Owsley County Board v. Owsley County Fiscal Court

64 S.W.2d 179, 251 Ky. 165, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 797
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedSeptember 29, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 64 S.W.2d 179 (Owsley County Board v. Owsley County Fiscal Court) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Owsley County Board v. Owsley County Fiscal Court, 64 S.W.2d 179, 251 Ky. 165, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 797 (Ky. 1933).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Drury, Commissioner

Affirming.

The Owsley county board of education, and all hut-one of the holders of the bonds issued in 1921 by the-former Booneville graded school district No. 1, sued the Owsley county fiscal court and the other bondholder, and asked for a mandatory order to require said fiscal court to meet and levy a tax upon the property in the former Booneville graded school • district No. 1, to pay *167 said bonds. Tbeir petition was dismissed, and they have appealed.

This litigation grew ont of the absorption of theBooneville graded school district No. 1 by the Owsley county common school district, and the reader of this-opinion will understand it better by reading first the opinions in Gibson et al. v. Wilson, 240 Ky. 524, 42 S. W. (2d) 710, and Wilson et al. v. Wilson, Sheriff, et. al., 244 Ky. 112, 50 S. W. (2d) 48.

The real issue between these parties is whether the-levy to pay these bonds is to be laid upon the property situated within the former Booneville graded school district No. 1, or upon the property situated within the. Owsley county common school district, of which the former Booneville graded school district No. 1 is now a part.

The Booneville graded school district No. 1 was. absorbed by and made a part of the Owsley county common school district* unde'r the provisions of section. 4475a-l Ky. Stats., in which it is provided:

“The county board of education shall assume all. legal liabilities and assets of such school district.”'

This statute could not have been more plainly written..

It is a part of an Act approved March 20th, 1928, see page 208, ch. 56, sec. 1, Acts of 1928.

The cases relied upon by the plaintiffs (Board of Education for Pike County v. A. H. Andrews Co. (Ky.) 122 S. W. 207, and Shaw v. City of Mayfield, 191 Ky. 389, 230 S. W. 539) were written before the above statute was enacted.

The Legislature fixed the terms upon which these-two districts should be combined, the governing authorities of them agreed with each other upon the consolidation, with the statute before them, and it became-as much a part of their agreement as if written therein.. See 43 C. J. p. 143, sec. 123.

The Legislature had the power to so provide as will appear from this which is taken from 12 C. J. p. 1007, sec. 629, note 96:

“As incidental to territorial change, the legislature. may direct the manner in which debts or liabilities of the municipalities affected shall be met and by whom, as to it seems equitable.”
*168 “The school district is created by the Legislature as an instrument of the state. Such quasi municipal corporations are but the agents or representatives of the state.” Macmillan Co. v. Clarke, 184 Cal. 491, 194 P. 1030, 1035, 17 A. L. R. 288.

In Coler & Co. v. Dwight School Township, 3 N. D. 249, 55 N. W. 587, 592, 28 L. R. A. 649, we find this with numerous authorities cited to sustain it:

“There can be no question as to the power of the legislature to impose upon a new municipality, which includes all- or a portion of the territory of an old municipal corporation, liability for the debts of the old corporation, where the property of the latter is turned over to and received by the former under the law.”

In 24 R. C. L. p. 566, see. 10, this is written:

“Some statutes provide that a new district assuming the property of an old district shall assume its debts as well. In case of the abolition of the old district and the formation of new districts out of its territory the new districts are deemed the successors of the old and as such liable for all of its debts and entitled to all of its property.”

The board of education has made no effort to have the fiscal court levy a tax upon the property now included in the Owsley county common school district to pay these bonds, but is asking to have such tax imposed only upon the property situated in the former Boonewille graded school district No. 1, without taking any step to bring before the court the parties that would be affected thereby, and the court properly dismissed the petition.

That does not mean that the obligation of the Booneville graded school district No. 1 to pay these bonds was released by the absorption of that district by the county distinct. The right of the bondholders to proceed against the Booneville graded school district No. 1, to coerce the payment of these, bonds, remains unaffected by the absorption of that district, and the obligation of that district to pay these bonds was not impaired in the least by the absorption of it, but as between the old Booneville graded school district No. 1, and the Owsley county common school district, the obligation of the latter for the payment of these bonds *169 became, by this absorption and consolidation, a primary obligation and that of the former became a secondary obligation. Thus the bondholders lost no right whatever, but acquired a new and additional right, that is,, .the right to proceed against the Owsley county common school district for the payment of these bonds, and the Booneville graded school district acquired a new-right it did not have before the absorption or consolidation, which is the right to require the Owsley county common school district to pay these bonds.

The Owsley county common school district says: that by this absorption and consolidation it acquired the assets of the Booneville graded school district, and that the Booneville graded school district before this-absorption and consolidation had the power to levy taxes upon the property situated in the Booneville.graded school district to produce a fund for the payment of these bonds, and this power the Owsley county-common school district contends was an asset of theBooneville graded school district No. 1, and that by this absorption and consolidation that power, as an asset,, passed to the Owsley county common school district.

This power to levy a tax upon the property of theBooneville graded school .district No. 1 was a power-only,- it was not an asset, but a tax that had been levied under this power before the absorption and consolidation was an asset even though the tax so levied had not then been collected. See Wilson v. Wilson, Sheriff, 244 Ky. 112, 50 S. W. (2d) 48. The taxing power of the governing authorities of the 'Booneville graded school district No. 1 (which is distinct from the right of the bondholders to have such a tax levied) did not pass to the Owsley county common school district, but that power, formerly had by the governing authorities of the Booneville graded school district No. 1, to levy a tax for the payment of these bonds as well as their power to buy property, to build a schoolhouse, to employ teachers, to conduct a school, etc., lapsed when, by this absorption and consolidation, the Booneville graded school district No. 1 ceased to be a corporate entity.

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Bluebook (online)
64 S.W.2d 179, 251 Ky. 165, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 797, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/owsley-county-board-v-owsley-county-fiscal-court-kyctapphigh-1933.