School Dist. No. 79 v. School Dist. No. 78

1937 OK 262, 67 P.2d 80, 179 Okla. 597, 1937 Okla. LEXIS 351
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 13, 1937
DocketNo. 26808.
StatusPublished

This text of 1937 OK 262 (School Dist. No. 79 v. School Dist. No. 78) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
School Dist. No. 79 v. School Dist. No. 78, 1937 OK 262, 67 P.2d 80, 179 Okla. 597, 1937 Okla. LEXIS 351 (Okla. 1937).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

This is an action commenced on July 18, 1984, by school district No. 78 of Creek county, state of Oklahoma, against school district No. 79 of Creek county, state of Oklahoma, seeking a writ of mandamus to compel the members of the board of said school district No. 79 to present an estimate for the sum of $1,500 to the excise board of Creek county, state of Oklahoma. The petition alleged that on the loth day of June, 1932, the county superintendent of Creek county, Okla., one Alvin Hicks, made and entered an order as such county superintendent, dividing school district No. 1 of Creek county, state of Oklahoma, into school districts No. 78 and No. 79; that such order was made after a petition containing the signatures of more than one-third of the qualified electors residing in said school district No. 1 had been properly and duly filed with said county superintendent, and after all things had been done as required by the laws of the state of Oklahoma relating to the division of school districts. Plaintiff further alleges that after said division, the county superintendent of Creek county, state of Oklahoma, following the provisions of section 6785, O. S. 1931, determined the value at that time of the schoolhouses and all other property belonging to said school district No. 1. and determined that in order to adjust properly and equitably the affairs of said new districts in so far 'as school buildings and other property were concerned, said school district No. 79 should pay to school district No. 78 the sum of $1,500; that the school buildings, equipment and other property in school district No. 79 exceeded in value by more than $3,000 the value of the buildings, equipment, and other property in school district No. 78.

Plaintiff further alleged that it became the duty under section 6785, O. S. 1981, of the individual defendants, the members of the board of school district No. 79, to make and present an estimate to the excise board of Creek county, state of Oklahoma, requesting that a levy be made upon the property of school district No. 79 to pay for the assessment of $1,500 to said school district No. 78 in the Same manner as if it had been levied for the purpose of paying off bonds regularly voted in school district No. 79 for the construction of a school building, but that said school district No. 79 and the of ficers, including the defendants named, had neglected and refused to make provision for the p'ayment of said indebtedness of $1,5'00 to said school district No. 78, and continued so to refuse. Plaintiff prayed for a writ of mandamus requiring said defendants and each of them to comply with their statutory duty in the premises, and to make and submit to the excise board of Creek county, state of Oklahoma, an estimate in which there was provided a levy for the payment of said $1,500 assessment from school district No. 79 to school district No. 78, in such manner as if the levy were being requested and made for the payment of bonds for the erection of a schoolhouse in said school district No. 79.

The defendants answered collectively, alleging that the acts and proceedings of the county superintendent of Creek county, state of Oklahoma, done and performed on the loth day of June, 1932, wherein he attempted to disorganize and abandon school district No. 1 of Creek county, state of Oklahoma, and to form school districts No. 78 and No. 79 from the. territory formerly embraced in school district No. 1, were void and wholly without force and effect; that the county superintendent never, at any time, acted in compliance with section 6785, O. S. 1931, or made any equitable division of said property between said school districts No. 78 and No. 79, and alleged' the fact to be that said county superintendent, without any notice, appraisement or investigation of existing conditions and affairs between Said districts, unlawfully, arbitrarily, unjustly, and inequitably attempted to assess said school district No. 79 with the sum of $1,5'00. Defendants further alleged that said attempted assessment was inequitable, unjust, and unfair, and was not made and determined as provided by law. Defendants further alleged that the plaintiff, school district No. 78, for the. fiscal year 1932-1933, had an assessed valuation of $161,691, with a bonded and judgment indebtedness of approximately $5,500, and an enrollment of children each year not to exceed ■ twelve pupils; that the defendant school district No. 79, for the fiscal year 1932-1933, had an assessed valuation of $124,941 with a bonded and judgment indebtedness of approximately $5,500, and an average school enrollment of 55 children; that the assessment of $1,500 against said school district No. 79 could only be used for the purpose of procuring a school building for said school district No. 78, and that it now had, and at all times has had, a school *599 building fully adequate for its needs; that such school building was received from the old school district No. 1 at the time of the division of said school district, and was fully paid for and in a good state of repair. Defendants further contended that section 6785, O. S. 1981, is unconstitutional and void for various reasons not here necessary to consider because not argued at the time of the trial or in their brief.

Alternative writ of mandamus was issued, and a trial was had upon the issues thus made up on August 6, 1934, resulting in a demurrer being sustained to the allegations of the petition. Motion for new trial was duly filed and a hearing had on the same on January 10, 1935, at which time the court sustained said motion for new trial and set the cause for final hearing on April 2d, 1935. A trial was had on that date resulting in a judgment for the plaintiff, and ordering school district No. 79 to pay to school district No. 78 the sum of $1,5'00. A motion for new trial was duly filed, and from an order overruling the same this appeal is prosecuted.

The statute involved in this case is section 6785 O. S. 1931., which reads as follows:

“When a new district is formed, in whole or in part, from one or more districts possessing a schoolhouse or entitled to other property, the county superintendent of public instruction, at the time of forming such new district, shall equitably determine the proportion of the present value of such schoolhouses or other property justly due to said now district. Such proportion, when ascertained shall be levied upon the property of the district retaining the schoolhouse or other property and shall be collected in the same manner as if the same had been authorized by a vote of the district for building a schoolhouse, and, when collected, shall be paid to the new district to be applied towards procuring a schoolhouse for such district.”

Plaintiff in error contends that the above section of our statute does not apply to a situation as in the case at bar, inasmuch as there is no wording in the statute to bring it to apply upon a case where one school district is divided into two school districts, both of said new school districts having schoolhouses which were formerly in the old district; that the' obvious intent of the Legislature in passing section 6785, O. S. 1931, was that it should apply only to those cases where two school districts are created from one old district, one of the new districts retaining the old district’s single schoolhouse, and it being necessary for the county superintendent to make an equitable and proportionate levy against the members of the school district retaining the old schoolhouse in order to provide funds to build a new schoolhouse in the new district, which then had none.

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Bluebook (online)
1937 OK 262, 67 P.2d 80, 179 Okla. 597, 1937 Okla. LEXIS 351, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/school-dist-no-79-v-school-dist-no-78-okla-1937.