Lansing School District v. School District No. 3

327 Mich. 436
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedApril 6, 1950
DocketCalendar No. 44,-694
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 327 Mich. 436 (Lansing School District v. School District No. 3) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lansing School District v. School District No. 3, 327 Mich. 436 (Mich. 1950).

Opinion

Boyles, C. J.

The question here for determination is which of 3 sections of the school code apply to the circumstances of the case. The board of education of the Lansing school district filed a petition in the circuit court for Ingham county for mandamus to compel the board of education of school district No 3, Lansing township, commonly known as the Everett [438]*438district, to convey, assign and transfer all of its property to the Lansing school district. The circuit judge granted the writ and the Everett district board of education appeals. For brevity, the plaintiff board of education of the city of Lansing school district will be referred to as the Lansing district, and the defendant board of education of school district No 3, Lansing township, will be referred to as the Everett district.

At a special election held in November, 1949, the entire territory of the Everett district in Lansing township was annexed to the city of Lansing. The Lansing district otherwise included all of the territory within the city’s corporate limits and certain other territory in adjoining Lansing township. Following the November annexation election, the Lansing district school board by resolution determined that the Everett district was a part of the Lansing district and demanded that the Everett district board convey, assign and transfer all of its property to the Lansing district board. The Everett district board, taking the position that the Everett district could become a part of the Lansing district only by the affirmative vote of the qualified electors in both districts, declined to comply with the demand. The instant case followed. The court held that the Everett district had become a part of the Lansing district, granted the writ, and the board of education of the Everett district appeals. .

The Lansing district claims that PA 1927, No 319, pt 1, ch 6, § 4 (CL 1948, § 346.4 [Stat Ann § 15.184]), applies to the instant case, and results in the annexation of the Everett district as a part of the Lansing school district by the adoption of the above resolution without any further election or vote of the' electors of the districts involved. The Lansing district is a school district of the third class and comes [439]*439within the provisions of section 4, ch 6, pt 1, of the school code, which provides:

“Whenever hereafter any territory shall be annexed to any city forming the whole or a part of a school district of the third class, the territory so annexed shall become a part of the contiguous school district embracing the whole or some part of said city, and all property of any school district, situated wholly upon the territory so annexed, shall become the property of the school district to which the said territory is adjoined.” CL 1948, § 346.4 (Stat Ann § 15.184).

The above section was adopted in the school code as originally enacted (PA 1927, No 319, pt 1, ch 6, § 4 [CL 1929, § 7222]) and remains unchanged. It answers the question now before us unless it has been superseded or repealed by some later or more applicable statutory provision. Counsel for the Everett district rely on PA 1941, No 247, § 1 (CL 1948, § 388.151 [Stat Ann 1949 Cum Supp § 15.2071]), the essential part of which is as follows:

“Where unincorporated territory # * * (is) annexed to * * * a city comprising a third-class school district * * * any school district * * * within such annexed * # # territory, * * * shall be annexed to and become a part of the said third-class school district whenever the respective governing bodies of the said third-class school district and of the school district # * * to be annexed thereto shall by resolution so determine. * * * Provided, however, That the annexation of any school district * * * with the said third-class school district, as provided in this act, shall not become effective until the qualified school electors of each of the said school districts * * * ' within the boundaries of the city shall have approved such annexation by a majority vote of the qualified school electors residing within the city.”

[440]*440As indicated, said Act No 247 was passed in 1941. It is the position taken by counsel for the Everett district that the said act, being later in time of its adoption, supersedes section 4, ch 6, pt 1, of the school code, supra, as well as section 17, ch 3, pt 2, of said code to which reference will again be made later. Counsel for the Everett district claim that the 1941 act repeals both of said sections by implication and that consequently a separate and independent election in both school districts is required in order to annex the Everett district to the Lansing district. Counsel for the Everett district, as they construe the 1941 act, conclude that it is repugnant to the other two sections referred to, that they cannot be reconciled, and hence the repeal by implication. As to that, repeals by implication are not favored in the law and the burden is on counsel for the Everett district to establish such repeal. In Jackson v. Michigan Corrections Commission, 313 Mich 352, the Court said:

“The presumption is against a repeal by implication, the theory being that had the legislature intended a repeal it would have expressly so stated, designating the specific acts or parts of acts repealed. If possible, the earlier and later statutes concerned in any case must be construed together and each given force and effect.”

We do not consider that the several acts referred to are necessarily repugnant. The reasoning resulting in counsel’s conclusion of an implied repeal is based on the construction given by counsel for the Everett district to the words, “a city comprising a third-class school district,” in the 1941 act. Counsel for Everett district argue that the city of Lansing “comprises” a third-class school district within the meaning of said 1941 act. But the city includes only [441]*441a part of the Lansing third-class school district, namely, that part within the corporate limits. We do not agree with counsel for the Everett district that PA 1941, No 247, supersedes or repeals by implication section 4, ch 6, pt 1, of the school code. Said section, in express language, applies to “any city forming the whole or a part of a school district of the third class.”

Everett school district also argues that PA 1941, No 247, supersedes and repeals by implication section 17, ch 3, pt 2, of the school code on the ground that said 1941 act is inconsistent, and of later enactment. But in that regard counsel do not overcome the fact that said section 17, ch 3, pt 2, of the school code was “re-enacted and published at length”

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Covert Township Assessor v. State Tax Commission
218 N.W.2d 807 (Michigan Court of Appeals, 1974)
Flynn v. City of Fraser
206 N.W.2d 448 (Michigan Court of Appeals, 1973)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
327 Mich. 436, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lansing-school-district-v-school-district-no-3-mich-1950.