MTR. OF BD. OF EDUC. v. Allen

6 A.D.2d 316, 177 N.Y.S.2d 169

This text of 6 A.D.2d 316 (MTR. OF BD. OF EDUC. v. Allen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
MTR. OF BD. OF EDUC. v. Allen, 6 A.D.2d 316, 177 N.Y.S.2d 169 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1958).

Opinion

6 A.D.2d 316 (1958)

In the Matter of The Board of Education of Union Free School District No. 3 of the Town of Oyster Bay, Nassau County, et al., Respondents-Appellants,
v.
James E. Allen, Jr., as Commissioner of Education of The State of New York, Appellant-Respondent

Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York, Third Department.

July 31, 1958.

Charles A. Brind, Jr., George B. Farrington, John P. Jehu and Elizabeth M. Eastman for appellant-respondent.

Henry Root Stern, Jr., and George C. Pratt for respondents-appellants.

Newton Millham for Board of Education of Union Free School District No. 4, Town of Oyster Bay, Nassau County, amicus curiæ.

GIBSON, HERLIHY and REYNOLDS, JJ., concur.

*317BERGAN, J. P.

Petitioners, who comprise both the board of education and also certain taxpayers, of a union school district seek to annul an order of the State Commissioner of Education laying out a new central school district. The district in which petitioners have an interest would be embraced in the new central district. The court at Special Term has in part sustained and in part annulled the order of the commissioner. There are cross appeals.

The central school district laid down by the order of the commissioner is in the town of Oyster Bay, Nassau County. It would bring in three existing union free districts, which for convenience *318 will be called Brookville (District 3); Locust Valley (District 4); and Bayville (District 6). It is not in dispute that the main aim in setting up the proposed central district by the commissioner's order is to provide facilities for secondary education.

The record makes it clear that public sentiment is in favor of the establishment of the central district in Locust Valley and Bayville; but in the Brookville district represented by petitioners, public sentiment is very strongly against its establishment. The voting ratios in Locust Valley and Bayville are such, however, that it is manifest that upon submission of the order setting up the central district for approval, Brookville will be swept into the new district against its manifest preference.

The reasons which underlie the opposition of Brookville to the centralized school process are readily demonstrable. Brookville is a school district of relatively large wealth per capita; it has spent and committed itself to pay bond issues to provide unusually good primary education for its children at considerably greater cost per pupil than the expenditures made by the other districts; and nearly all of its children will go from this excellent primary school, not to any public high school, but to private secondary schools.

The Brookville district feels, therefore, that it has no substantial need for high school facilities for its own pupils; and that being included with its two neighboring districts, which concededly need high school facilities, will merely increase unduly its tax burden without substantial benefit to itself or the needs of its children. For these reasons, among others, petitioners contend that the order of the commissioner including Brookville within the central district is arbitrary and unreasonable.

It is argued, additionally, that the commissioner did not follow the statute in determining that the order creating the central district should be made; and the individual petitioners allege that in any event the statute is unconstitutional and the commissioner's order purported to be in pursuance of the statute in its tax impact on them is in violation of their individual rights.

We address ourselves first to the constitutional problem as it is posed by petitioners in its broadest reach: that any legislative or administrative scheme which permits a tax district to be cast in with another and larger district against its will and under circumstances where, in the pooled fiscal apparatus of the larger district, it will surely lose the autonomy and right of fiscal decision it has heretofore exercised, is a deprivation of the right *319 of self-determination by the public tax district and does violence to the constitutional rights of its taxpayers.

Indeed, it is argued by the individual petitioners that in the increased tax burden imposed by this scheme they are deprived of due process of law. The literal argument advanced in petitioners' brief is that the order of the commissioner "discriminates against them in that their tax burden will be increased to pay for the education of children of the other two districts without corresponding benefit to them, and in that the statutory procedure virtually deprives them of any right of self-determination with respect to their educational system". A statute, it is argued, which "thus penalizes a district" deprives the district taxpayers of due process of law.

The theory of taxation is that it supports the public welfare, as that may from time to time and from place to place, be conceived to be. It is usually assumed that the tax levy meets minimal constitutional safeguards against discrimination if the people who pay the tax are treated alike, and the same approximate standard of extraction is followed based, for example, on the amount of income a man receives, or the value of real property he owns in the tax district.

These standards of extraction may not be exactly just or perfectly fair, but they must be put up with. That one man may in the general interest get more benefits from public tax money than another, has never been regarded as a good reason why the other should not pay his share of the tax. The general services of the State are not bought, item by item, merely by those who use them. Public services are thought to be generally important enough to be provided by the whole community for those who need them.

People without children pay for schools; men and women who go through life without litigation must support the courts; people help pay for roads they never use and never see; families in sound mental health help sustain the hospitals for the mentally ill; residents of Kings help acquire and preserve the remote forest lands of Hamilton.

It is one of the concomitant local inequities of the modern State that well-off geographical sections are likely to spend more than they ever hope to get back in carrying along the general burden; and that economically strong areas help sustain the weak ones. This is true within the Federal Union; within the State of New York; within cities, within counties; and within central school districts.

But a local inequity is not necessarily a general injustice and while the individual petitioners make out an appealing case *320 of carrying more than they think warranted of the burden, placed alongside the benefits, of the new district, they do not make out a case of constitutional discrimination for which a law court is able to afford redress.

Besides these broad constitutional arguments penetrating into the area of political economy, the individual taxpayers pursue a more conventional form of constitutional attack upon the statute under which the commissioner acted in making his order laying out the proposed district. It is contended that section 1801 of the Education Law is unconstitutional in the sense "it fails to specify standards adequate to guide the Commissioner in laying out central school districts" and is therefore invalid.

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Board of Education of Union Free School District No. 3 v. Allen
6 A.D.2d 316 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1958)

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6 A.D.2d 316, 177 N.Y.S.2d 169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mtr-of-bd-of-educ-v-allen-nyappdiv-1958.