San Carlos School District v. State Board of Education

258 Cal. App. 2d 317, 65 Cal. Rptr. 711, 1968 Cal. App. LEXIS 2417
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 26, 1968
DocketCiv. 24308
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 258 Cal. App. 2d 317 (San Carlos School District v. State Board of Education) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
San Carlos School District v. State Board of Education, 258 Cal. App. 2d 317, 65 Cal. Rptr. 711, 1968 Cal. App. LEXIS 2417 (Cal. Ct. App. 1968).

Opinion

SALSMAN, J.

San Carlos School- District sought an injunction -and a writ of mandate against respondent State Board of Education. The superior court sustained a *319 general demurrer to the complaint, refused leave to amend, and entered its judgment dismissing the action. We affirm.

Appellant’s complaint, as amended, contained two counts. In the first count it sought (1) to enjoin a school district reorganization election scheduled for June 7, 1966; (2) to have the court declare the Unruh School Act (Stats. 1965, First Ex. Sess., 1964, eh. 132) unconstitutional; (3) to enjoin transfer of certain district funds to other districts for purposes of equalization; (4) to have the court declare the district reorganization a nullity if approved by the voters, and (5) to have the court enjoin all defendants from taking further steps to process the pending election.

The second count in the complaint asked for the writ of mandamus, and in effect charged the State' Board of Education with an abuse of discretion in rejecting a locally formulated plan for school district reorganization and in submitting a plan devised by the State Board of Education to the electorate in lieu thereof.

' The controversy stems from an attempt to consolidate and unify certain school districts in southern San Mateo County, which is part of a long-standing project to consolidate and unify school districts throughout the State of California. It is common knowledge that for many years, such attempts have been a source of great dispute in the Legislature, among the electorate, and in the courts.

The Sequoia Union High School District embraces a large area of southern San Mateo County. Eight elementary school districts are located within its boundaries. They are; Belmont, Redwood City, Woodside, Portola Valley, Las Lomitas, Menlo Park City, Ravenswood City, and the appellant San Carlos School District. Respondents’ plan to unify these districts, creating one large unified school district for grades 1 through 12 within the boundaries of the present Sequoia Union High School District, prompted appellant to commence this lawsuit.

The' Education Code contains detailed procedures for the formulation and approval of plans for school district unification and the submission of such plans to the electorate for approval or rejection. (See Ed. Code, § 3100, et seq.) Essentially. at the time this lawsuit was before the trial court, the statutory scheme permitted plans for unification to be formulated at the local level, within the districts affected by the plan. These local plans were then submitted to the State Board of Education, which had the power to approve-or reject *320 them. Only a plan approved by the State Board could be submitted to the voters of an area proposed to be unified. If a plan was rejected by the State Board, a new plan had to be proposed.

The State Department of Education could also submit plans to the State Board of Education, based upon the Department’s studies, research and information. The Board could approve the Department’s plan if it believed the Department’s plan superior to a local plan in furthering the Legislature’s intentions with respect to the reorganization of school districts and the equalization of educational opportunities.

In the case we now consider, the San Mateo County Committee on School Reorganization recommended to the State Board of Education that Sequoia Union High School District be divided into three separate, unified school districts. (See Ed. Code, § 3201.) The local committee proposed that the Belmont and San Carlos School Districts be consolidated into one district; that the Redwood City School District be a separate district, and that the Las Lomitas, Menlo Park City, Portola Valley, Ravenswood City and Woodside districts be consolidated into a third district. This plan was submitted to the State Board of Education three times, and rejected each time. In rejecting the locally developed plan the State Board relied upon section 3100 of the Education Code, 1 which at that time expressed the legislative intent in this language: “It is the further intent of the Legislature that in exercising the authority to approve master plans and plans and recommendations developed at the local level, the State Board of Education consider the boundaries of existing high school districts as the minimum geographical base for the organization of individual unified school districts, to be deviated from only in exceptional situations. ’ ’ (Italics ours.)

The State Department of Education then devised a plan for unification of the elementary school districts within Sequoia Union High School District. Its plan followed legislative intent. It proposed that the entire area within the high school district be unified into a single district covering grades 1 to 12. The Department’s proposal was submitted to a specially constituted review committee (see former Ed. Code, § 3325) 2 , together with the previously rejected three-district proposal. *321 After holding hearings, the review committee recommended the adoption of the Department’s plan. The State Board accepted the recommendation, and, following statutory procedure, submitted the plan to the San Mateo County Superintendent of Schools, who called the election which appellant in this action sought to enjoin.

The superior court declined to enjoin the election. The election was held on June 7, 1966. The plan opposed by appellant, which had been proposed by the State Department of Education and approved by the State Board, was defeated throughout the whole of the Sequoia Union High School District and in each separate elementary school district within the high school district.

It is clear from the record that, by the time the superior court ruled on respondents’ demurrer the questions whether to enjoin the election and whether to declare the unification a nullity if approved had become moot because of the electoral defeat of the State Department’s plan. The election also rendered moot the question whether the State Board of Education abused its discretion in rejecting the three-district plan proposed three times by the County Committee on School Reorganization, because the plan approved in lieu of the rejected plan was voted down resoundingly at the polls. Moreover, the legislative guidelines upon which the State Board relied in rejecting the three-district plan were amended late in 1967, although the principal requirement that unified districts be no smaller than existing high school districts remained. (See Ed. Code, § 3100, amended Stats. 1967, ch. 1209, § 1, p. 2918, effective August 15,1967.)

Three issues of law, however, remained. They were: (1) Whether appellant as a school district possessed sufficient standing to bring the action, (2) if it possessed such standing, whether it could complain of the possible transfer of some of its funds to other districts, and finally, (3) whether particular provisions of the Unruh School Act of 1964 were unconstitutional. In sustaining respondents’ demurrer to the complaint the court resolved all of these issues against appellant.

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Bluebook (online)
258 Cal. App. 2d 317, 65 Cal. Rptr. 711, 1968 Cal. App. LEXIS 2417, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/san-carlos-school-district-v-state-board-of-education-calctapp-1968.