Hoover v. Canton Township School District

9 Pa. D. & C. 272, 1926 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 50
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Washington County
DecidedJuly 12, 1926
DocketNo. 3125
StatusPublished

This text of 9 Pa. D. & C. 272 (Hoover v. Canton Township School District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Washington County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hoover v. Canton Township School District, 9 Pa. D. & C. 272, 1926 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 50 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1926).

Opinion

Brownson, P. J.,

This taxpayers’ bill was filed against the School District of Canton Township and the members of its board of directors to enjoin a proposed issue of bonds of said district. On presentation of the bill, with injunction affidavits, an order was made fixing July 9, 1926, at 10 o’clock A. M., as the time for hearing a motion for a preliminary injunction. At the time so fixed, the parties, by their respective counsel, appeared in open court, and the defendants, having accepted service of the bill, presented for filing their answer thereto, whereupon, it appearing that there were no facts in dispute, it was mutually agreed that the hearing be converted into a final hearing upon bill and answer. Accordingly, the question of law raised by the bill and answer was argued, and the case submitted for final hearing, and the matter was taken under advisement by the court.

Facts.

Prom the pleadings the following facts appear:

1. The School District of Canton Township is a municipality, being a school district of the fourth class, existing under the Common School Law of Pennsylvania. The other defendants are the duly elected and qualified directors thereof, and the complainant is a citizen and taxpayer of said district.

2. On Aug. 6, 1925, the board of directors of said district adopted a resolution expressing a desire to increase the indebtedness of the district by an amount not to exceed $56,000, for the purpose of repairing, enlarging and rebuilding certain school buildings and equipping and furnishing the same, to the end that the public schools of said district might be maintained in compliance with law, bonds of the district to be issued for the amount of such increase; and providing that the question of making such increase of indebtedness should be submitted to the electors of the district, for the purpose of obtaining their assent thereto, at an election to be held on Nov. 3, 1925, and that notice thereof be given by the secretary.

3. In pursuance of and in accordance with this resolution, the secretary of the board of directors gave notice to the electors of the district that the question of making such an increase of debt would be submitted to them at the election to be held on Nov. 3, 1925. At said election, votes were cast for and against the proposed increase, a majority of the electors voting in favor thereof, and the directors of the district propose to issue and sell bonds for the purposes set forth in the resolution aforesaid.

4. The notice of said election, as given, in the manner prescribed by the resolution aforesaid, sets forth, for the information of the electors, the following matters, inter alia : .

“The amount of the last assessed valuation of the taxable property in said district is $3,385,320.00
[273]*273“The amount of the existing indebtedness of said district is $51,000.00.
“The percentage of the proposed increase of indebtedness is approximately one and two thousandths (1.002%) per centum of the last assessed valuation given above.”

5. The statement, so made, that the percentage of the proposed increase is 1.002 was not correct and accurate, since, as a calculation shows, $50,000 is in fact a small fraction under 1.5 per cent, of the valuation, $3,385,320.

6. The bill charges that said notice, by reason of its stating the percentage to be approximately 1.002 instead of stating it as approximately 1.5, was not in compliance with the requirements of the act of assembly regulating the increase of municipal indebtedness, and prays that the election held be for this reason declared to be void. It is undisputed that in all other respects all the requirements of law have been complied with.

7. The said notice correctly set forth the amount of the last assessed valuation and the amount of the proposed increase, thus giving to the electors data from which, by calculation, they could verify the correctness of the percentage statement. The erroneous statement thereof was unintentionally made, being the result of a clerical error of the person who prepared the resolution and notice. In all the steps they have taken looking toward the making of this increase of indebtedness, including the notice given to the electors, the directors of the district have acted with honesty of purpose and entire good faith.

8. No person having raised any objection to this notice previous to the election, or at any time until shortly before this bill was filed, the directors, in reliance upon the vote cast at the election, entered into a contract for the erection of a school building in the place of one which had been condemned by the Department of Public Instruction, the cost to be paid with the proceeds of the proposed bonds when issued; and the erection thereof is now in progress, the effort being made to have it completed in time for the opening of the ensuing fall term of school. If it should be determined that said election was void and that the directors were not authorized to enter into the building contract and incur thereby the debt intended to be paid from the proposed bond issue, inconvenience and loss may result to the school district.

Discussion.

The procedure for effecting an increase of the indebtedness of municipalities is regulated by the Act of April 20, 1874, P. L. 65. Section 3 of that act, in the final form given to it by the amendment of April 7, 1925, P. L. 171, requires municipalities (including school districts), when seeking the assent of the electors to such an increase, to embody in the notice of the election to be held for that purpose “a statement of the amount of the last assessed valuation, of the amount of the existing debt, of the amount and percentage of the proposed increase, and for [of] the purposes for which the indebtedness is to be increased.” These directions clearly “are mandatory in the sense that théy impose the duty of obedience on those who come within their purview:” Black on Interpretation of Laws, 571, as quoted in Knight v. Coudersport Borough, 246 Pa. 284, 289. But whether all of them are mandatory in the sense in which the word is frequently employed, viz., that a failure of strict compliance will vitiate what is done, or, to state the matter more concretely, whether such an inaccuracy in the statement of the percentage as occurred here will render void the election subsequently held, is the question, and the only question, now to be determined.

In Knight v. Coudersport Borough, 246 Pa. 284, and Com. v. Kelly, 255 Pa. 475, the doctrine was laid down that when a law regulating elections does not declare that a specified irregularity shall be fatal to the legality [274]*274of an election, it does not follow that every slight departure from the directions of the statute will taint the whole proceedings with a fatal blemish, and that, “in the absence of such declaration, the judiciary endeavor to discern whether the deviation from the prescribed forms of law had or had not so vital an influence on the proceedings as probably prevented a full and free expression of the popular will,” and if it had, will hold the entire election vitiated by the irregularity, while, if it had not, will consider it immaterial. There are a number of reported decisions of lower courts, collected in 5 P. & L. Dig. Dec., Col. 7876, and Vol. 1 of the supplements thereto, Col.

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Related

Graham v. City of Lebanon
87 A. 567 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1913)
McGuire v. Philadelphia
91 A. 628 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1914)
Knight v. Coudersport Borough
92 A. 299 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1914)
Commonwealth, ex rel. Gast v. Kelly
100 A. 272 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1917)
Chostkov v. City of Pittsburgh
177 F. 936 (W.D. Pennsylvania, 1910)

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9 Pa. D. & C. 272, 1926 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 50, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoover-v-canton-township-school-district-pactcomplwashin-1926.