Olmstead v. Carter

200 P. 134, 34 Idaho 276, 1921 Ida. LEXIS 105
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 2, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 200 P. 134 (Olmstead v. Carter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Olmstead v. Carter, 200 P. 134, 34 Idaho 276, 1921 Ida. LEXIS 105 (Idaho 1921).

Opinion

RICE, C. J.

This action was brought by appellant, a taxpayer of Rural High School District No. 1, Washington county, to restrain respondents, as trustees of the district, from issuing or selling certain bonds thereof.

It is alleged in the complaint that Rural High School District No. 1 was organized prior to January 18, 1913, and was originally composed of two regularly organized school districts; that on January 18, 1913, the board of county commissioners of Washington county duly made and entered its order segregating one of the districts from the rural high school district and that ever since that time the rural high school district has been and now is composed of the identical territory embraced in and covered by the remaining common school district; that a special bond election was regularly called and held June 24, 1921, at which the trustees of the district were authorized to issue bonds in the sum of $13,000; that the common school district, covering the territory embraced in the rural high school district, [278]*278has already issued bonds to the limit permitted by law; that the common school district has in the course of construction, and partially completed, a schoolhouse; that the same is now in an unfinished condition, and that it will require approximately $13,000 to complete it; that the trustees of the rural high school district and the common school district have entered into an agreement and understanding, whereby the building may be completed by the rural high school district and thereafter used for the convenience and accommodation of both districts, and that under the agreement a certain portion of the building is to be set apart and used by the rural high school district and the other portion by the common school district; that the construction of the building in this manner will result in a large saving and expense to the taxpayers of the district.

A demurrer was interposed to the complaint and sustained by the court, and appellant, refusing to amend, judgment of dismissal was entered, from which the appeal is taken.

‘ The complaint does not set out in detail the steps taken in calling the special bond election, nor does it contain the notice of election specifying the purposes for which the bonds were to be issued. We assume, for the purposes of this opinion, that the bonds were voted by the electors for the purpose of completing the partially constructed schoolhouse belonging to the common school district.

Briefs have been filed by counsel for appellant and respondents and by the attorney general as a friend of the court. It is urged that the order of the board of county commissioners, made on January 18,1913, segregating the two common school districts comprising the rural high school district, was beyond the power of the board, and therefore' absolutely void; that consequently the bond election, having been held only in one of the two common school districts, was not valid and the bonds are therefore not legally authorized.

The rural high school district was organized pursuant to an act of the tenth session of the state legislature, found [279]*279in Sass. Laws 1909, page 73. This law provided for the organization of two or more regularly organized school districts, not having within their limits an incorporated city, into a rural high school district for the purpose of maintaining a high school therein.

Sess. Laws 1911, chap. 159, page 483, provided a code of laws for the public school system of the state. The provision of the law of 1909 with reference to rural high school districts was substantially re-enacted with the addition of section 141, which reads in part as follows:

“When two-thirds of those who are heads of families and residents of any regularly organized school district joined to a rural high school district shall present a petition to the board of county commissioners showing that it is to the best interests of the said regularly organized school district to be segregated from the rural high school to which said regularly organized district is joined, it shall be lawful for the said board, if they unanimously agree, to segregate said petitioning subdistrict from said rural high school district.....”

It was in pursuance of the section last above quoted that the commissioners of Washington county made their order of segregation. It is contended that since the rural high school district could not be created out of less than two regularly organized common school districts, it was the intent of the legislature to require in all cases that a rural high school district must be composed of at least two common school districts, and that the power of segregation could be exercised only where the rural high school district was composed of more than two common school districts and where the order of segregation would not reduce the number of common school districts composing the high school district to less than two.

There are no means of learning the intent of the legislature except from the language of the statute as enacted. It seems reasonable to suppose that it was not contemplated that a rural high school district would be composed of less [280]*280than, two common school districts, but section 141, quoted above, authorized the segregation of any regularly organized school district from a rural high school district. The language of this section is clear and unambiguous. "Whatever may have been contemplated by the framers of the bill as to the probable result of its operation, section 141 is not so obviously inconsistent with the remainder of the law relating to rural high school districts, that "it is necessary to restrict its application to such high school districts as may be composed of more than two common school districts. Any presumed intent cannot defeat the action of the board of county commissioners in the exercise of a power granted to it in clear and unmistakable language and justify us in holding its order void upon collateral attack.

Subsequently the law was again amended so as to prevent a segregation to less than two common school districts.

This appeal involves the question as to whether a rural high school district can legally expend its funds derived from the sale of its bonds for the completion of a school building owned by a common school district, in view of the arrangement between the two districts by which the building is to be used in common by them.

Sess. Laws 1921, chap. 215, page 457, provides: “The purpose for which bonds may be issued is to acquire or purchase school site or sites, to build or provide one or more schoolhouses or other needed buildings in said district, or to add to or repair said building or buildings or to provide or furnish the same with all furniture, apparatus, or equipment including lighting and heating, necessary to maintain and operate the school or schools, or any and all of said purposes; .... ”

In the case of Stewart v. Gish (Kan.), 198 Pac. 259, the supreme court had under consideration a question similar to that which we are now considering. The Kansas statute, as quoted in the opinion of the court, provides as follows: “The rural high school district board shall have authority to issue the bonds of the rural high school district for the [281]*281purchase of a site and for the construction of a building or buildings for school purposes; .... ”

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Bluebook (online)
200 P. 134, 34 Idaho 276, 1921 Ida. LEXIS 105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/olmstead-v-carter-idaho-1921.