aiken County but within a school attendance area composed of portions of Aiken, Saluda and Edgefield Counties. The three plaintiffs, who contest the bond issue for themselves and others similarly situated, are all residents of the attendance area and, of them, one is a resident and taxpayer of each of the three counties involved.

*202 The circuit court overruled all objections to the sale of the bonds and expenditure of the proceeds and plaintiffs have appealed.

The School District of Aiken County was created in 1951 as the product of a countywide consolidation of school districts. In the same year, an amendment to Art. X, Sec. 5, Constitution of 1895, was ratified by which the permissible limit of the bonded debt of “any school district in Aiken County” was increased from 8% of the assessed value of the taxable property within the district to 25% thereof. The original 8% limitation imposed by this section of the constitution remains applicable in Saluda and Edgefield Counties.

The attendance area in question, which is designated as Monetta-Ridge Spring Attendance Area No. 5, was created by Act No. 271 of the Acts of 1953, 48 Stat. at Large 342. It consists of the Monetta attendance area of the School District of Aiken County, and the areas formerly constituting Ridge Spring School District No. 2 of Saluda County and Wimberly Branch School District of Edgefield County.

Plaintiffs contend that by this act and subsequent legislation relating to the attendance area, the designated school districts of Saluda and Edgefield Counties have been consolidated with the School District of Aiken County and made a part thereof. If these areas have been thus consolidated with the School District of Aiken County, the bonded debt of the consolidated district may not lawfully exceed the limitation imposed by the constitution on any segment thereof, i. e., 8 % of the assessed value of the taxable property of the district. The amount of the proposed bond issue exceeds this limitation. Therefore, the key question on the appeal is the soundness of the conclusion of the circuit judge that the districts in question have not been consolidated.

The authority of the legislature to authorize consolidation of school districts of more than one county into a single district, or to accomplish this purpose directly by legislation, is not challenged. See Sections 21-112, 21-114, Code of *203 1962; Walker v. Bennett, 125 S. C. 389, 118 S. E. 779; Edwards v. State Educational Finance Commission, 222 S. C. 433, 73 S. E. (2d) 456. Direct legislative action is involved here, and whether consolidation has been accomplished depends upon the intention of the legislature as ex-presed in the pertinent acts of 1953, 1958 and 1960, to which we now refer in the order of their passage. An act of 1965, upon which defendants rely, was adopted after a special election held on May 18, 1965, in Aiken County had resulted in a vote of 5767 to 1234 in favor of the bond issue. This act will be discussed later.

The Act of 1953, supra, was entitled: An Act to Consolidate Ridge Spring School District No. 2 of Saluda County and Wimbery Branch School District of Edgefield County with the School District of Aiken County, and to Define the Purposes Therefor and the Powers Thereof.

Consistently with the title, it was enacted that the designated “portions of the counties of Saluda and Edgefield * * * and the School District of Aiken County, are consolidated for school purposes only to the end that a new and larger school attendance area shall be formed * * An area board of education was created with provision for representation thereon from “the present Monetta Attendance Area” of Aiken County and from the affected districts of Saluda and Edgefield Counties.

Provision for an area board followed the established pattern for the operation of schools in existing attendance areas in the School District of Aiken County, Sec. 21-1045, Code of 1962; and, again conforming to this pattern, the act provided that the schools in the new attendance area should be “supervised and administered by the County Board of Education of Aiken County in the manner now provided by law for the School District of Aiken County.” By virtue of Sec. 21-1035.1, Code of 1962, the said County Board was and is, ex officio, the Board of Trustees of the School District.

*204 The provisions of the act to which we have referred were appropriate to the declared legislative purpose to “Consolidate Ridge Spring School District No. 2 of Saluda County and Wimberly Branch School District of Edgefield County with the School District of Aiken County.” No more was required because the incidents and effect of consolidation were already declared by general law. Sec. 21-114.3, Code of 1962. However, the act undertook to legislate against a uniform tax rate for school purposes throughout the consolidated district. It provided that the respective areas of Saluda and Edgefield Counties should “pay to the County Board of Education of Aiken County each year only that portion of the cost of maintenance and operation of the schools of the Monetta-Ridge Springs Attendance Area which is determined to be their respective share of the cost on a per pupil average attendance basis on all resident students of the respective counties.”

The act clearly contemplated that there should be only one public school system in the attendance area, which should be operated for the benefit of the children from the designated sections of each county, who should have equal access to such schools. If the provisions of the act for unequal taxation had been challenged, serious constitutional questions would have arisen, both under Art. X, Sec. 5, Constitution of 1895, requiring uniformity of taxation, and under the equal protection clause of. Art. I, Sec. 5. However, the act was not challenged, and schools were operated under it in Aiken and Saluda Counties by the Board of Trustees of the School District of Aiken County, for the benefit of children from the entire attendance area, until 1958, when this act was repealed and replaced by Act No. 946 of the Acts of 1958, 50 Stat. at Large, 1964.

The 1958 Act was in substantial part a re-enactment of that of 1953 but with two significant changes, as will be seen. The title of this act again bespoke the intention of the legislature to “Provide For The Consolidation Of Certain *205 School Districts In Aiken, Edgefield and Saluda Counties; * * Again, the provisions of the act were appropriate to the purpose expressed in its title, except that as to the Edgefield area, the provision of the 1953 act for contribution to the maintenance and operation of schools on an average pupil attendance basis was retained.

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Bluebook (online)
146 S.E.2d 716, 247 S.C. 199, 1966 S.C. LEXIS 242, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boatwright-v-mcelmurray-sc-1966.