Jones v. Brightwood Independent School District, No. 1

247 N.W. 884, 63 N.D. 275, 1933 N.D. LEXIS 182
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedApril 10, 1933
DocketFile No. 6122.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 247 N.W. 884 (Jones v. Brightwood Independent School District, No. 1) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jones v. Brightwood Independent School District, No. 1, 247 N.W. 884, 63 N.D. 275, 1933 N.D. LEXIS 182 (N.D. 1933).

Opinion

Burr, J.

Plaintiffs seek to enjoin the defendants from levying *283 taxes to pay certain warrants and bonds issued by Brigbtwood Independent School District No. 1 in Richland County.

Plaintiffs allege that this school district is organized under the “provisions of a special act of Dakota Territory,” which provided for a board of education with power to levy taxes not to exceed “two cents on the dollar of valuation of the taxable property of said District; ” that by amendment in Chapter 205 of the laws of 1909 the board may issue bonds in an aggregate amount not to “exceed fifty mills on the dollar of the assessed valuation of the property of the said district; ” that the board is forbidden to incur expenditures in any year in excess of the income for that year; that the assessed valuation of the district for the year 1919 to 1930 inclusive ranged from about $616,000 in 1919, to a little over $1,620,000 in 1920 and $1,205,000 in 1930; and that the bonded indebtedness of the district was $150,000 in July 1924 and $100,000 on July 1, 1931; with outstanding unpaid warrants on July 1, 1931, of approximately $66,000.

After showing the amount of cash in the various district funds plaintiffs allege the school board, in July, 1929, adopted a resolution with reference to the necessary amount of taxes to bo levied, including a reserve fund of over $24,000 to take care of this outstanding indebtedness, and in October, 1929, after showing the district owed outstanding warrants amounting to over $103,000; authorized an annual levy to pay one quarter of the excess over the debt limit and for interest on the total amount, for four successive years; that in December, 1929, the county auditor of Richland County certified to the county treasurer that “taxes to be levied for school purposes in the District amounted to $56,606.46; ” that according to the resolution adopted by the board in 1930 the levy was ordered for the proportionate share of previous indebtedness and, in addition thereto, amounts necessary for the current expenses of the school, and that all in all, after the deduction of the estimated revenue from cash on hand, tuition, county aid, uncollected taxes and other sources, the board levied $54,900 for general school purposes; and $20,544.10 for excess debts; that in December 1930 the county auditor certified to the county treasurer a tax levy for the School District of $44,494.63; and that the total amount of taxes which the school district could levy for the year 1929 was approximately $15,-000. The plaintiffs then allege that defendants are paying illegal *284 debts, are threatening to continue illegal and excessive tax levies and will do so unless enjoined.

The defendants allege that the school district now operates under the general law of the state; that one issue of bonds was sold to the state and the proceeds used to build a school house; that the second issue of bonds was used to take up outstanding warrants that were issued in part payment of this school building; that these bonds were sold to an innocent purchaser who gave to the defendant cash consideration therefor; that the remaining indebtedness said to be in excess was incurred in the years 1918 and 1919 by the school board upon the authority of the people of the school district, in proceedings wherein plaintiffs Jones, Green and Cunningham participated, the remaining plaintiffs accepted, and all of them approved; that the outstanding-warrants were issued for salaries, fuel supplies, tuition and upkeep of the school; that by October, 1929, an indebtedness of approximately $70,000 had been incurred which should have been'funded by special levies made by school boards prior thereto; that the provisions of the Law of 1923, C. 326 (Comp. Laws Supp. 1925, §§ 2079bl to 2079bl3) in force at that time, required school boards to “go on a cash basis” and authorized a special levy to retire this indebtedness “that said bonds were sold and delivered in good faith and received and paid for in good faith” and the proceeds thereof used for school purposes and if bonds and warrants are declared illegal it is the duty of the school district and the taxpayers to restore this money to those who purchased the bonds and the school warrants.

The intexvenors claim that they are the holders of some of the warrants issued in 1926 and 1927 and the same were delivered to them in payment of fuel furnished to the defendants for the purpose of maintaining the school, and in accordance with the authority conferred by law upon the board to contract for such fuel.

The trial court denied an injunction and plaintiffs appeal.

Plaintiffs say no question of fraud arises, that the question involved is the illegality of bonds and warrants issued 'in excess of the debt limit, “or issued in exchange for other wamants' which were in excess” of the debt limit.

The issue on the claim of the intervenors may be disposed of by the mere recital of the fact that these warrants were issued for fuel *285 purchased from tbe intervenors during tbe years cited; were witbin tbe power of tbe school board to issue; tbe supplies were included in tbe budget and provided for by tbe tax levy; and even though prior indebtedness be illegal these warrants can be separated and distinguished.

Respondents claim the plaintiffs are estopped from maintaining this suit because of their conduct. Resident taxpayers, seeking to vindicate the rights of the public generally, are not, under the facts in this case, estopped from doing so even if dilatory in their action. Lang v. Cavalier, 59 N. D. 75, 84, 228 N. W. 819, 822. This is not an action brought by a taxpayer to enjoin the collection of his own taxes because the same or a portion thereof are illegal. This is an action on behalf of the public. Where the plaintiffs are taxpayers in the district they have sufficient interest to justify an action.

Appellants take the position “that tbe various general school statutes referring to bonds, warrants, levies, etc.,” are not applicable to the defendant school district, though it is the contention of the defendants that they do apply, saying:

“It is sufficient to state that these acts do not refer to nor are they made applicable to school districts operating under a special charter.”

It appears to be a part of the plaintiffs’ theory that all the rights, powers, duties and limitations of the school board are found in this territorial act and arc not affected in any way by anything which the state legislature has done, other than by chapter 205 of the Session Laws of 1909.

The territorial legislature in 1885 enacted the special law cited by tbe plaintiffs in this case; but there is nothing irrevocable about this legislation. Article 2 of the schedule of the state constitution shows that only the territorial laws not repugnant to the constitution “remain in force until they expire by their own limitations or be altered or repealed.” There is nothing to prevent the State legislature from amending or repealing any of these territorial laws. In territorial days the “organic law” of the territory was the authority for legislative action; but there is nothing therein which made a special law creating a school district an irrevocable act.

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Bluebook (online)
247 N.W. 884, 63 N.D. 275, 1933 N.D. LEXIS 182, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-brightwood-independent-school-district-no-1-nd-1933.