School Commissioners v. Board of Aldermen & Treasurer

73 S.E. 905, 158 N.C. 191, 1912 N.C. LEXIS 18
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 28, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 73 S.E. 905 (School Commissioners v. Board of Aldermen & Treasurer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
School Commissioners v. Board of Aldermen & Treasurer, 73 S.E. 905, 158 N.C. 191, 1912 N.C. LEXIS 18 (N.C. 1912).

Opinion

Hoxe, J\

Chapter 317, Private Laws 1911, conferred upon the Board of Aldermen of the City of Charlotte the power, on approval of the popular vote, to issue bonds for various purposes, not to exceed, in the aggregate, the sum of $1,065,000, and specified that a portion of these bonds, not to exceed in amount the sum of $100,000, should be known as “school bonds” and to be used for the purpose of purchasing lands for schools and of building schoolhouses for the graded schools of the city. The act also providing “that moneys arising from the sale of the bonds” should be used for no other purpose than that’for which they were authorized to be issued. In taking the sense of the qualified voters, the different purposes were to.be submitted as separate propositions and the votes taken in five different ballot boxes; and, in reference to the effect of the election, the act in question further provides: “If a majority of such qualified voters shall vote ‘Issue’ on any one or more of the five propositions submitted for issuing bonds for the purposes aforesaid, then it shall be deemed and held that the proposition receiving a majority of such votes is favored and approved by a majority of the. qualified voters of the city of Charlotte, and the board of aldermen shall cause bonds to be prepared and issued for the purposes so approved of by a majority of qualified voters of the city, and levy a tax in accordance with the provisions of this act.” The measure having been approved by the popular vote, the bonds in question were issued and sold and the proceeds are now held by defendants, subject to the provisions of the law and the judgment of the court on the questions presented. It further appears that the plaintiffs, the School Board of the City of Charlotte, having made selection of certain sites for school purposes, have made demand on defendants that the fund in question be turned over to their treasurer, and defendants, the board of aldermen, professing a willingness to turn over $80,000 of said fund, the amount apportioned for four of the school sites, has refused to turn *194 over the remaining $20,000, the amount apportioned for the .public schools of North Charlotte, contending that the site selected for school purposes in that section of the city is not a suitable or proper one and that, under the charter of the city of Charlotte, and other acts relevant to the inquiry, .and by reason of the powers conferred in said acts on the board of aldermen of the city, that said body must of necessity have a discretionary supervision of these matters and the ultimate power of determining whether the moneys in question shall or shall not be expended in the purchase of the site selected. If defendants are correct in their position, that they are possessed of discretionary power in the premises, the present action must fail, for it is familiar doctrine that mandamus does not lie to enforce the exercise of discretionary power in any given or-specified way. Board of Education v. Board of Commissioners, 150 N. C., 116; Barnes v. Commissioners, 135 N. C., 27; Ewbank v. Turner, 134 N. C., 77. Coming, then, to this the principal question presented, the revised charter of the city of Charlotte, enacted by the General Assembly in 1907, in reference to the public school system of the city and on matters more directly relevant, to the inquiry, makes provision as follows:

“Sec. 193. That there shall be maintained in the city of Charlotte a system of public schools to be kept open not less than nine months in each year, without charge, for the education of the children of the said city within the ages of six and twenty-one years.' *
“Sec. 194. That said system of public schools shall be under the control of a board of school commissioners, composed of seventeen members, who shall be elected biennially at the general election held for mayor and other city officers, and shall hold office for two years, and until their successors are duly elected and qualified, and shall serve without compensation. Any vacancy in said board of school commissioners shall be filled by an election held by said board, and the person so elected shall hold office for the unexpired term.
“Sec. 195. Said board of school commissioners shall be a body corporate and politic under the name of ‘The School Com *195 missioners of tbe City of Charlotte,’ with all rights and powers of the school committees of the respective townships, in addition to the powers in this act granted.
“Sec. 196. That the Mayor of the City of Charlotte shall be ex oficio- chairman of said board of school commissioners, and shall be entitled to vote in any of the meetings of said board only in the ease of a tie; and in all meetings of said board a majority of the membership thereof shall constitute a quorum for the transaction of business.
“Sec. 197. That said board of school commissioners shall have exclusive control of the public schools of the city of Charlotte, and shall have full and ample powers to purchase sites, to provide necessary school buildings and facilities, to appoint examiners, employ teachers and fix their salaries, prescribe courses of study, and in general to do everything that may be necessary and proper to open and conduct a sufficient number of schools to meet the needs of the scholastic population of the city of Charlotte. And it shall be lawful for said board of school commissioners, in their discretion, to receive into the public.schools of the city of Charlotte upon such terms as they may think reasonable any children of school age residing beyond the limits of said city.”
“Sec. 201. The said board of school commissioners shall appoint a treasurer, and prescribe his duties and compensation. He shall give bond for the faithful performance of his duties in such sum as the said board may prescribe, which bond shall not be less than double the amount which may reasonably come into his hands at any one time, and with sufficient security, to be approved by said board.
“Sec. 202. It shall be the duty of the Board of Aldermen of the City of Charlotte to provide for the payment to said treasurer of all moneys collected under this act; and it shall be the duty of the Treasurer of Mecklenburg County to pay to the treasurer of said board of school commissioners, to be used in carrying out the objects of this act, all school moneys in his hands, from time to time, to which the city of Charlotte shall fairly be entitled.”
“Sec. 204. That the board of aldermen shall provide for all expenses arising from permanent repairs and improvements *196 made from time to time by said board of school commissioners upon any of the buildings and premises in use for school purposes within the city of Charlotte.”
“Sec. 206. That the Board .of Aldermen of the City of Charlotte shall levy an annual tax for the support and maintenance of said system of public schools in the city of Charlotte, which annual tax shall not exceed 20 cents on the $100 valuation of property and 60 cents on the poll.”

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Bluebook (online)
73 S.E. 905, 158 N.C. 191, 1912 N.C. LEXIS 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/school-commissioners-v-board-of-aldermen-treasurer-nc-1912.