Newark Public Schools v. Wright

88 A. 462, 27 Del. 279, 4 Boyce 279, 1913 Del. LEXIS 43
CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedOctober 4, 1913
StatusPublished

This text of 88 A. 462 (Newark Public Schools v. Wright) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Newark Public Schools v. Wright, 88 A. 462, 27 Del. 279, 4 Boyce 279, 1913 Del. LEXIS 43 (Del. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Rice, J.,

delivering the opinion of the court:

The plaintiff is a corporation existing under the laws of the State of Delaware, having such powers as are conferred upon it by Chapter 612, Volume 19, Laws of Delaware, Chapter 67, Volume 21, Laws of Delaware, and all acts amendatory thereof and supplemental thereto. By the provisions of Chapter 612, school districts [281]*281in New Castle County known as school districts Nos. 39 and 41, were divided into school districts Nos. 39, 39¿4, 41 and Hf4, and these four districts by the same act were incorporated and consolidated into one school district under the name of “the Newark Public Schools,” to be governed by a “board of education.”

In the month of July, A. D. 1912, and for many years prior thereto, the defendant resided within the boundaries of said consolidated school district. The defendant in July, 1912, owned a motor car or automobile located within this district.

In July, 1912, the board of education of the said consolidated school district in order to raise money necessary to carry on the schools and for incidental expenses, for the ensuing year, in addition to the four dividends provided for in Chapter 612, laid a tax upon said motor car or automobile of the defendant, at a valuation of seven hundred and fifty dollars, at a rate of two dollars and fifty cents for each one hundred dollars of valuation, making a total of eighteeen dollars and seventy-five cents tax on said motor car or automobile; the rate being the same as levied upon other personal property located in this school district, for school purposes, for the year.

If the court is of the opinion that said motor car or automobile, at the time of assessing and levying said tax for the ensuing school year, was not exempt from assessment and taxation for school purposes, judgment to be entered in favor of the plaintiff for eighteen dollars and seventy-five cents, besides costs of suit; otherwise, judgment to be entered for the defendant.

The court understands that no question is raised concerning the regularity of the assessment made by the “board of education,” and the only question for their determination to be whether an automobile owned and located in the consolidated school district known as “the Newark Public Schools,” is or is not, under the laws of this state, exempt from taxation for school purposes in that district.

Chapter 612, Volume 19, Laws of Delaware, p. 712, under which act this plaintiff was incorporated, provided that school districts Nos. 39 and 41, New Castle County, be divided into the [282]*282four school districts Nos. 39, 39j^, 41 and 41^, and these four districts be incorporated and consolidated into one school district, under the title of “the Newark Public Schools,” and the governing body to be a “board of education,” with power to levy and collect taxes for school purposes.

The powers of the board of education of “the Newark Public Schools” to assess and levy taxes for school purposes are set forth in paragraph 6, section 1, and section 4 of chapter 612.

Section 1, paragraph 6: “The four districts formed by this act shall have and enjoy all the rights, powers, incidents, immunities, privileges and benefits, of school districts, in this state, and each of said districts shall be entitled to its proportionate share of the school fund of this state apportioned to New Castle County. ’ ’

Section 4 of the same chapter is as follows: “That the board of education aforesaid is hereby vested with all the authority conferred by any law of the State of Delaware on the school committee of united school districts Nos.' 39 and 41, in New Castle County, authorizing it to lay and raise by taxation any sum or sums of money which may be necessary to carry on the schools and for incidental expenses, in addition to the four dividends provided by this act, and the board' of education shall have all the powers conferred upon commissioners of other districts for the collection of taxes, and shall have the right to draw the four dividends due from the state as drawn by other districts consolidated in like manner.”

From sections 1 and 4 it will be seen that the board of education, in respect to assessment and taxation for school purposes, had certain powers specifically mentioned in the chapter under consideration, as well as other powers conferred formerly on the school committee of united school districts Nos. 39 and 41 of New Castle County. Prior to Chapter 612 becoming a law, school districts Nos. 39 and 41 were governed by a school committee, and the powers of that school committee concerning assessment and taxation, were the same as granted to school committees of school districts throughout the state, being found in Section 12, Chapter 42, Revised Code of 1893, p. 325.

Section 12, Chapter 42 of the Revised Code: “It shall be the [283]*283duty of the school committees of the several school districts to make assessment lists for their respective districts. Such lists shall consist of the rates of persons of all the white male inhabitants of the district over twenty-one years old; of the rates of the personal property of all the white inhabitants of the district; and of the clear rental value of all the assessable real estate within the district owned by white persons. The rates of persons and of personal property shall be taken from the assessment list of the hundred on which the inhabitants of the district respectively stand assessed at the time, or if they be not on the list of any hundred in the county, the committee shall rate the same according to law,” etc.

At the time “the Newark Public Schools” were incorporated, it appears from Chapter 42 of the Revised. Code that all personal property within a school district was subject to taxation for school purposes within the district, provided it appeared on the hundred assessment list of the hundred of which the school district was a part. The same law directed that the school assessment list should be made from the hundred assessment list.

In 1898 and subsequent to the passage of the law incorporating “the Newark Public Schools”, the Legislature passed an act respecting public schools entitled “An act concerning the establishment of a general system of free public schools”, being Chapter 67, Volume 2, Laws of Delaware, p. 168. In considering this case it will be necessary for us to refer to sections 18 and 30 of chapter 67.

That portion of section 18 necessary for consideration now, is as follows:

“The personal property of all white persons now subject to tax for school purposes in the school districts shall be liable to assessment and tax for school purposes in the school district, only in which it is actually located; and it shall be the duty of the school committee of the several districts for white children as aforesaid within the limits of this state, making the assessment lists for their respective districts, to place thereon the rates of the personal property now subject to tax for school purposes in the school district in which it has an actual location, irrespective of the [284]*284residence'of the owner thereof.

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Bluebook (online)
88 A. 462, 27 Del. 279, 4 Boyce 279, 1913 Del. LEXIS 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/newark-public-schools-v-wright-delsuperct-1913.