Redmond v. LEXINGTON CTY. SCHOOL DIST.
This text of 445 S.E.2d 441 (Redmond v. LEXINGTON CTY. SCHOOL DIST.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Hampton C. REDMOND, Jr.; Wayne R. Saylor; O.M. Shealy; Leon J. Dasher; Iva J. Taylor; Bennie C. Gilbert; Glenn K. Stabler; Jerry L. Smith; W. Bennett Jeffcoat; Tommy R. Craft; Dennis D. Danquist; Blanchard Poole; Walter R. Cassidy; Allen D. Culler; William A. Chavis; Gene A. Jeffcoat; Grady McIver; Alfonso Walker; Effie L. Sutton; Henry Sutton; Narva Lee Williams; Paul Smith; Grady Hoffman; Johnie McKnight; Bill King; Linda King; Lawrence H. Livingston, Jr.; Phillip Lee Shealy; David Strickland; Thelma E. Culler; John Culler; and Suzette R. Culler, individually and for the benefit and on behalf of all others similarly situate, Appellants,
v.
LEXINGTON COUNTY SCHOOL DITRICT NO. FOUR; Splawn R. Davis; Jean C. Goodwin; Jefford Hart, Jr.; Edward G. Joseph; Danny Peagler; Robbie Lee Stabler; and Wendell Stabler, in their official capacities as Members of the Board of Trustees of Lexington County School District No. Four, Respondents.
Supreme Court of South Carolina.
*442 Kay F. Paschal, West Columbia, for appellants.
Kenneth L. Childs, David E. Dubberly, and Allen D. Smith, Childs & Duff, P.A., Columbia, for respondents.
TOAL, Justice.
This is an appeal of the trial court's grant of the Defendants Lexington County School District No. 4 and members of the Board of Trustees' motion to dismiss the Plaintiffs' complaint for failure to state a cause of action under Rule 12(b)(6), SCRCP. We AFIRM.
FACTS
The Plaintiffs, property owners in Lexington County School District No. 4 (District), filed a class-action suit against the District and the members of the Board of Trustees (Board) to prohibit the Board from entering into a lease-purchase agreement to build a new middle school.
The Board approved the lease-purchase agreement after a bond referendum was defeated by the electors of the District. The bond referendum was necessary to authorize bonded indebtedness in excess of the 8% *443 limit of Article X, § 15 of the South Carolina Constitution. The Plaintiffs allege the Board's decision to approve the lease-purchase method in effect nullified the vote of the electors of the District, and constituted an abuse of discretion.
The Plaintiffs additionally allege that the Board has not made necessary repairs to existing schools in the District, and that such repairs are ministerial, not discretionary duties mandated by S.C.CODE ANN. § 59-19-90 (1990) and 24 S.C.CODE ANN.REGS. § 43-180 (1992).
The Plaintiffs prayed for the following remedies: 1) a temporary injunction to prohibit the Defendants from entering into the lease-purchase agreement until such time as the tax base was adequate, and 2) a writ of mandamus to compel the Board to repair and renovate existing schools, including one school which had been closed due to structural defects.
LAW/ANALYSIS
In Caddell v. Lexington County School District No. 1, 296 S.C. 397, 373 S.E.2d 598 (1988), this Court held that lease-purchase agreements do not constitute debt as that term is used in the South Carolina Constitution. Article X, § 15 of the South Carolina Constitution provides that voter approval is needed before any school district may incur general obligation debt in an amount in excess of 8% of the assessed value of all taxable property of such school district.
The Plaintiffs attempt to distinguish this case on the basis that although entering into such an agreement would not violate Article X, § 15, it would constitute an abuse of discretion. The Plaintiffs allege that 1) the tax base is not sufficient to support such an expansion, 2) existing schools have not been maintained due to a shortage of funds, 3) there is a possibility of a tax reassessment of a major corporate landholder in the District, and 4) the proposed site of the new school contains environmental hazards that would pose a risk to students.
In Caddell, the voters had on three occasions rejected referenda to authorize bonded indebtedness. The Plaintiffs argue that such a course would in effect nullify the vote of the electors of the District. As this Court pointed out in Caddell, however, "It is not the construction ... for which voter approval is required ... [r]ather, it is the creation of a general obligation debt ... which requires the assent of the voters." Caddell at 401-02, 373 S.E.2d at 600 (citing Gude v. City of Lakewood, 636 P.2d 691, 697 (Colo. 1981)). Since lease-purchase agreements have not been designated general obligation debt by the legislature, voter approval is not required.
As Justice Finney recognized in his dissent in Caddell, the use of lease-purchase agreements in these circumstances appears to allow school districts to circumvent the spirit of the constitutional limitation on general obligation debt. But as we were constrained to conclude in Caddell, the legislature has not provided a similar limitation on lease-purchase agreements. However, it is apparent some members of the legislature are finding this resulting incongruity of concern, as evidenced by the South Carolina Senate's recent passage of a bill which would require the amount expended for lease-purchase agreements to be counted towards the constitutional limitation on general obligation debt.[1] If this bill is eventually passed by the House and signed by the Governor, the Defendants' position will obviously not merit the same result reached in Caddell and in this case. Until the legislature has definitively spoken on this issue, however, we must apply the law as it currently exists.
South Carolina law provides that each school district shall be under the management and control of the board of trustees, subject to the supervision of the county board of education. S.C.CODE ANN. § 59-19-10 (1990). Section 59-19-90, in particular sub-parts (1), (5), (7), and (9), provides the general powers and duties of the board of trustees as follows:
*444 (1) Provide schoolhouses. Provide suitable schoolhouses in its district and make them comfortable, paying due regard to any schoolhouse already built or site procured, as well as to all other circumstances proper to be considered so as best to promote the educational interest of the districts;
....
(5) Control school property. Take care of, manage, and control the school property of the district;
....
(7) Control educational interest of district. Manage and control local educational interests of its district, with the exclusive authority to operate or not to operate any public school or schools;
....
(9) Transfer and assign pupils. Transfer any pupil from one school to another so as to promote the best interests of education, and determine the school within its district in which any pupil shall enroll....
In Gamble v. Williamsburg County School District, 305 S.C. 288, 408 S.E.2d 217
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445 S.E.2d 441, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/redmond-v-lexington-cty-school-dist-sc-1994.