Hodges v. Talbert

69 S.E. 103, 135 Ga. 253, 1910 Ga. LEXIS 503
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedOctober 13, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 69 S.E. 103 (Hodges v. Talbert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hodges v. Talbert, 69 S.E. 103, 135 Ga. 253, 1910 Ga. LEXIS 503 (Ga. 1910).

Opinion

Beck, J.

J. D. Talbert and others, alleging that they were residents and taxpayers of the Brinson school district in Decatur county, filed their equitable petition for injunction against C. S. Iiodges and other trustees of the Cyrene school district, and J. W. Butts, tax-collector of said county, and H. V. Griffin, secretary and treasurer of the board of trustees of the Brinson school district. Petitioners alleged that the county board of education established the Cyrene school district out of portions of Bethel, Brinson, and Matthews districts, after having laid off the county into school districts in accordance with the act of the legislature providing for local taxation for public schools, approved August 21, 1906, amendatory of the act approved August 23, 1905, and after a map of the county thus laid off had been filed with the ordinary in accordance with the provisions of law. It is averred, that the action of the board of education in establishing the Cyrene district is illegal, because the act approved August 21, 1906, does not provide for nor authorize the creation of any new school district after a county is once laid off into districts; that the reduction of the Brinson school district in area, after the amount of local taxation had been voted upon by the voters of the district, was unjust and illegal, and the reduction of the area would place a heavier burden of taxation upon the people without their consent. Petitioners prayed,.-that the tax-collector and the treasurer of the board of trustees of the Brinson school district be enjoined from paying over any of the money raised by local taxation during the current yeajr, in the Brinson school district as originally, laid' out, to C. S. Hodges and the others who claimed to be trustees of the Cyrene school district; that the money so raised be ordered paid over to the trustees of the Brinson school district and he applied for [255]*255iho benefit of the public schools of the Brinson district; that the establishment of the Cyrene school district be declared illegal and of no effect; and that the portion of the territory of the Brinson district as originally laid out but now included in the Cyrene district be declared to be still a part of the original district.

The defendants, Hodges and the other trustees of the Cyrene school district, demurred generally and specially to the petition; and in their answer they insisted that the Cyrene school district was legally established and that they constituted the duly elected board of trustees of that district. They further contended that under the pleadings and evidence in the ease the legality and propriety of the establishment of the new district was shown. They also filed a plea of former adjudication of the issues raised.by the petition; also averred that the petitioners were concluded by the decision of the State board of education, rendered upon appeal from the State school commissioner, who had, upon appeal from the action of the county board, sustained the county board. Hpon interlocutory hearing the court below granted the prayer of the petitioners, and passed an order enjoining the tax-collector and the secretary and treasurer named as defendants from paying over to the other defendants, as trustees of the Cyrene school district, the money collected for school purposes from the territory which had originally constituted a part of the Brinson school district; the judgment being based upon the court’s opinion that under the local school tax act, known as.the 'McMicliael act, a county board of education, after having laid off the county into school districts under the provisions of that act, .has no authority to so change the lines of the established districts as to construct a new district.

1. In the act providing for local taxation for public schools, approved August 21, 1906 (Acts 1906, p. 61), it is provided: “That within thirty days after the passage of this act, or as soon thereafter as practicable, it shall be the duty of the count}' board of education of each county in Georgia to lay off the county into school districts, the lines of which shall be clearly and positively defined by boundaries, such as creeks,' public roads, land-lots, district-lines, or county-lines. The school districts thus marked out shall contain an area of not less than sixteen square miles,. and, where practicable, shall be so shaped as to have the school build[256]*256ings as near the center as ¡possible, and no territory shall be included whose occupants reside farther than three miles from the schoolhouse without written petition of two thirds of the qualified voters therein; provided, that the board of education may have the right to establish districts with areas'less than sixteen square miles where there are natural causes or local conditions that make it necessary to do so. The natural causes which will'permit the creation of smaller districts are mountains, streams over which there are no bridges, and dangerous roads. Local conditions which will permit the creation of small districts must be determined by the board of education.” And in the act it is also provided that “A map of the county thus laid off, plainly outlining the boundaries of the school districts with full description thereof, shall be filed with the ordinary within forty days after the passage of this act, or as soon thereafter as practicable, and the boundaries of said school districts shall not be altered any oftener than two years.”

We are of the opinion, after reading the portions of the act known as the McMichael act, quoted above, and from consideration of the entire act, that it was the purpose of the General Assembly in enacting this law to have the boards of education of the various counties of the State to lay off their respective counties into school districts in size not less than sixteen square miles, except where natural conditions required, for the convenience of the respective patrons of the school, a district smaller in area than that, and, when this was done, that the division of the county into districts should have the element of permanency and definiteness; so that when the residents and taxpayers of each district were called upon, in an election held for that purpose, to decide the question as to whether or not they would impose a local tax upon themselves, they could act with a view both to the existing conditions and educational needs of the districts and the corresponding burdens that would be imposed by the tax for which they were voting. But if the board of education of the county could, in their discretion, at any time, cut off from tlie territory of any other district a substantial portion thereof, which would have the effect of materially lessening the amount of taxable property in the district thus laid off, then a taxpayer voting one day for local taxation at a certain rate could not be certain that the amount of money thus raised would be sufficient to equip and maintain a school adequate [257]*257to the needs of the district; and this uncertainty might have the effect of deterring taxpayers and voters from voting for local taxation for school purposes, as they might otherwise do if they could be assured that the school district as originally laid out and established would remain substantially the same as it was at the time of the election held for the .purpose of deciding the ■ question of local taxation.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
69 S.E. 103, 135 Ga. 253, 1910 Ga. LEXIS 503, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hodges-v-talbert-ga-1910.