Excise Board of Lincoln County v. St. Louis-San Francisco Ry. Co.

1939 OK 303, 93 P.2d 1081, 185 Okla. 436, 1939 Okla. LEXIS 367
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 12, 1939
DocketNo. 29120.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1939 OK 303 (Excise Board of Lincoln County v. St. Louis-San Francisco Ry. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Excise Board of Lincoln County v. St. Louis-San Francisco Ry. Co., 1939 OK 303, 93 P.2d 1081, 185 Okla. 436, 1939 Okla. LEXIS 367 (Okla. 1939).

Opinion

RILEY, J.

The defendants in error, hereinafter referred to as protestants, protested several items of the tax levy of Lincoln county for the fiscal year commencing July 1, 1938. All the items protested were settled before trial in the Court of Tax Review except two. One of these was an item of $300, one-half of an estimate made by the school district in which the town of Wellston is located for expense in' superintending the separate school within said district located in the town of Wellston. The other one-half was supposed to be paid out of the secondary aid fund furnished by the state.

The other item is one providing a levy for the sinking fund of said school district for the same year.

The ground of protest as to the latter item is in substance that the amount found necessary for sinking fund requirements for the year, including an allowance for delinquent taxes, was $7,724.87. That the rate of levy necessary to raise said amount if all the taxable property within said district had been included would have been but 11.993 mills per $1 valuation, but, in computing the levy, the taxing authorities had excluded from consideration all the property within the limits of two former common school districts, Nos. 32 and 33, which had been annexed to the school district after the bonded indebtedness for which the levy was being made had been incurred; that by reason of the omission of said territory, the rate of levy found necessary was 15.75 mills; that the rate thus applied was illegal and excessive as applied to protestant’s property and all other taxable property within the school district other than that included in the two former school districts Nos. 32 and 33 to the extent of 3.753 mills.

The Stanolind Pipe Line Company et al. also protested the first of the above items. The two protests were tried together before the Court of Tax Review upon the same evidence and stipulation.

The Court of Tax Review denied the protest as to the item for expense of superintending the separate schools, as to both protestants, and sustained the protest of the St. L.-S. F. Ry. Co., and its trustees, as to the sinking fund item, and ordered the levy reduced 3.43 mills, and directed that the levy as so reduced be extended to and spread against and collected from all the property located within the territorial limits of said disorganized districts 32 and 33.

The railroad company and its trustees did not appeal from the order denying the first item of its protest. That item is not before us in this appeal. The county and excise board appeal from the order sustaining the protest as to the sinking fund levy.

The question involved is whether the school district involved is an independent district within the meaning of section 6853, O. S. 1931, '§ 181, title 70, Okla. Stat. Ann., taken in connection with other applicable provisions of the statutes relative to school districts.

From the record in this case it appears that in 1920, five school districts in Lincoln county, known as school districts Nos. 56, 57, 127, and 128, by an election duly held, were disorganized and.included in a school district denominated as consolidated school *438 district No. 1, of Lincoln county. Declaration to tliat effect was made By the county superintendent of Lincoln county, dated June 25, 1920. That prior to that time school district No. 128 was comprised of the incorporated town of Wellston and 1,760 acres outlying territory, and had been maintaining a four-year high school fully accredited with the State University, and at all times since the creation of said “Consolidated School District” the district thus formed has maintained such a high school, and the town of Wellston has at all times since been an incorporated town within said district. Shortly after the formation of said school district, school building bonds in the sum of $57,500 were authorized and issued by said district. Thereafter refunding bonds were issued by the district as thus formed in the sum of $20,000. It was to meet sinking fund requirements for this bonded indebtedness that the levy here involved was made.

In June, 1929, after the bonds were issued, the territory embraced within common school district No. 33 was annexed. School district No. 32, partly in Lincoln county and partly in Logan county, was annexed in 1927, also after the bonds were issued.

The procedure for the annexation of districts Nos. 32 and 33 was upon petition to the county superintendent signed by a majority of the legal voters of such territories, respectively, and by the “Board of Education of the Town of Wellston (otherwise known as-Consolidated District No. 1)”, as provided by section 6915, O. S. 1931. Said school district, after its organization until about 1937, had a separate treasurer. Ever since its organization the district has conducted its schools, managed its business, and has maintained numerous suits in the name of the board of education of the town of Wellston otherwise known as consolidated school district No. 1, of Lincoln county, and has assumed to act as a consolidated district, and as an independent district.

The question was submitted to the Court of Tax Review, and its findings as they affect this appeal were:

“The court further finds that said school district, by such appropriation, has attempted on the one hand to operate as an independent district in making the appropriation for supervisory expense in the separate schools; and, on the other hand, has attempted to operate as a consolidated district in calculating the sinking fund levy necessary to care for the needs of bonds issued by such school district prior to the annexation of the territory contained in disorganized districts 32 and 33.
“The court further finds, from the facts adduced, that said district is, and has been for a long time, operating as a-board of education district, exercising all the powers of an independent district; and that the same is an independent district; * * * that said district being an independent district, the appropriations upon which levies , shall be spread for the sinking fund of said school district, to pay for bonds issued prior to the annexation of disorganized districts 32 and 33, should be spread over the territory comprising such disorganized districts 32 and 33; and that the excise board failed to do this; and that the valuation as used, excluding such territories, of $504,484, should be increased to $643,899; and the levy for sinking fund purposes should be reduced by the amount of 3.41 mills under said 12th cause of action, reason 1; and said levy, as reduced, should be certified to the county assessor by the proper officials of said county (and spread over the territory formerly comprising disorganized school districts 32 and 33.)”

Judgment was entered accordingly, and the county and county excise board appeal.

It is apparently conceded that if the district is an independent district, the judgment of the Court of Tax Review is correct to the extent it holds that all the taxable property within the whole district should have been taxed for the sinking fund.

It is well settled, except for what is said in St. Louis-S. F. Ry. Co. v. Bonaparte, 142 Okla. 177, 286 P. 343, that territory comprising an entire common' school district may.

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Related

Public Service Co. v. Parkinson
1943 OK 299 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1943)
Stanolind Pipe Line Co. v. Excise Board of Lincoln County
1939 OK 309 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1939)

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Bluebook (online)
1939 OK 303, 93 P.2d 1081, 185 Okla. 436, 1939 Okla. LEXIS 367, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/excise-board-of-lincoln-county-v-st-louis-san-francisco-ry-co-okla-1939.