Hicks v. Board of Education

112 S.E. 1, 183 N.C. 394, 1922 N.C. LEXIS 280
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedApril 26, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 112 S.E. 1 (Hicks v. Board of Education) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hicks v. Board of Education, 112 S.E. 1, 183 N.C. 394, 1922 N.C. LEXIS 280 (N.C. 1922).

Opinion

Walker, J.

This is a controversy submitted without action to test the validity of an election proposing to create a standard high school at Pikeville, N. 0., and to maintain efficient elementary schools at other sections in the same district, and to levy a special tax not more than 30 cents on the $100, to supplement the public school fund.

Plaintiffs contend that the election was not held-in accordance with law, but clearly in contravention of two complete statutes relating to special school tax districts, and that the effect of this election, if it were valid, will be to abolish three existing special school districts within the territory of the proposed district, and this abolition will be worked not *399 directly but incidentally, or will not be accomplished in tbe manner prescribed by tbe statute for tbe abolition of special school tax districts. That C. S., 5531, provides tbe only method available for tbe abolition of a special tax district theretofore created and existing by virtue of an election held therein. Briefly, it provides that an election may be held upon petition of two-thirds of the qualified voters, and if at the election a majority of the qualified voters in said district shall vote against special tax, the tax shall be deemed revoked and shall not be levied, and the district shall thereby be discontinued.

Section 5532 provides for the continuance of any debt created, notwithstanding the district be abolished.

Section 5533 provides that an election for abolition shall be held not oftener than once in two years.

Section 5535 provides that an election may be held for the purpose of increasing the tax in a special tax district; but at its conclusion says: “No election shall be held oftener than once in two years.”

The case on appeal sets forth that both the Mt. Carmel and Pleasant Grove special tax districts, included in the proposed consolidated or enlarged district, held elections less than two years prior to the election held last October for the purpose of establishing the consolidated district, and at such elections special taxes were levied, and plaintiffs contend that the effect of the new election, if held valid, will be to authorize an increase in taxes within less than two years after a former increase in tax had been voted. But we need not notice this contention any further in the view we take of the controversy. It is further contended by the plaintiffs that the Mt. Carmel and Pleasant Grove special tax districts cannot be either indirectly or inferentially abolished in any other manner than is prescribed by section 5531; and, as the election held undertakes in effect to abolish them, it was, therefore, in contravention of law, and is void.

The other ground of illegality urged against said election is that the order of the commissioners of the board of education of Wayne County undertaking to create a consolidated, or enlarged, district with Pikeville as its center, with the Pikeville School as the only high school in the district, and with elementary schools at other portions of the district, is an attempt to avoid a clear mandate of the law. It not only attempts to abolish the two school districts, Mt. Carmel and Pleasant Grove, in a manner not provided for by law; but it undertakes to'add them to the Pikeville District, making them subsidiary to the Pikeville High School, ' which is beyond the travel reach of most of the pupils; and it does this without allowing those outside of the original Pikeville District an opportunity to vote separately upon the proposition whether they shall be added to the Pikeville District or not, as expressly recognized and declared by C. S., 5530.

*400 Section 5530, upon which plaintiffs mainly rely, provides that upon the written request of a majority of the committee, or trustees, of any special tax district, the board of commissioners may enlarge the boundaries of such special tax district, subject to the approval of the voters to be expressed at an election which shall be held in the new territory. It prescribes that the voters in the new territory proposed to be included in the district shall have the privilege of voting whether they will levy upon themselves a special tax of the same rate (meaning' the same rate that the special tax district levies). If a majority shall approve the tax rate, the proposed new territory is thereupon merged into the original district, and all in and out of the original district pay the same tax. This it is claimed is a fair and consistent act authorizing a reasonable exercise of the right of franchise or suffrage. The old district, it is argued, acts through its committee, and if it desires an enlargement, by resolution, it invites a certain designated territory to come into or join the district on the same terms enjoyed by those already in. The outsiders, at an election called for that purpose, pass upon the invitation, and either accept or decline it. If they accept, they have by a majority assumed a tax and acquired a corresponding benefit, or are supposed to have done so. It thus requires the affirmative act of the old district through its trustees, and the affirmative act of a majority of the taxpayers in the new district. If both approve, no one can complain. But in the case at bar, as plaintiffs assert, the old district did it all. It issued the invitation to come in, not depending upon the right of the taxpayers or voters in the new territory to accept or decline it, as they might see fit in their own interest to do, but that the old district or districts compelled the new and contiguous territory to be annexed to theirs, as they could and did easily do, because they had the majority and could outvote the minority in the new territory. This would seem' to be contrary to the letter and the spirit, of section 5530.

There is another ground upon which it is contended that this election is clearly illegal. There was, in the territory proposed to be embraced in the consolidated or new district, a considerable number of people who had never voted upon themselves any special tax whatsoever. They did not live in Rikeville District, nor in Mt. Carmel, nor in Pleasant Grove District. They lived in the country, where only the ordinary regular State school tax levy prevailed. These people have never voted any special tax upon themselves; and if this election is held valid, they will find themselves inside of a consolidated school district, with the 30 cents special tax imposed upon them, when they have never been allowed to separately vote on the question whether that tax should be levied or not, whereas they clearly were entitled to vote under section 5530, which vote, according to the plain directions of that section, must be among *401 themselves as a unit. As it was, they only bad tbe privilege of voting in common with tbe electors in three other special tax districts; and tbe question whether they should pay a special tax was not decided by them alone, as required by the statute, but by a majority of the voters living in three existing special tax districts, as well as a number on the outside. The votes were not taken separately, but taken as a whole, and the aggregate result declared. The people in the new territory practically had no voice in the matter.

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Bluebook (online)
112 S.E. 1, 183 N.C. 394, 1922 N.C. LEXIS 280, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hicks-v-board-of-education-nc-1922.