Sawyer v. Gilmore

83 A. 673, 109 Me. 169, 1912 Me. LEXIS 79
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJune 6, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 83 A. 673 (Sawyer v. Gilmore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sawyer v. Gilmore, 83 A. 673, 109 Me. 169, 1912 Me. LEXIS 79 (Me. 1912).

Opinion

Cornish, J.

This bill in equity is brought to enjoin the Treasurer of State and his -successors in office, from collecting a tax assessed under the provisions of Chapter 177 of the Public Laws of 1909, entitled, “An Act relating to the Common School Fund and the means of providing for and distributing the same.” The plaintiff is a resident of Mattamiscontis, an unorganized township in the County of Penobscot. He is the owner of twelve lots of land in the township, and has one child of school age. The entire State tax assessed against these lots at the rate of five mills amounted to twenty-one dollars and fifty-one cents, three-tenths of which or six dollars and forty-five cents, was created by the act in [171]*171question. The amount involved in this suit is not large but the consequences are of vast importance.

The case comes up on report, and by stipulation, the only question raised and to be considered is the constitutionality of the chapter-above referred to under the State and Federal Constitutions.

Chapter 177 of the Public Taws of 1909, the statute in question, reads as follows:

“Sec. 1. A tax of one and a half mills on a dollar shall annually be assessed upon all of the property in the state according to the valuation thereof and shall be known as the tax for the support of common schools.

“Sec. 2. This tax shall be assessed and collected in the same-manner as other state taxes and shall be paid into the State Treasury and designated as the common school fund.

“Sec. 3. One third of this fund -shall be -distributed- by the treasurer -of state on the first day of January, annually, to the several cities, towns and plantations according to the number of scholars therein, as the same shall appear from the official returns made to the state superintendent of public schools for the preceding year, and the remaining two thirds of said fund shall be distributed by the treasurer of state on the first day of January, annually, to-the several cities, towns and plantations, according to the valuation thereof as the same shall be fixed by the state assessors for the preceding year.

“Sec. 4. All of the said fund not distributed or expended during the financial year shall at its close be added to the permanent school fund.

“Sec. 5. All moneys provided by towns -or apportioned by the state for the support of common schools shall be expended for the maintenance of common schools, established and controlled by the towns by which said moneys are provided, or to which said moneys are apportioned.

“Sec. 6. Sums received by any city, town or plantation from the distribution provided by section three shall be deemed to be raised by such city, town or plantation within the meaning of revised statutes, chapter fifteen, section thirteen, as amended.

“Sec. 7. The passage of this act shall in no wise affect the provisions of sections one hundred and twenty-four, one hundred and twenty-five, one hundred and twenty-six and one hundred and [172]*172twenty seven of chapter fifteen of the revised statutes, or of section two of chapter one hundred and eleven of .the Public Laws of 1907.”

It is contended that this statute violates section 8 of Article IX of the State Constitution, which reads: “All taxes upon real or

personal estate assessed by authority of this State shall be apportioned and assessed equally according to the just value thereof;” Article VIII providing .that “the Legislature are authorized and it shall be their duty to require the several towns to make suitable provision, at their own expense, for the support and maintenance of public schools” and the fourteenth amendment of the Federal Constitution, declaring that “No State shall deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.”

Before entering upon a consideration of the constitutional questions thus raised, it may be useful to take a brief survey of the laws in force at the time this statute was enacted, pertaining to the raising and distribution of money for the common schools of the State.

These schools have received their support from two distinct sources, State aid and direct municipal taxation, the former passing through the State treasury to the treasuries of the several municipalities and the latter through the municipal treasuries alone. State Aid.

The State aid, since 1872, when the first so-called mill tax was created, has itself been derived from three sources.

First. From the income of the “Permanent School Fund” so called, a fund created by the sale of wild lands appropriated by the State in former years for the support of schools, amounting at the present time to about one-half a million dollars, and on this principal the State pays interest at the rate of six per cent. R. S., Ch. 15, Sec. 122.

Second. From one-half of the State tax on Savings Banks and Trust Companies, R. S., Ch. 15, Sec. 122.

Third. From the school mill tax so called, derived from assessing all the property in the State situated in cities, towns, plantations and unorganized townships, at the rate of one mill on the dollar from 1872 to 1907, and since 1907 at the rate of one and one-half mills. R. S., Ch. 15, Sec. 124, Pub. Laws 1907, Ch. in.

[173]*173This school mill fund is distributed by the Treasurer of State to the several cities, towns and plantations, according to the number of scholars therein.

The Legislature of 1909 created by the act in question, Chap. 177, an additional revenue by imposing a further State tax of one and one-half mills upon all of the property in the several cities, towns, plantations and unorganized townships of the State at the rate of one and one-half mills on the dollar, this fund to be known as the Common School Fund and to be distributed by the State Treasurer to the several cities, towns and plantations of the State, one-third according to the number of scholars therein and two-thirds according to the valuation. The support of common schools on the part of the State under the present plan is therefore derived from (1) the Permanent School Fund, (2) the Savings Bank and Trust Company tax, (3) the School and Mill Fund and (4) the Common School Fund. It is this last which is under consideration here.

Municipal Aid.

The several cities, towns and plantations have in addition been compelled by the Legislature to assist in the maintenance of common schools by municipal taxation. The amount thus required has varied from time to time. In 1821, it was fixed at forty cents per capita, inclusive of the income of any incorporated school fund, Stat. 1821, Ch. 117, Sec. 1; changed in 1832 to forty cents, exclusive of State income or of any State aid, Pub. Laws 1832, Ch. 39; sixty cents, exclusive, as in R. S. 1857, Ch. ti, Sec. changed to one dollar, exclusive, by Pub. Laws 1868, Ch. 196; eighty cents exclusive of such income, State aid and oí the mill tax, irom 1872 to 1907, Pub. Laws 1872, Ch. 56, R. S. 1903, Ch. 15, Sec. 13; fifty-five cents, exclusive from 1907 to 1909, Pub. Laws 1907, Chap, m; and since January 1, 1910, eighty cents “exclusive of the income of any corporate school fund, or of any grant from the revenue or fund from the State or of any voluntary donation, devise or bequest,” Pub. Laws 1909, Chap. 128, but inclusive of any sums received from the distribution of the Common School Fund created by the act now under consideration. Pub. Laws 1909, Ch. 177, Sec. 6.

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Bluebook (online)
83 A. 673, 109 Me. 169, 1912 Me. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sawyer-v-gilmore-me-1912.