Mann v. Board of Education

1938 NMSC 071, 85 P.2d 595, 43 N.M. 78
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 14, 1938
DocketNo. 4455.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1938 NMSC 071 (Mann v. Board of Education) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mann v. Board of Education, 1938 NMSC 071, 85 P.2d 595, 43 N.M. 78 (N.M. 1938).

Opinions

SADLER, Justice.

In the case before us we are to decide whether proposed school bonds about to be issued and sold to the federal government by authority of Laws 1934 (Spec.Sess.), c. 6, under a Public Works Administration (commonly known as P. W. A.) application, are illegal and void because the election at which they were voted was held within a year succeeding consecutively that of a previous bond election in the same school district in contravention of 1929 Comp. § 120-702 of the School Code.

Section 120-702 of the school code prescribes the form of the petition for initiating a school bond election and further provides: “Two separate' questions may be submitted in the petition for election and in the election, in which case the vote thereon shall be separately counted, canvassed and certified, but not more than one such election hereunder shall be held in any two consecutive years.”

In April, 1937, Artesia Municipal School District No. 16 of Eddy County voted a bond issue of $85,000, the proceeds to be used in erecting and furnishing a high school building. The bonds were sold to the State of New Mexico and most of them are still outstanding as subsisting obligations of the district. This election was initiated and conducted by authority of Article 7, Chapter 120, New Mexico Statutes Annotated, 1929, a part of the School Code.

In September, 1938, at another election initiated under the authority of Laws 1934 (Spec.Sess.) c. 6, bonds of the district to the amount of $42,000 were voted for the purpose of providing additional buildings and improvements for school purposes. The validity of the second election is challenged by plaintiff as a taxpayer and resident of the district in a suit for injunction against the Board of Education of the district to restrain the issuance and sale of the bonds to the United States of America acting through its agency, the Federal Emergency Administration of Public Works. The sole ground of attack upon the validity of the bond issue is that the election purporting to authorize the bonds is void because held within the second consecutive year following the previous bond election noted herein-above.

The cause was tried upon the complaint and answer. The trial court found that all of the proceedings in connection with the election were regular and valid; that defendants had accepted an offer from P. W. A. for a grant of $33,545 and for the purchase of the district bonds to the amount of $42,000 and that the sale of said bonds was about to be consummated. In addition, the court found that until the filing of this suit, no action or suit of any kind had been instituted in the district court of Eddy County attacking the validity of the resolution calling the election or attacking the proceedings subsequent to the election.

The trial court deduced conclusions of law-from the facts found as follows:

. “1. That Section 120-702 of the New Mexico Statutes Annotated, 1929 Compilation, does not prohibit the holding of more than one election in any two consecutive years by a School District where such election is held in connection with an application to the Federal Emergency Administration of Public Works for a loan and grant in accordance with the provisions of Chapter 6 of the Special Session Laws of 1934 of New Mexico.
“2. That no attack having been made by any person or Corporation upon the validity of the Resolution calling the election of September 14th, 1938, and no attack having been made, and no person or Corporation having instituted in the District Court of Eddy County, New Mexico, an action or suit to contest the validity of the proceedings taken subsequent to the election of September 14, 1938, as provided by Sections 120-711 and 120-712 of the New Mexico Statutes Annotated, 1929 Compilation, the plaintiff is now barred by the provisions of said sections from maintaining this action.”

A decree declining to enjoin naturally followed for the review of which this appeal is prosecuted.

We think the trial court was right in its first conclusion. Hence, we find it unnecessary to express an opinion upon its second conclusion. The obvioús purpose of Laws 1934 (Spec.Sess.) c. 6 was to enable counties, cities, towns, school districts and other political subdivisions of the state therein described to avail themselves of the federal government’s lending program in aid of industrial and economic recovery.

The act is known as “The, Public Works Act.” Laws 1934 (Spec.Sess.) c. 6, § 18. Its title reads: “An Act concerning the borrowing of money and the acceptance of grants from the federal government, simplifying the procedure for the authorization and financing of public works projects, providing for the private sale of bonds and other obligations to the federal government, providing for the form and maturity of such bonds and other obligations, generally regulating the issuance of such bonds to the federal government, conferring powers to contract therewith, and prescribing the manner of exercising existing powers in order to enable municipalities and public bodies to secure the benefits of and aid in carrying out the provisions of the National Industrial Recovery Act; and declaring an emergency.”

Section 2 of the act provides: “Sec. 2. That notwithstanding the provisions of any general, special or local law, any municipality, by majority vote of its governing board, and any public body of this state, having the power under existing law to borrow money are hereby authorized to accept from the Federal Government direct grants of moneys to defray part of the cost of the labor and materials employed upon any public works project undertaken under the provisions of the National Industrial Recovery Act. That the funds received as such grants shall be expended on the project so undertaken in the same manner as other funds' available for such project whether as loans or otherwise.”

Section 3 authorizes private sale to the federal government by any municipality of bonds for the financing of any public works project “notwithstanding the provisions of any general, special or local law.” Section 4 authorizes any municipality to enter into agreements with the federal government and to do any and all things necessary or advisable in connection with any public works project; also provides that making or execution of such agreements may be authorized by resolution of the governing board and that the resolution need not be published. Section 5 provides for issuance and sale to the federal government of notes, temporary bonds, interim certificates and for later funding same into bonds. Section 6 (amended Laws 1935, c. 52) confers powers on municipalities with reference to the form of bonds.

Sections 7 and 8 read:

“Sec. 7. That nothing in this Act contained shall affect the provisions of any other law in so far as such law limits amount of indebtedness or requires the approval or the concurrence of any officer of a municipality in the authorization or the financing of a public works project, or the action of any commission, board or body required by any other law as a condition precedent to the appropriation of money or the approval of any commission, board or department of the State required by any other law.
“Sec. 8.

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Related

Board of Education of School Dist. No. 5 v. Patton
86 P.2d 277 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1938)

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Bluebook (online)
1938 NMSC 071, 85 P.2d 595, 43 N.M. 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mann-v-board-of-education-nm-1938.