Matot v. Inglewood School District

235 P. 667, 71 Cal. App. 557, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 574
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 6, 1925
DocketDocket No. 4918.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 235 P. 667 (Matot v. Inglewood School District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matot v. Inglewood School District, 235 P. 667, 71 Cal. App. 557, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 574 (Cal. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinions

CRAIG, J.

The city of Inglewood is a municipal corporation of the sixth class, within the county of Los Angeles, and prior to August 22, 1924, its boundaries were admittedly coterminous with those of the Inglewood School District. On that date certain territory lying within the limits of Jefferson -School District, and embracing the residence property of petitioners, was annexed to the city of Inglewood. After said annexation the above-named minors enrolled -as pupils *558 of Inglewood School District, but respondents rejected them therefrom on the ground that they were pupils of the Jefferson District" and not entitled to attend the Inglewood School. An alternative writ of mandate issued herein, based upon a petition alleging the foregoing facts and a stipulation of the parties that the annexed territory is still a part of the Jefferson School District unless such annexation had the effect of removing the same therefrom and adding it to Inglewood School District.

Petitioners contend that by virtue of said annexation to the city of Inglewood, the respondent School District was similarly extended, and therefore that they no longer reside in the Jefferson District, and they invoke the provisions-of section 1576 of the Political Code as authority for their alleged right to attend school in the respondent district. The part of said section here involved reads as follows: “Every city or incorporated town, except cities and towns of the sixth class, unless subdivided by the legislative authority thereof, shall constitute a separate school district which shall be governed by the board of education or board of school trustees of such city or incorporated town; provided, however, that in no instance shall the territory within am, incorporated city of the sixth class he in more than one school district

The italicized proviso was added to said section in 1917 (Stats. 1917, p. 208), prior to which amendment the section did not apply to cities of the sixth class, but every other city or incorporated town constituted a separate school district unless subdivided by its legislative authority. Following the addition of the prohibitory clause, said section not only excepted cities of the sixth class from permissive legislative subdivision for school purposes, but expressly forbade that territory embraced in a city of the sixth class should be in two or more school districts. And said act of 1917 contains a further significant provision, “that whenever a city or town shall be incorporated, except a city or town of the sixth class, the board of supervisors of the county may annex thereto, for school purposes only, the remainder, or any part of the remainder, of the district or districts from which such city or incorporated town was organized, whenever a ma *559 jority of the heads of families residing therein shall petition for such annexation.”

If, therefore, respondents are correct in their theory that the annexed territory is not now in the Inglewood School District, it must follow that under the provisions of the statute as amended, it is no longer in any school district, since if embraced in the Jefferson District, the city of Inglewood, since the annexation, lies within two districts, and this cannot be, under the prohibition of the provision above quoted. If we read the whole statute, of which the quotation from section 1576 of the Political Code is a part, it appears to have been intended that neither municipal nor county legislative authority may extend the limits of a city of the sixth class without extending the boundaries of the single school district which must be coextensive with it. A further consideration opposed to respondents’ contention is that if an original school district be not enlarged to embody added territory, annexation to a city of the sixth class would be impossible, though expressly authorized by statute.

Petitioners rely upon Mitchell v. Henry, 184 Cal. 266, 269 [193 Pac. 502], wherein the question here presented was not decided, but the supreme court said it would be reasonable to conclude that the prohibition against more than one school district in a city of the sixth class is limited to the matter of forming school districts, and does not extend to a forbidding of the creation or extension of a city when such creation or extension will happen to have the purely incidental effect of causing the territory of the city to be divided between two school districts. It was therefore further said, however: “In the second place, a not unreasonable construction of the code section is, that by it the annexed territory is upon annexation ipso facto taken out from the school district of which it was before a part and made part of the district of which the city is either the whole or a part. This, in fact, would seem to be the probable effect in the case of the annexation of territory to a city other than one of the sixth class. Such eities have each as a part of its municipal organization a school department. Even in the absence of any express statute on the matter, it would seem likely on the principle declared in Petition of East Fruitvale Sanitary District, 158 Cal. 453 [111 Pac. *560 368], that it Avould not he permitted that the municipal school organization and an entirely distinct school organization should both function within the same municipality at the same time, and that the annexed territory by Adrtue of the mere fact of its annexation would pass under the jurisdiction of the municipal school department. It would seem probable that this would also follow from the language of the code section under consideration that ‘EVery city . . . except cities and towns of the sixth class . . . shall constitute a separate school district. ’

“It may be said that the reason for the distinction which-the portion of the section just quoted makes between cities of the sixth class and others is that the former do not have school departments as parts of their organizations, and that for this reason likewise the rule of the Sanitary District case mentioned would not apply to such cities. This is true, but it might well be replied that the prohibition of the section on a city of the sixth class being in more than one school district means that nevertheless the same rule shall apply as to it, so that when the territory is annexed to it, it follows as an incident that the territory becomes a part of the same school district as the city.”

From the provisions of the law quoted, and others to which it is not necessary here to make reference, it is apparent that the legislature intended to provide a system by which school districts should be made coterminous with the boundaries of other municipal entities. To be sure, the board of supervisors is given authority in certain classes of cities to provide otherwise, but this exception only emphásizes the general rule. There is sound reason for such a policy. The further consideration, of procedure for annexation, and for taxation, present themselves, whereby the qualified electors of a municipality, and of the proposed addition, declare by ballot whether or not they shall unite in a common interest and assume common burdens for the maintenance of a larger municipality. After annexation electors residing in the new territory become residents of the city, subject to taxation of their property for street, school, sanitation, and general fluids (Laws 1917, p. 1664, c. 796, sec.

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Related

Murata v. Vernon School District
255 P. 208 (California Court of Appeal, 1927)

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Bluebook (online)
235 P. 667, 71 Cal. App. 557, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 574, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matot-v-inglewood-school-district-calctapp-1925.