In re Foster Township School District

23 Pa. D. & C. 68, 1934 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 209
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Luzerne County
DecidedOctober 17, 1934
Docketno. 2323
StatusPublished

This text of 23 Pa. D. & C. 68 (In re Foster Township School District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Luzerne County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Foster Township School District, 23 Pa. D. & C. 68, 1934 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 209 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1934).

Opinion

Coughlin, J.,

This is a proceeding brought by petition of 10 resident taxpayers of the School District of the Township of Foster, Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, asking to remove from office, as school directors, respondents, Philip Guza, John Fedorchak, Peter Ferko, Steven Kardisko, John Boder, John Bra-[69]*69dish, George Sotak, all of whom have been members of said school board since the first Monday of December 1929 (they having been elected prior thereto), except said Boder and said Fedorchak, who became members the first Monday-of December 1931.

The petition is presented under section 217 of the School Code of May 18, 1911, P. L. 309, providing for removal for failure or neglect to perform mandatory duties therein prescribed. The district is a district of the third class.

“The proceedings for the removal of school directors are penal in character, and the rights of the directors must be as carefully considered as are the rights of a defendant in a criminal court”: Scranton City School Directors, 6 D. & C. 105.

“The remedy provided by section 217 of the Act of May 18,1911, P. L. 309, for the removal of school directors is' highly penal in character and must be strictly construed”: Pittston City School District’s Directors, 6 D. & C. 545.

We take up, therefore, the mandatory duties set forth as having been violated in the petition of those seeking to oust.

One of the duties alleged to have been neglected is that prescribed by section 563 óf said code. It provides that the board shall prepare a budget of the amount of funds required by the district in its several departments for the following fiscal year. This is to be done at or before the time of levying the annual school tax. The budget is to be apportioned to the several classes of expenditures by the board. Thereafter no money apportioned for any class of expenditures is to be used for any other purpose than designated in said budget until preceded by affirmative action upon the part of the board at a legal meeting thereof. The total amount of the budget must not exceed the amount of the funds available for [70]*70school purposes in said district, including the proposed annual tax levy and State appropriation.

A second duty allegedly violated comes under section 226 of said code, prohibiting a director from being employed in any capacity by said district, or receiving any pay for services rendered the district, except as provided by the code.

A third duty allegedly not performed comes under section 553 of said code, requiring the school tax collector to make a written report to the secretary of the board at the end of every month of the amount of taxes collected during the month, furnishing the names of taxables from whom collected. The tax collector, under said section, must at the end of each month pay over the amount collected to the school treasurer of the district, obtain his receipt, and exhibit it to and have it countersigned by the secretary at the time of making his monthly report.

It is charged against respondents that for the fiscal year 1930-31 the said respondent board expended $32,-430.32 in excess of their budget. The facts are these: The board fixed their budget as required by law for said year at $146,240, and made their tax levy. They expended $145,476.06. Of this there seems to be no dispute. The under-expenditure was $763.94. This budget was based on a valuation of $2,318,475, and a tax levy of 57 mills. This was the 25 mills allowable for general purposes and an additional 32 mills alleged to be for the teachers’ salaries.

In December of 1930, Judge Valentine, of our court of common pleas, granted a preliminary injunction restraining the tax levy beyond 43 mills, and the valuation upon which the tax levy had been made on coal lands was cut, by order of Judge Jones, in accordance with the coal decision rendered on or about that time.

Other proceedings to cut the tax levy had been instituted in October 1930, but had been dismissed.

[71]*71The proceedings in December to reduce the tax levy, accompanied by preliminary injunction, were finally continued to March 1931. The income was therefore cut at about the close of the fiscal year some $32,457.25, with a falling off in the tax collector’s accounts. There was also a shortage in the tax collector’s accounts, although the same was not discovered until 1933, amounting at that time, according to the auditors of the petitioners, to $25,000. These items, as near as we can cull the same from the testimony, resulted in a deficit, and caused a floating .indebtedness of about $70,000, July 1, 1933.

At the beginning of the fiscal year 1930-31 the indebtedness of the school district was

Outstanding orders............... $1,398.75
Temporary loans................. 24,000.00
Bonded indebtedness.............. 28,000.00

The temporary loans were provided for in the budget of May 26, 1930, but were not paid, as a result, it is argued, of the restraining order made permanent in March 1931, at which time the millage was reduced by court order 14 mills. There were also land returns, which for the years 1930-31, 1931-32, 1932-33, totaled $24,-275.18. Tax defalcations of over $25,000, discovered in the fiscal year, 1932-33, which will be hereinafter referred to, further upset the fiscal affairs of this district, and resulted in a large floating indebtedness at the end of the fiscal year 1932-33.

In the fiscal years 1931-32 and 1932-33 the levy remained at 43 mills.

The reason for reducing the levy from 57 mills to 43 mills is set forth in the opinion of Judge Valentine in Coxe Brothers & Co., Inc., et al. v. School District Foster Twp., 26 Luz. L. R. 201. The reason is as follows:

In districts of the third class the levy for general purposes is restricted to 25 mills. For the payment of minimum salaries and increments there is no limit, but the [72]*72amount raised for the payment of such salaries and increments cannot exceed the sum remaining after credit is given for the payments to be made by the Commonwealth, and while the sum to be paid by the Commonwealth may not be paid to the district during the fiscal year for which levy is made, any such sum is an offset of the district (citing Duff et al. v. Perry Township School Dist., 281 Pa. 87, 92), and must be taken into consideration in determining the amount to be raised by levy for such purposes.

In other words, as was stated in Duff et al. v. Perry Township School Dist., supra, under the additional millage the school district is empowered to raise only the sum necessary to pay 65 percent of minimum salaries, or the percentage provided in section 1210 of the School Code, which under certain conditions enumerated in the statute may be reduced, dependent upon the valuation in the district per teacher, whereby the Commonwealth assumes in some cases the payment of 75 percent and in others 60 percent.

Now the complaint here is that the expenditure of 1930-31 exceeded the budget. It did not, however, exceed the budget that was fixed in May, preceding the beginning of that fiscal year, provided the 57-mill levy proposed could have been made under the law. Nor is complaint made as to the borrowing limitations of the district.

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Related

Duff v. Perry Township School District
126 A. 202 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1924)

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23 Pa. D. & C. 68, 1934 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 209, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-foster-township-school-district-pactcomplluzern-1934.