Eugene School District No. 4 v. Fisk

79 P.2d 262, 159 Or. 245, 1938 Ore. LEXIS 66
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 2, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 79 P.2d 262 (Eugene School District No. 4 v. Fisk) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eugene School District No. 4 v. Fisk, 79 P.2d 262, 159 Or. 245, 1938 Ore. LEXIS 66 (Or. 1938).

Opinion

ROSSMAN, J.

This is an appeal by seven of the eight defendants in this proceeding from a declaratory decree which construes some of the provisions of 1920 Session Laws, Sp. Sess., chapter 38, as amended by 1933 Session Laws, chapter 169. This statute is sometimes spoken of as the state elementary school fund law and is codified as §§ 35-1801 to 35-1804, Oregon Code 1930. It levies a tax of two mills on the dollar upon all taxable property within the state for the support and maintenance of the public elementary schools. This support is given to the schools in addition to whatever other provisions for their support are provided by law. The act declares that the fund created by the tax “shall be known as the state elementary school fund.” The plaintiffs are four school districts of Lane county. The defendants are county officials of that county. One of them, who is the county school superintendent, filed an answer in which he admitted all of the averments of the complaint and joined in the plaintiffs’ prayer. According to the complaint, the plaintiffs claim, “that said elementary school tax is a state tax which shall be paid by Lane county to each of the plaintiffs in full-regardless of whether or not there are any delinquent taxes of any kind whatsoever, and regardless of whether *248 or not all taxpayers have paid or pay all their respective taxes whatsoever in full”. The defendants, so the complaint alleges, claim “that said elementary school taxes assessed and levied must be apportioned, charged and paid to plaintiffs only in proportion to and as said taxes are actually collected, and that said elementary school tax is not a state tax and that if and when taxes are delinquent all school districts, including plaintiffs, must bear pro rata whatever loss results from such delinquencies.” The seven defendants who resist the plaintiffs’ demands, to whom we shall hereafter refer as the defendants, filed an answer which, in addition to admitting the averments just quoted, alleges: “Though said tax is attempted to be described as a state tax in the act providing for the same, said tax is nevertheless not a state tax but is, in fact, a tax for local elementary public school purposes.” They contend that the county’s duty has been fully performed when it has transferred to the elementary school fund the portion of the tax actually collected.

The difficulties which finally culminated in the institution of this proceeding began in the year 1930 when many delinquencies in the payment of taxes developed. The plaintiffs, however, have received in full the taxes levied for the school year 1934-1935 and all previous years under the authority of this act, but have not recéived the entire amount of taxes levied after that year. According to both the complaint and the answer, the following tax delinquencies exist in Lane county:

For the year 1930..................................$ 47,382.13
For the year 1931 -.................................. 98,153.73
For the year 1932..................................'244,291.77
For the year 1933 .................................. 375,744.32
For the year 1934 .....................,............ 447,004.54
For the year 1935 .................................. 435,427.57
For the year 1936 .................................. 356,535.31

*249 For the school year 1935-1936 there were unpaid to the plaintiffs the following parts of the levied elementary school tax:

Eugene School District No. 4................$15,211.92
Cottage Grove School District No. 45 .. 3,156.00
Junction City School District No. 69 „ 1,683.20
Springfield School District No. 19........ 3,156.00

The total sum due to the plaintiffs for all arrearages since 1934-1935 is $124,864.68.

Not only the plaintiffs, hut also the defendants, allege that a dispute exists concerning the interpretation of this statute, and that a declaratory judgment is necessary. For instance, the complaint alleges: “Certain bona fide disputes have arisen between the defendants on the one side and the plaintiffs on the other side in the following, among other particulars * # *. ” From the answer, we quote: “ A controversy exists between the plaintiffs and these answering defendants over said matter, the plaintiffs contending that they should be paid the full amount of said levy regárdless of * * *. That a controversy exists between the plaintiffs and these answering defendants as to whether or not the said provisions of §§ 35-1801 to 35-1803, Oregon Code 1930, and acts amendatory thereto, are constitutional. * * * A dispute exists between plaintiffs and these answering defendants as to * * *. Wherefore, these answering defendants join with the plaintiffs in asking for a judgment and decree construing and determining the aforesaid elementary public school tax law * *

The plaintiffs prayed for a decree “construing and determining the aforesaid elementary public school tax law and determining and adjudging whether the defendants must pay to the plaintiffs and other school *250 districts in the county in full the elementary public school taxes levied and apportioned regardless of delinquencies in payment of taxes; and for such other relief as to the court may seem meet and equitable; and that plaintiffs have judgment for costs and disbursements of this proceeding.”

The answer, in addition to joining with the plaintiffs’ prayer for a construction of the nature of the tax, prayed for a determination of the defendants’ duty in regard to payment of the aforementioned balance of $124,864.68, and asked for a determination of the validity of the statute.

The declaratory decree, referring to the statute, construes the latter as requiring “the levy of a two mill tax for the support and maintenance of elementary schools of the state to be known as the state elementary school fund,” and declares that “the county court has no discretion as to whether such tax should or should not be levied, for by the terms of the statute itself such tax is levied and the tax so levied is by the plain provisions of the statute a state tax; and it is the duty of the county treasurer on the first day of May and November to credit from the general fund to the state elementary school fund one-half of the tax required to be levied and collected in the county for that year, and it is the duty of the treasurer of Lane county to credit the elementary school fund in full irrespective of whether or not all the taxpayers of Lane county have paid all of their taxes in full, * * The decree said nothing concerning the defendants’ duty in regard to payment of the balance of $124,864.68.

Section 4 of the act referred the measure to the people for enactment or rejection under the referendum. At the election held on May 21, 1920, 110,268 *251 votes were east in favor of the measure and 39,593 against it.

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Bluebook (online)
79 P.2d 262, 159 Or. 245, 1938 Ore. LEXIS 66, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eugene-school-district-no-4-v-fisk-or-1938.