Jones v. School Dist. No. 96

1930 OK 292, 289 P. 268, 144 Okla. 10, 1930 Okla. LEXIS 637
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 10, 1930
Docket20643
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1930 OK 292 (Jones v. School Dist. No. 96) 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
Jones v. School Dist. No. 96, 1930 OK 292, 289 P. 268, 144 Okla. 10, 1930 Okla. LEXIS 637 (Okla. 1930).

Opinion

HALL, C.

Wight Jones, a resident taxpayer residing in school district No. 96 in Grady county, brought this action against the school board of that district to 'enjoin the issuance of certain school district bonds authorized by a vote of the people. The basis of the complaint is that a sufficient number of persons having resided in the school district for a period of over three months did not vote for the bonds to. authorize their issuance. The case was tried on a stipxxlation of facts, to the effect that without the affirmative votes of certain persons who, at the time, were bona fide residents of the school district, and possessing the constitutional qualifications to vote at other elections, but had not resided in the school district for a period of more than three months immediately preceding the election, the bonds -would have been defeated. In other words, the issue is a question of law; and the question of the correctness of the decision of the trial court depends upon whether or not a person who has all the qualifications enumerated in section 1 of art. 3 of the Constitution, and who is a bona fide resident of the school district, may vote at a school -district bond election, or whether a period of more than three months is required as a condition precedent to voting at such election. The Constitution, art. 3, sec. 1, in defining qualified electors, provides, among other things, that they must be persons over the age of 21 years, citizens of this state and the United States, and who have resided in the state one year, in the county six months, and in the election precinct 30 days next preceding the election.

Section 10283, Comp. Stat. 1921, in regard to the issuance of bonds of a school district, provides that the electors must have been bona fide residents of tbe school district for more than three months next preceding the school bond election.

It will be thus seen that tbe Constitution provides, among other things, as a qualification to vote, a residence of only 30- days in tbe election precinct; and that Comp. *11 Stat. 1921, see. 10288, provides for more than three months’ residence within the limits of the school district as a prerequisite to the right to vote on the proposed issuance of bonds for the school district.

The only question for determination here is whether or not the Legislature can prescribe a different or an additional qualification than that which is contained in the Constitution. Of course, before the determination of that question, it is necessary to determine whether or not a legislative provision requiring a residence of three months as a condition precedent to the right to vote in a school district bond election, is a modification of the qualifications enumerated in the Constitution.-

The trial court held the act to he in conflict with the Constitution. We think his conclusion was correct.

In addition to the provision of section 1 of art. 3 of the Constitution, providing the period of residency necessary for one to become an elector, section 26 of art. 10 of the Constitution provides as follows;

“No county, city, town, township, school district, or other political corporation, or subdivision of the state, shall be allowed to become indebted, * * * to an amount exceeding, in any year, the income and revenue provided for such year, without the assent of threeKftfths of the voters thereof, voting at. an election, to be held for that purpose.” (Emphasis ours.)

In view of the fact that the Constitution (art. 3, sec. 1) does not specifically mention •school districts or other municipalities, such .as a township, town or city, it might be said, with some force of argument, that there is no conflict between the provisions in section 1, art. 3, of the Constitution, providing a residence of 30 days in the precinct as a prerequisite to voting, and the provisions in section 10283, Comp. Stat. 1921, prescribing a residence of over three months in the school district. But when we consider the provisions of section 1 of art. 3, in connection with the language of section 26 of art. 10 (of the Constitution), which has express reference to three-fifths of the voters of the school district, it is reasonably clear that the words “voters in the school district,” or equivalent language, “voters thereof,” were used in reference to and within the meaning of the other provisions of that •same document defining the qualifications of •a voter or an elector.

It has become definitely settled that where the qualifications of electors are fully defined in the Constitution, a law which assumes to prescribe any additional qualification as a condition precedent to the right to vote, or prescribing a longer residence than that required by the Constitution, is unconstitutional and void. 20 C. J. 66; North Carolina v. Canady, 73 N. C. 198, 21 Am. R. 465; Wendover v. Tobin (Tex. Civ. App.) 261 S. W. 434; White v. Multnomah County, 13 Ore. 317, 10 Pac. 484; Attorney General v. Detroit, 78 Mich. 545, 44 N. W. 388. The rule is stated in Ruling Case Law, vol. 9, p. 1034, in this language:

“It is a generally accepted rule that the enumeration in a state Constitution of the classes of citizens who shall be permitted to vote is to be taken as to all matters within the purview of the provisions as a complete and final test of the right to the exercise of that privilege, and that the Legislature can neither take from nor add to the qualifications there set out unless the power to do so is expressly or by necessary implication conferred upon it by the Constitution itself.”

We think that the constitutional provision (art. 3, sec. 1) was intended to toe all-embracing; and this being true, any legislative act existing at the time of the adoption of the Constitution or subsequently enacted purporting to prescribe a longer residence as an additional qualification to a right to vote on the issuance of school bonds, is in conflict with the Constitution, and therefore void.

This statute (section 10283, Comp. Stat. 1921) antedated the Constitution; that is, it was enacted when Oklahoma was a territory. Since the adoption of the Constitution, the Legislature has never legislated on the particular subject other than the formal adoption of the Revised Laws of 1910, which included this statute among many others, some in conflict with and some not in conflict with the Constitution. That fact, however, is not controlling, but only goes to the motive and reason for the existence of the statute.

It is the individual opinion of the writer that the question before us is not even close; and that the meaning' of the Constitution is clear; but, even if it were otherwise, we must recollect that, in determining the constitutionality of a statute, it is a rule of universal application adhered to by the highest courts of the different states and the Supreme Court of the United States, that in cases where the question of its constitutionality is not well-defined, and where the matter is not easy to determine, the construction given it by executive and administrative officers of the government for a long time, will be given consideration and is persuasive. In this connection, the Attorney General, the ex-officio bond commissioner' of this state, has always and has consistently given the matter the construction which we are giving *12 it in this opinion

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Bluebook (online)
1930 OK 292, 289 P. 268, 144 Okla. 10, 1930 Okla. LEXIS 637, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-school-dist-no-96-okla-1930.