County of Sacramento v. Stephens

53 P.2d 197, 11 Cal. App. 2d 110
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 4, 1936
DocketCiv. 5561
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 53 P.2d 197 (County of Sacramento v. Stephens) 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
County of Sacramento v. Stephens, 53 P.2d 197, 11 Cal. App. 2d 110 (Cal. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

THOMPSON, J.

This is a petition for a peremptory writ of mandamus to compel the Auditor of Placer County *112 to issue school bonds in the sum’ of $6,500, which were voted by the electors of the Dry Creek Joint Elementary School District at a bond election which was held therein pursuant to law. This proceeding was instituted to determine the validity of the bonds. The respondent contends that the bonds are void on account of the failure of the trustees of the district to segregate the district into precincts for the purpose of election and because notice of the election was not published as required by section 4.961 of the School Code in a Sacramento County newspaper in addition to the one which was published in a Placer County newspaper, since portions of both counties are included in the school district.

This proceeding involves the following stipulated facts: Dry Creek Joint Elementary School District was organized pursuant to law. It has existed since 1857 and includes territory belonging to both contiguous counties of Placer and Sacramento outside of any incorporated city therein. The school building in question is now and always has been situated in that portion of the joint district within the County of Placer, where the greater number of pupils reside. Under the provisions of section 2.81 of the School Code, jurisdiction of the school district is conferred upon the county superintendent of the county where the greater number of pupils reside. The two school buildings which are located therein are old, dilapidated, unsanitary and unfit for educational purposes of the district. On June 20, 1934, they were condemned as unfit and unsafe for school purposes. At a regular meeting of the board of trustees of that district called for that purpose, pursuant to law, the trustees unanimously voted to hold an election therein pursuant to section 4.960 of the School Code on March 21, 1935, to authorize the issuing of bonds in the sum of $6,500 for the construction of new school buildings and to improve the grounds and furnish necessary equipment therefor. Pursuant to section 4.963 of the School Code, which requires a bond election to be conducted in the same manner as an election for school trustees, the board duly designated the district schoolhouse as the place where the bond election was to be held pursuant to section 2.870 of the same code, and directed that the election be held in the joint district as a whole constituting but one precinct thereof. Notices of the time and place of election together with a copy *113 of the architect’s sketches of the proposed school building and a statement of the maximum tax rate required to construct and furnish the same were personally delivered to each registered voter of the district or left for him at his residence prior to the election day. Official notices of the time and place of holding the election, signed by all of the trustees, were posted in three public places within the district in both Sacramento and Placer Counties, for more than twenty days prior to the election as provided by section 4.961 of the School Code. An official notice of the time and place of the election was also published in conformity with the last-mentioned section of the code in the “Roseville Tribune and Register”, a newspaper of general circulation printed and published at Roseville in Placer County. Notices of the time, place and purpose of the school bond election were repeatedly printed as matters of news in both the ‘ Roseville Tribune and Register”, and in the “Sacramento Bee” prior to the election, the last-mentioned newspaper having a wide circulation among the electors of the school district in both counties. The necessity and proposal to submit the question of constructing and equipping new schoolhouse buildings were widely discussed among the electors of that district prior to the election. All school elections of that district had invariably been held in the school building which was designated as the place for holding this bond election since its organization as a school district. The election was conducted in every respect as required by statute. Prior to the election certified copies of the register of qualified electors in the school district in both Sacramento and Placer Counties were procured from the respective county clerks pursuant to section 2.878 of the School Code, showing the names of all electors who were entitled to vote at the school election. All of the qualified electors residing in that portion of the school district which is located in Sacramento County voted at the school election with the exception of four individuals. Unusual interest was exhibited by the electors in the bond election, ancl an unusually large vote was cast thereat, being nearly four times as large as the vote cast for trustees of that district at the following election therefor. There is no evidence that any elector in the district was ignorant of the time or place of the election, and no elector was precluded from voting thereat.

*114 The bond election was carried by more than the necessary majority of two-thirds of all electors voting thereat. If the four persons residing in the Sacramento portion of the district who failed to vote at the bond election were also counted as voting against the bonds, there would still be a majority in favor of the bonds in excess of two-thirds of all the qualified electors who participated in the election. It does not appear that the substantial rights of any taxpayer of the school district were injuriously affected by the failure to officially publish the notice of election in a Sacramento County newspaper. The election returns were regularly canvassed pursuant to law and the bonds were declared to have been carried by a two-thirds’ majority. Owing to the alleged defect of publication of notice the Auditor refused to issue or certify the bonds or offer them for sale as required by law. This petition for a writ of mandamus was brought to validate the bonds and to compel the respondent to issue and certify the bonds as valid obligations of the school district.

The respondent asserts that the bonds are void for the reasons that the entire school district was designated as one precinct for the purpose of the bond election, with the polling place at the schoolhouse building in Placer County, and that no separate precinct or polling place was designated for that portion of the district which is located in Sacramento County, and that the trustees failed to separately publish a notice of the time and place of holding the election in a Sacramento County newspaper pursuant to the provisions of section 4.961 of the School Code.

It was not illegal for the board of trustees of Dry Creek Joint Elementary School District to designate only one voting precinct and polling place for the bond election in spite of the fact that the district was composed of parts of two different counties. Section 4.963 of the School Code provides regarding the conducting of bond elections that:

‘ The election shall be conducted as elections for • school trustees of elementary school districts are conducted, except as may be otherwise provided in this chapter. ...”

There is no provision of law in the chapter affecting school bond elections which requires more than one precinct or polling place to be designated for bond elections.

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Bluebook (online)
53 P.2d 197, 11 Cal. App. 2d 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/county-of-sacramento-v-stephens-calctapp-1936.