Landers v. Van Aukin

151 P. 712, 77 Or. 479, 1915 Ore. LEXIS 141
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 21, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 151 P. 712 (Landers v. Van Aukin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Landers v. Van Aukin, 151 P. 712, 77 Or. 479, 1915 Ore. LEXIS 141 (Or. 1915).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Burnett

delivered the opinion of the court.

1. The following excerpts from Chapter 172, Laws of 1913, being “An act to provide for the duties and powers of district school boards, including their acts in connection with incurring indebtedness of their districts and funding and refunding the same,” etc., are applicable to the case in hand:

“If authorized by a majority vote of the legal voters present at any legally called school meeting they shall purchase, lease or build schoolhouses, buy or lease [484]*484land for school purposes, furnish schoolhonses with furniture, lights, and apparatus, and for such purposes may, when so authorized, levy not oftener than once a year, a tax not exceeding 5 per cent of the value of the taxable property of the district, or issue or sell negotiable bonds as hereinafter in this act provided. They may also sell, lease, or otherwise dispose of any property belonging to the district, when authorized to do so by majority vote at any legally called school meeting: Provided, that the call for such meeting shall have stated that such sale, lease or disposition would be one of the objects of such meeting”: Section 1, subd. 5.
“When authorized by a majority vote of the legal voters present at any legally called school meeting, they may, in the name and on behalf of their district, contract a debt by borrowing money, or otherwise, not to exceed 5 per centum of the value of the taxable property of the district, for the purpose of building a school building or repair of school buildings, or for the purchase of land for school purposes, and issue negotiable interest bearing warrants (and fix the time of payment of the same) of their district, evidencing such debt; and they may from time to time, not oftener than once a year, levy a tax on the taxable property of the district to pay the interest thereon, or principal when due, which taxes shall be collected in the same manner as other school taxes are or may be collectible by law. * * ”: Section 1, subd. 6.
“Whenever, in the judgment of the board, it is desirable or necessary to the welfare of the schools in the district, or to provide for the children therein proper school privileges, or whenever petitioned so to do by one third of the voters of the district, the district board shall call a meeting, at some convenient time and place fixed by the board, to vote upon the question of the selection, purchase, exchange or sale of a schoolhouse site, or the erection, removal or sale of a schoolhouse. Said election shall be conducted and votes canvassed in the same manner as at the annual election of school officers. Three notices of the time, place and purpose of such meeting shall be posted in three public places [485]*485in the district by the clerk at least 10 days prior to such meeting. If a majority of the voters present at such meeting shall by vote select a schoolhouse site, or shall be in favor of the purchase, exchange or sale of the schoolhouse, as the case may be, the board shall locate, purchase, exchange or sell such site, or erect, remove or sell such schoolhouse, as the case may be, in accordance with such vote: Provided, that it shall require a vote of two thirds of the voters present and voting at such meeting to order the removal of the schoolhouse, and such schoolhouse so removed cannot again be removed within three years from the date of such meeting” : Section 1, subd. 14.

In Section 2 of the act it is provided that school districts may contract bonded indebtedness for the purpose of erecting and furnishing a school building or buildings, or to purchase a site or sites therefor, or to fund or refund outstanding indebtedness, or for any, all, or either of such purposes, and to provide for the payment of the same by issuing bonds, when authorized by what is known as a “bonding election. ’ ’ Being empowered by a majority vote to that end, the directors are required to issue bonds, and the county treasurer must register them and cause their delivery to purchasers, holding the proceeds subject to the order of the district board, to be used solely for the purpose for which the bonds were issued. Subdivision 4 of Section 2 of the act contains this excerpt:

“The district school board shall ascertain and levy annually, in addition to all other taxes, a direct annual ad valorem tax on all the taxable property in such school district, sufficient to pay the interest accruing on said bonds promptly when and as the same becomes due.”

Like mandatory language is used respecting the duty of the board to provide funds by taxation for the liqui[486]*486elation of the bonds. It is further prescribed by the act that, if the district school board fail or refuse to levy the necessary tax or interest or sinking fund, the county treasurer shall report the same to the County Court and county board of commissioners, whose duty it then shall be to themselves levy the tax required. Subdivision 9 of Section 2 here follows:

“Whenever any school district shall have any outstanding warrant or bonded indebtedness incurred in building any schoolhouse or schoolhouses or in the furnishing of the same or for the purchase of any schoolhouse site or sites or in refunding or funding indebtedness, which indebtedness is due or subject under the pleasure or option of the school district to be paid or redeemed, it shall be lawful for said school district, by and through its district school board, to issue and exchange, for any such indebtedness, its bonds bearing not to exceed legal interest per annum; and said bonds shall in all respects conform to and be governed as to their issue by the provisions of Section 2 of this act except that the funding or refunding of said indebtedness and the issuing of bonds for such purpose shall not require an election, but may be done by resolution of the district school board at any legally called meeting thereof; and the validity of any bonds issued under the provisions of this section or of the indebtedness thereby funded or refunded shall not thereafter be open to contest by said school district or by any person or corporation for or on its behalf for any reason whatever. ’ ’

As the law stood at the time of the events narrated in the complaint, Section 4088, L. O. L., read thus:

“District meetings, legally called, shall have power to levy a tax upon all real and personal property in their district and make any necessary appropriation for the support and benefit of schools, and also adjourn from time to time: Provided, that no tax shall be levied at any special meeting unless the call for such meet[487]*487ing shall have stated that one of the purposes of such meeting ■would be the levying of a tax. The minutes of all school meetings must be signed by the chairman and secretary.”

The plaintiffs question the regularity of the proceedings described, and argue that they constituted an attempt to order the removal of the schoolhouse, requiring for its accomplishment a two-thirds vote of the voters present. They urge also that, one vote having been taken, in which the proposed new site failed of receiving two thirds of the ballots, the power to vote on the question was exhausted, and no sanction can be imputed to the second ballot.

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Bluebook (online)
151 P. 712, 77 Or. 479, 1915 Ore. LEXIS 141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/landers-v-van-aukin-or-1915.