Ross v. Adams Mills Rural School District

149 N.E. 634, 113 Ohio St. 466, 113 Ohio St. (N.S.) 466, 3 Ohio Law. Abs. 723, 1925 Ohio LEXIS 218
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 12, 1925
Docket19096 and 19345
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 149 N.E. 634 (Ross v. Adams Mills Rural School District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ross v. Adams Mills Rural School District, 149 N.E. 634, 113 Ohio St. 466, 113 Ohio St. (N.S.) 466, 3 Ohio Law. Abs. 723, 1925 Ohio LEXIS 218 (Ohio 1925).

Opinion

Matthias, J.

A demurrer in each case presented the question of the validity of the levy of taxes upon property in the Adams Mills rural school district to meet the payment of the portion of the bonded indebtedness of the territory transferred to that district from the Jefferson school district, as apportioned by the county board of education.

*474 It is to be observed that as a part of tbe proceeding of the issuance of bonds of Jefferson school district for the purpose of erecting a school building therein, a levy of taxes sufficient to pay the principal and interest thereon as they matured had been authorized and duly certified to the county auditor, whose duty followed to place the same upon the duplicate, which duty in that regard was duly performed.

It is required by Section 11, Article XII of the Constitution of Ohio, that legislation whereby bonded indebtedness is created must make provisions for levying and collecting annually by taxation an amount sufficient to pay the interest on said bonds and provide a sinking fund for their redemption at maturity. Pursuant to that requirement it was provided by Section 5649-lb, General Code (109 Ohio Laws, p. 344), that upon the issuance of bonds a certificate of the resolution providing therefor shall be filed with the county auditor, and that “thereafter, the county auditor, without further action by the tax-levying authority of the subdivision, shall include said amiual levies in the appropriate annual budgets submitted by him to the budget commissioners as provided in Section 5649-3c of the General Code.”

In this instance the duty of the county auditor was fully performed. By the subsequent action of the county board of education the transfer of territory from the Jefferson district to the Adams Mills district was made, and the indebtedness apportioned pursuant to the provisions of Section 4692, General Code. No new or additional order of the board of education was necessary to authorize *475 the levy of taxes for the payment of the bonds. That had been done by the Jefferson district board pursuant to the 'Constitution and the statute. Consequently the action of the county board, whereby in connection with its proceedings authorizing a transfer of territory and a division of indebtedness it assumed to direct the levy of the taxes, may be disregarded, as may also the subsequent decree of the Court of Appeals approving that action. That suit was brought merely for the purpose of enjoining the completion of such transfer until the county board performed its full duty under Section 4692, General Code, by apportioning the indebtedness of the transferred territory. Such bonded indebtedness had been incurred by the Jefferson school district for the erection of a school building in that district, which was in process of construction at the time said territory was sought to be and was transferred from the Jefferson school district to the Adams Mills school district. The territory having been duly transferred, and the indebtedness having been apportioned by the county board pursuant to Section 4692, General Code, the county auditor properly proceeded under Section 5649-3c, General Code, and the tax theretofore levied was continued upon the property in the Jefferson district and the property in the Adams Mills district in accordance with the apportionment of indebtedness so made by the county board of education. That the levy was so made and. continued is not questioned, but it is contended that the indebtedness of the original district cannot be apportioned under the law in such manner that the property other than that in *476 the original Jefferson district can be required to pay any indebtedness created by that district, and it is further contended that if the statute authorizes a levy on property other than that in the original district such provision is violative of the constitutional guaranty of the equal protection of the law.

It seems to be the clear purpose and intent of the provisions of Section 4692, General Code, to require that any of the indebtedness of the district from which territory is transferred shall be apportioned between the districts from which and to which such territory is transferred. Indeed, it is impossible to make that provision of the statute effective if not so interpreted and applied.

When such division was made the indebtedness became the-indebtedness, of the Adams Mills district and of the Jefferson district, as apportioned. Under the provisions of iSleetion 4692, General Code, the “legal title of the property of the board of education shall become vested in the board of education of the school district to which such property is transferred,” and, when an equitable division of the indebtedness was made, all the property in each district became liable for its respective proportion thereof. There is no statutory provision which would authorize a tax levied upon only a portion of a district or subdivision, and no method has been prescribed, and none has been suggested, whereby that could be done. It would be contrary to the provisions of all tax levying and tax limitation statutes. In accordance with the familiar principles of statutory construction, Section 4692, General Code, will be so construed *477 as to make it a valid enactment for all purposes, and proceedings thereunder will, if possible, be so construed as to accomplish a valid result. Just as legislation enacted subsequent to the issuance of bonds that would remove a portion of the security thereof, and thereby impair the obligation of contract, would be invalid as against the holders of said bonds so also would a proceeding under this statute which undertook to transfer a portion of the district be a nullity against holders of the bonds, if it did not provide for the apportionment of the indebtedness and payment of the bonds as contemplated in the original proceeding for the issuance thereof, as required by the constitutional and statutory provisions heretofore.referred to.

The contention that such statutory provision is violative of the due process clause of .the federal Constitution has been considered in numerous cases and decided adversely thereto. In Hunter v. City of Pittsburgh, 207 U. S., 161, 28 S. Ct., 40, 52 L. Ed., 151, it was held:

“There is no contract, within the meaning of the contract clause of the Federal' Constitution, between a municipality and its citizens and taxpayers that the latter shall be taxed only for the uses of that corporation and not for the uses of any like corporation with which it may be consolidated. ’ ’

The language of Justice Moody, who rendered the opinion of the court, is pertinent here. After referring to the powers conferred upon municipal corporations and their status as political subdivisions of the state, he said, at page 178 (28 S. Ct., 46):.

“The State, therefore, at its pleasure may modi *478 fy or withdraw all such powers, may take without compensation such property, hold it itself, or vest it in other agencies, expand or contract the territorial area, unite the whole or a part of it with another municipality, repeal the charter and destroy the corporation.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
149 N.E. 634, 113 Ohio St. 466, 113 Ohio St. (N.S.) 466, 3 Ohio Law. Abs. 723, 1925 Ohio LEXIS 218, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ross-v-adams-mills-rural-school-district-ohio-1925.