Jarrell v. Board of Education of County of Raleigh

50 S.E.2d 442, 131 W. Va. 702, 1948 W. Va. LEXIS 53
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 16, 1948
DocketCC 740
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 50 S.E.2d 442 (Jarrell v. Board of Education of County of Raleigh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jarrell v. Board of Education of County of Raleigh, 50 S.E.2d 442, 131 W. Va. 702, 1948 W. Va. LEXIS 53 (W. Va. 1948).

Opinion

Haymond, Judge:

This is a proceeding instituted in the Circuit Court by James R. Jarrell, a citizen and a taxpayer of Raleigh County, who sues in behalf of himself and other citizens and taxpayers, against the Board of Education of that county in which the plaintiff seeks a declaratory judgment to prohibit the defendant from expending $866,910.14 of moneys derived from special levies voted in 1941 and 1944 for purposes alleged to be unauthorized in a pleading designated as a declaration but which may properly be considered as a pleading in equity. To the answer of the defendant the plaintiff filed a demurrer which the circuit court overruled and upon the joint motion of the parties certified its ruling to this Court.

From the pleading and the exhibits filed by the plaintiff it appears that special elections for additional school levies were held in Raleigh County in 1941 and in 1944, at which such levies were duly authorized by more than sixty per cent of the votes cast for the purpose of constructing public school buildings in that county. The orders for these elections specified the purpose and the projects for which the moneys should be spent and stated the amount to be used for each project.

In the order for the special election in 1941 the following twenty separate projects and the cost of each were specified, the priority in building to be based upon the greatest need as determined by the Board of Education: Beckley Junior High School, $80,000.00; Byrd Prillerman High School, $12,000.00; Clear Fork High School, $18,-000.00; Crab Orchard School, $10,000.00; Cranberry and Skelton School, $45,000.00; Edwight School, $10,000.00; Eccles School, $8,000.00; Fireco School, $18,000.00; Hollywood School, $18,000.00; Mt. View Junior High School, $16,703.00; Marsh Fork High School, $40,000.00; Prince- *704 wick School, $10,000.00; Sophia High School, $65,000.00; Sprague School, $18,000.00; Shady Spring Elementary School, $23,000.00; Shady Spring High School, $27,000.00; Stoco High School, $30,000.00; Stratton High School, $35,-000.00; Trap Hill Elementary School, $27,500.00; and Woodrow Wilson High School, $60,000.00, amounting to a total of $571,203.00.

In the order for the special election in 1944, these twenty six separate projects and the cost of each were also specified, the priority -in building likewise to be based upon the greatest need as determined by the board; Amigo School, $6,000.00; Byrd Prillerman High School, $2,000.00; Beckley Junior High School, $45,000.00; Clear Creek School, $25,000.00; Clear Fork High School, $4,000.00; Crab Orchard School, $36,000.00; Cranberry and Skelton School, $12,000.00; Collins' High School at Coal City, $80,000.00; Elliott High School, $60,000.00; Edwight School, $2,000.00; Fireco School, $10,000.00; Helen School, $2,000.00; Mab-scott School, $36,000.00; Morton Reaves School, $12,000.00; Mt. View Junior High School, $7,000.00; Old Eccles School, $20,000.00; Princewick School, $4,000.00; Pettus School, $12,000.00; Sprague School, $6,000.00;" Shady Spring Elementary School, $7,000.00; Stratton High School, $30,-000.00; Stoco High School, $5,000.00; Sophia Elementary School, $25,000.00; Sophia High School, $45,000.00; Trap Hill Elementary School, $8,000.00; and Trap Hill High School, $25,000.00, amounting to a total of $526,000.00.

The election orders created committees of designated persons to advise the board in all matters relative to price, award of contracts for work and materials, inspection of work, and audit and settlement of accounts in connection with the building program.

Of the total funds authorized and raised by the two special levies an unexpended amount of $866,910.14 remained in the custody and the control of the Board of Education at the time of the institution of this proceeding on January 3, 1948.

By an order entered by the Board of Education at a *705 meeting held by it with advisory committee members on December 16, 1947, the available and unexpended sum of $866,910.14 of the moneys raised by the levies was allocated, with fixed amounts for costs, to these sixteen projects: Elliott High School, $92,507.98; Sprague Negro Elementary School, $36,049.24; Coal City High School, $126,-386.43; Crab Orchard Elementary School, $78,000.00; Sophia Elementary School, $52,000.00; Mt. View Elementary School, $104,000.00; Clear Creek Elementary School, $43,135.31; Stratton High School, $65,000.00; Fireco Elementary School, $16,000.00; Hollywood School, $26,000.00; East Beckley Negro School, substitute for Morton-Reaves School, $26,000.00; Clear Fork High School, $39,000.00; Skelton-Cranberry School, $78,000.00; Eccles School, $52,-000.00; Mabscott School, $17,831.18; and Shady Spring Elementary School, $15,000.00. It should be noted that two of these sixteen projects, Mt. View Elementary School and East Beckley Negro School, for which were allocated the respective sums of $104,000.00 and $26,000.00, were not mentioned or designated in either of the orders for the elections in 1941 and 1944 which submitted to the voters the question of authorizing the special levies. These projects may therefore be characterized as new or additional projects which have been substituted and selected for completion by the board.

No part of the funds raised by either special levy has been expended for the construction of Trap Hill Elementary School for which $27,500.00 was specified in the order for the election in 1941 and $8,000.00 was specified in the order for the election in 1944, or Trap Hill School for which $25,000.00 was specified in the order for the election in 1944. The plaintiff and other voters in the magisterial district in which the Trap Hill schools were to be located were induced to vote for the levies because of the inclusion of these schools and they would not have voted in favor of the levies if no provision had been made for these projects at the designated cost for each of them. If the unexpended sum of $866,910.14 of the moneys obtained from the levies is spent in the manner provided by the allocation made by the board on December 16, 1947, these *706 schools will- not be built or paid, for by money realized from either of the special levies.

The plaintiff charges that the expenditure of the remaining portion of the funds in the manner and for the projects provided by the allocation is unauthorized and prays for a declaratory judgment to prohibit .that use of the money.

The answer of the defendant admits the material facts as alleged by the plaintiff but it defends against his charge of unauthorized expenditure of the funds on the ground that an unexpected and extraordinary increase, since the special elections, in the cost of labor and materials which, as to the only designated project for which bids were received, was seventy one per cent above the amount provided for it by the special levies, renders impossible the completion of the designated projects as planned by the use of the unexpended funds and other legally available funds at the disposal of the board.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
50 S.E.2d 442, 131 W. Va. 702, 1948 W. Va. LEXIS 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jarrell-v-board-of-education-of-county-of-raleigh-wva-1948.