Raynolds v. Swope

207 P. 581, 28 N.M. 141
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedJune 2, 1922
DocketNo. 2627
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 207 P. 581 (Raynolds v. Swope) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Raynolds v. Swope, 207 P. 581, 28 N.M. 141 (N.M. 1922).

Opinion

SYLLABUS BY THE COURT

DAVIS, J.

By wbat is known as tbe County Unit Law (Chapter 79, Laws 1915, and Chapter 105, Laws 1917), tbe Legislature adopted a new method of collecting and distributing taxes for school purposes. This proceeding attacks Section 43 of tbe 1917 law as being contrary to tbe principle that one district or class may not be taxed for the benefit of another district or class, which appellant says is a fundamental principle of taxation, and specifically because it is in conflict with Section 4, of Article 12, of the Constitution.

Under the system created by these acts schools and school districts are divided into two classes, municipal and rural. The municipal schools are under the control and management of the municipal boards of education. The rural schools are conducted and managed by county boards of education and boards of directors in each school district. The municipal boards of education and the directors in the rural school districts each year prepare a budget, or estimate, of the financial needs of their district. The municipal estimates go direct to the county commissioners. The rural estimates are submitted for approval to the county superintendent of schools, who passes upon them, and, if approved, submits them also to the county commissioners. The commissioners, thus having before them the estimates of the amount of money necessary for all of the schools within the county, municipal and rural, pass upon them, and then levy a flat tax upon all of the property in the county suffiicient, with other revenues not involved in this proceeding, to maintain the schools for the ensuing year in accordance with the approved estimates. The moneys derived from this tax are credited to the districts in accordance with these estimates. It will be observed that under this basis of distribution there is no relation between the tax Collected in any one district and the revenue apportioned to it. Some districts, receive more than the amount contributed from the taxable property within their boundaries and others less. Unless the funds are divided among the districts in accordance with the tax-paying property in each, this is the inevitable result. A distribution, for instance, according to the number of children of school age in each district, or according to enrollment or attendance, would create the same situation as that here complained of.

Appellant is a taxpayer within the municipal district of Albuquerque. He alleges that a large portion of the taxes collected from him and the other taxpayers within that district under the county levy will be distributed to other districts, and therefore in effect that he is taxed for tbe benefit of districts in which he has no interest. 'An injunction was asked restraining the county treasurer from paying to the county board of education any portion of the levy collected within, 'the Albuquerque district, and the court was asked to declare Section 43 of Chapter 105, .Laws 1917, unconstitutional. The complaint was dismissed on demurrer, and this appeal taken.

The contention of appellant, tersely stated, is that each school district must be a self-supporting unit, maintaining its schools exclusively from its own resources. The position is not based upon constitutional or statutory authority, but upon the general principles that one district may not be taxed for the benefit of another. Appellant’s brief cites decisions and text-writers to the effect that levies for the benefit of a city may not be made on property outside of the city, and, conversely, in one case, that town property may not be taxed for the benefit of persons not residing in it. The fallacy in the entire argument lies in the fact that we do not have here taxation of one district for the benefit of another. The tax is not a district tax. It is a county tax, levied equally and uniformly upon all the taxable property in the county.- We are not dealing with a special tax levied against the property in one district, the proceeds of which are used in another. A levy by the county for the carrying on of education is certainly for a public purpose. It is difficult to see how a county tax, levied for a public purpose, under distinct legislative authority, imposed uniformly upon all the property assessed in the county, can be subject to attack. Indeed appellant does not question the validity of the tax, nor seek to restrain its collection. He complains of the distribution made of it after it has come into the dounty treasury. An injunction is asked restraining the treasurer from paying it out in accordance with the provisions of the law under which it -jwas collected, but appellant’s theory as to what is to be done with it is not disclosed. The standing of an individual taxpayer to litigate the distribution Cf this fund might well be doubted. But be this as it may, we know of no rule of law, and there is certainly neither statute nor constitutional provision, that requires money lawfully collected in one district to be expended in that district, nor any principle that necessitates the considering of education as a local matter peculiar to special districts. School affairs may be administered through districts as a matter of convenience, but the power to administer may be in one body and the power to tax in another. The conclusion that a district must support itself from its own funds does not follow from the premise of its creation nor its endowment with administrative powers. Assume that there were in any given year no municipal sqhools in the city of Albuquerque or in some outside district. That would not mean the illegality of levying a ta’x upon the property in that district for county educational purposes, any more than the fact that there is no public road or no bridge adjacent to the property 'of an individual would exempt it from a general county road and bridge tax.

“Wherever a system of public instruction is established by law, to be administered by local boards, who levy taxes, build schoolhouses, and employ teachers for the purpose, it can hardly be questioned that the state, in establishing the system, reserves to itself the means of giving it complete effect and full efficiency in every township and district of the state, even though a majority of the people of such township or district, deficient in proper appreciation of its advantages, should refuse to take upon themselves the expense necessary to give them a participation in i’ts benefits. Possibly judicial proceedings might be available in some such cases, where a state law for the levy of local taxes for educational purposes had been ¡disobeyed; but the Legislature would be at liberty to choose its own method for compelling the performance of the local duty. And here again the state has the same power to apportion the moneys raised for the general purpose that it has to apportion moneys raised for police purposes or for roads.” 2 Cooley on Taxation (3d Ed.) p. 1299.

Just as in the case before us it happens that there is collected from the city of Albuquerque under this general tax more money than is there expended for education, and the surplus is used fob educational purposes elsewhere in the county, so in some rural districts in the state it may happen that sums are collected from taxes upon property within their limits greatly in excess of the amount needed or expended on schools in them, and the surplus be used for the other schools including those in the municipalities. It is a general county tax, not levied by districts, but spread generally, over all taxable property.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State Ex Rel. Woodahl v. Straub
520 P.2d 776 (Montana Supreme Court, 1974)
Board of Trustees v. Board of County Commissioners
359 P.2d 635 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1961)
Greene v. Esquibel
272 P.2d 330 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1954)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
207 P. 581, 28 N.M. 141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/raynolds-v-swope-nm-1922.