Hull v. Board of Education

1931 OK 368, 300 P. 775, 150 Okla. 30, 1931 Okla. LEXIS 273
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 23, 1931
Docket21223
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 1931 OK 368 (Hull v. Board of Education) 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
Hull v. Board of Education, 1931 OK 368, 300 P. 775, 150 Okla. 30, 1931 Okla. LEXIS 273 (Okla. 1931).

Opinion

ANDREWS, J.

.This is an appeal from the judgment of the district court of Washington county, granting a peremptory writ of mandamus against the defendant, excise board of Washington county, requiring it to approve certain items in the budget of the estimated needs of the separate schools of school district No. 30, comprising the city of Bai tlesville and annexed territory, as theretofore presented by the plaintiff, board of education of the independent school district for the year 1020-30. The parties will be referred to as they appeared in the trial court.

The record shows that the plaintiff filed with defendant its budget of said district for the separate school for the fiscal year 1929-30, which included, among others, four items, as follows:

Salaries, officers and clerk _$300.00
Salary, superintendent _ 600.00
Salaries, supervisors _ 400.00
Salary, building superintendent _ 200.00

—in the total sum of $1,500. The defendant struck from the budget those four items on the ground that they were not proper charges against the funds provided for the separate school of the district. Suit was brought by plaintiff against defendant to compel it to allow said items; an alternative writ was issued, and defendant filed its answer alleging want of authority to make an appropriation for those items. Upon hearing of the cause, the court entered its mandatory writ commanding defendant to reinstate said items in the separate school budget and to approve the same. The defendant reinstated the items in the separate school budget, approved them in conformity to the provisions of the writ and perfected its appeal to this court. A protest was filed in the Court of Tax Review, protesting the same items in the school levy for said plaintiff school district, and the funds derived from the levy are now held by the county treasurer of said county pending- the final determination of that protest. By reason thereof the issue presented is not moot.

The defendant assigns eleven specifications of error and presents the same under three divisions, which present questions for determination by tbis court as follows, to wit: - Has the board of education of an independent school district, in presenting its budget for separate schools in the district, the discretion and authority to say what items shall or shall not be inserted therein and the amount which the excise board shall appropriate therefor? Has an excise board the power and authority to revise and correct the estimate for separate schools ce;tilled to it by a board of education by either striking items therefrom, increasing or decreasing items thereof, or adding items thereto, when in its opinion the needs of the separate school shall require same? Has the board of education of an independent school district any right to place in its estimate for a separate school within its district an item or items to be transferred from the separate school fund to the general fund of the independent school district to be used to pay a part of the salary of the superintendent, clerk, supervisor of arts and building superintendent, or other officers employed by the independent school, and paid exclusively out of the funds of the independent school district ?

With certain exceptions, the funds for maintaining an independent school are derived from a tax upon the taxable property in the inclependent school district, and with the same exceptions, the funds for maintaining the separate schools of a county are derived from a tax on all of the taxable property in the county. Under the provisions of section 10412, C. O. S. 1921, the boards of education of independent school districts in cities and towns have control over schools and school property of the school district including the separate schools therein. Under section 10574, C. O. S. 1921, it is the duty of the board of education of an independent school district to prepare the budget, not only for the independent school, but for the separate schools, in compliance with the provisions of said section, in part, as follows:

“* * * In all inclependent districts where separate schools for white and colored children are maintained, it shall be the duty of the board of education therein, at the time of the preparing of their annual budget, to-prepare a separate budget of the amount of money that will be required to be raised by taxation, for the support and maintenance of such separate schools, including the amount necessary to purchase sites and to erect school buildings for such separate schools for the coming fiscal year, and it shall thereupon -be the duty of the county excise boards in such counties to levy a tax on all taxable property in their respective counties sufficient to pay the cost of supporting and maintaining such separate schools and purchasing sites and erecting school buildings for such separate schools as shown by such budget, and which said tax shall be published, levied and collected in the same manner as other taxes for county *32 purposes, and when collected shall he paid over to the respective treasurers of the board of education in such districts, to be expended upon the order of such board of education for the purpose for which same was levied and collected. * * *”

The plaintiff contends that the lang, age of section 10574, supra, that “* * * it shall thereupon be the duty of the county excise boards in such counties to levy a tax on all taxable property in their respective counties sufficient to pay the cost of supporting and maintaining such separate schools, * * * as shown by such budget, * * *” deprives the excise board of any discretion or authority to alter or change a budget so made, and requires it to make the levy in accordance with the budget presented by the board of education.

The defendant contends that, under the provisions of section 9698, C. O. S. 1921, the excise board has authority to revise and correct and to strike items therefrom or add items thereto as they think proper. Said section provides, in part, as follows:

“The excise board shall meet * * * for the purpose of examining the financial statements for. the previous fiscal year as submitted by the county and the several cities, towns, townships, and school districts, and ascertaining the true fiscal condition of each thereof at the close of such year; and for the further purpose of examining the statements of estimated needs for current expense purposes for the current fiscal year as certified by each of said municipalities, and determining the items and amounts for which appropriations shall be made for such year, detailed as to each officer, board or department.- The said board shall have power and authority to revise and correct any estimate certified to them by either striking items therefrom, increasing, or decreasing items thereof, .or adding items thereto, when in its opinion the needs of the municipality shall require. * * *”

Section 9699, C. O. S. 1921, provides, in part, as follows:

“* * * The several items of the estimate as made and approved by the excise board for each fiscal year shall constitute and are hereby declared to be an appropriation of funds for the several and specific purposes named in such estimate, and the appropriation thus made shall not be used for any other fiscal year or purpose whatsoever.

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Related

State Ex Rel. Brown v. Board of Education
1944 OK 274 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1944)
Oklahoma City v. State Industrial Commission
1938 OK 329 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1938)
Kansas City Southern Ry. Co. v. Germo Mfg. Co.
1935 OK 812 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1935)
Muskogee County Excise Board v. Stubbs
1935 OK 606 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1935)
Protest of Downing
1933 OK 387 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1933)
Protest of Wilhite
1923 OK 374 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1931)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1931 OK 368, 300 P. 775, 150 Okla. 30, 1931 Okla. LEXIS 273, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hull-v-board-of-education-okla-1931.