Funk v. Multnomah Education Service District
This text of 717 P.2d 656 (Funk v. Multnomah Education Service District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Petitioner seeks review of the Multnomah Education Service District Board’s (Board) denial of a proposal to change school district boundaries to transfer an area from Multnomah County School District No. 1 (the district) to the adjacent Riverdale School District. The area is located in the part of the district which was the subject of an unrelated reorganization proposal directed at creating a Jackson School District. The basis for the Board’s decision was that the proposed boundary change was “likely to adversely affect” the Jackson reorganization plan. ORS 330.090(4)(d).1 In School Dist. No. 1 v. Mult. Co. Educ. Serv. Dist., 78 Or App 247, 716 P2d 759 (1986), we affirmed the state Board of Education’s rejection of the Jackson plan.2 It follows that the Board’s decision here cannot be sustained, at least on the ground on which the Board based it.
The district contends that there is an alternative basis for affirming the decision. It argues that the proposed boundary change “is * * * likely to adversely affect the educational programs available to the children in the area affected by the proposed change” and that it is therefore contrary to ORS 330.090(4) (b). The district acknowledges that the Board made no findings or ruling on that issue, but it nevertheless argues that this court may and should decide as a matter of law that the proposal could not comply with ORS 330.090(4)(b). The district relies on Sch. Dist. No. 1 v. Linn Boundary Bd., 244 Or 207, 416 P2d 656 (1966). Although the boundary board in that case had not made express findings on all of the statutory prerequisites to a boundary change, the Supreme Court held as a matter of law that, in the light of facts to which the parties stipulated, one of the findings necessary for the approval of the proposed change could not have been made by the Board. The district argues that we should follow the same “efficient” course rather than remanding. However, unlike in Linn Boundary Bd., there is no [20]*20stipulation or other source of established fact here which would preclude or dictate any particular action by the Board.3 There is no merit to district’s argument.
Reversed and remanded for reconsideration.
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717 P.2d 656, 79 Or. App. 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/funk-v-multnomah-education-service-district-orctapp-1986.