McDonald v. Richards

248 P. 1049, 79 Cal. App. 1, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 26
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 24, 1926
DocketDocket No. 3091.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 248 P. 1049 (McDonald v. Richards) 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
McDonald v. Richards, 248 P. 1049, 79 Cal. App. 1, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 26 (Cal. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

THE COURT.

Appellants, as the Board of Trustees of Biggs Union High School in the County of Butte, filed their petition herein praying for a writ of mandate directed to the respondent as the Auditor of the County of Butte to levy a tax upon the property of the Union High School District sufficient in amount to produce the sum hereinafter stated. The petition sets forth the fact of the organization and existence of the Biggs Union High School District; the official capacity of the petitioners and also of the respondent; the fact that during the year 1925 and at the time specified in the code for taking such action the petitioners prepared and submitted a budget of the amount of money required for maintaining said High School District for the year beginning June 30, 1925, and ending on June 30, 1926; that said budget was submitted to the superintendent of schools; by him, after the performance of certain duties required by the law, approved and thereafter said budget was duly submitted to the board of supervisors of said county; that by the budget so submitted it was ascertained and set forth that the sum of $25,502.50 was the amount necessary to maintain said High School District during the period of time just herein mentioned; that after said budget was submitted to the board of supervisors of the County of Butte said board of supervisors failed and refused to levy a tax sufficient to raise the amount set forth in the budget so submitted by the Board of Trustees of said High School District as the amount necessary to be raised for the uses and purposes of said High School District and eliminated from said budget certain items, and thereafter said board of supervisors of Butte County levied a tax on the assessable property of said Union High School District sufficient only to raise the sum of $22,102.50. This action is prosecuted against the respondent as the Auditor of said County to compel said Auditor to immediately make a special tax levy against the taxable property located within said District sufficient to raise the sum set forth in the budget submitted by the Trustees of said District as neees *4 sary for the maintenance of said Union High School during the year referred to. The respondent had judgment and the petitioners appeal.

It is not necessary for the purposes of this appeal to consider the particular items eliminated by the board of supervisors from the budget submitted by the Trustees of the District further than to state that the legality of the expenditures deemed necessary by the Trustees of the District appears to be unquestioned.

This action involves directly the consideration of section 1612a of the Political Code and section 6 of article IX of the constitution, as amended in 1920, and indirectly section 1 of article III and section 12 of article XI of the constitution.

It is insisted on the part of respondent that section 1612a is unconstitutional in that there is a delegation of legislative power to a ministerial officer, to wit, to the superintendent of schools; and, further, that if said section is not unconstitutional it is simply directory in its provisions and not mandatory as to the sum of money to be raised by taxes levied by the board of supervisors. On the part of the appellants it is insisted that the section of the code is constitutional and that its requirements, so far as accepting the amount of the budget as submitted by the Trustees is concerned, is mandatory upon the board of supervisors and that it is the bounden duty of the board of supervisors to levy a tax sufficient to raise the amount of money set forth in the budget as necessary for the maintenance of the high school in question. It may be stated that the amount of money to be raised by the budget so submitted and the tax levied upon the property of the District constitutes a special tax, as the budget sets forth the money needed by the District that will not be derived from the ordinary sources of revenue under the general tax levies provided for in the codes.

The section under consideration requires that the school board shall annually in the month, of June make a. budget showing all the purposes for which" the School District will need money and the amount of money that will be needed for each of the purposes set forth in the budget. This budget is submitted first to the county school superintendent for his examination and for such changes as may be found necessary. After these changes are made, if any, the budget *5 is resubmitted to the Trustees of the district, who may either accept or reject the recommendations of the school superintendent. Thereupon the budget is again resubmitted to the county school superintendent, whose duty it is to approve the budget so made by the School Trustees and then calculate and determine the amount of money necessary to be raised by taxation as shown by the budget by deducting from the total sum of money necessary to be raised for the uses and purposes of the District the amount of revenue that will be obtained by the High School District during the current year from the sources otherwise provided for by general taxation and the laws of the state raising revenue for high schools, which we need not consider further than to state that it involves a calculation based upon the school attendance and matters of that kind which may be determined with reasonable accuracy by mathematical calculation and is the method provided for determining the amount of money that will be apportioned to the several high school districts from sources other than money raised by a special tax which we are considering.

As amended in 1920, section 6 of article IX of the constitution requires first that the legislature provide a state high school fund from the revenues of the state for the support of day and evening secondary and technical schools and shall provide for the distribution of such fund. It is further set forth that the amount shall not be less than thirty dollars per pupil in average daily attendance in the day and evening secondary and technical schools, etc./It is then further specified that the legislature shall provide for the levying of a county and city and county elementary school tax by the board of supervisors of each county, etc., sufficient in amount to produce a sum of money not less than the amount of money to be received during the current school year from the state for the support of such schools and not less than thirty dollars per pupil in average daily attendance. It is then further set forth that the legislature shall provide for the levying of a county and city and county high school tax by the board of supervisors sufficient in amount to produce a sum of money not less than twice the amount of money to be received during the current school year from the state for the support of public day and evening secondary and technical *6 schools, etc., provided that the high school tax levied by the board of supervisors shall produce not less than sixty dollars per pupil in average daily attendance. Then follows the further requirement: 11 The legislature shall provide for the levying of school district taxes by the board of supervisors of each county, and city and county, for the support of public elementary schools, secondary schools, technical schools and kindergarten schools, or for any other public school purpose authorized by the legislature.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
248 P. 1049, 79 Cal. App. 1, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcdonald-v-richards-calctapp-1926.