School Dist. No. 85 v. School Dist. No. 71

1928 OK 689, 276 P. 186, 135 Okla. 270, 1928 Okla. LEXIS 911
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 27, 1928
Docket17734
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 1928 OK 689 (School Dist. No. 85 v. School Dist. No. 71) 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. 85 v. School Dist. No. 71, 1928 OK 689, 276 P. 186, 135 Okla. 270, 1928 Okla. LEXIS 911 (Okla. 1928).

Opinion

RILEY, J.

A question here presented is whether recovery by a school district of “transfer fe'es” for instruction given is dependent upon the existence of an item being in the estimate made and approved of th'e school district sought to be charged. Involved also is whether an excise board may arbitrarily make an appropriation for transfer fe'es for a school district.

Presented here are two causes of action. As applied to the first, there was at no time an item, 'estimate, appropriation, or provision for paying the transfer charge; as applied to the second, the excise board of Kay county of its own volition, without suggestion or approval on the part of either school district affected thereby, inserted an item in the estimated needs of school dls- *271 trict No. 85, for the fiscal year ending Jan. 30, 1924, for “transfer fees,” which item so inserted increased the total amount of the estimated needs of that school district. There was no advertisement by the excise board of the increased 'estimate so made and approved as required by section 9698, C. O. S. 1921. C., R. I. & P. Ry. Co. v. Pourron, 118 Okla. 80, 246 Pac. 835.

It appears that school district No. 85 considered minutely its financial budget and each item of its estimated needs, and at its animal meeting on March 28, 1922, it voted exactly four mills additional levy over the base levy of five mills provided by statute. No item was made that year for transfer fees, either by the school board or the excise board.

Concerning the second cause of action, at the annual meeting of district No. 85, on March 2T, 1923, the district considered its itemized requirements and authorized an additional levy of exactly live mills over and above the five-mills base levy provided by law for school purposes. At that meeting the district considered and rejected a proposed item for transfer fees and definitely refused to authorize any item of the appropriation in any amount for transfer fees. The appellant school district contends that the item for transfer fees subsequently inserted in the estimate made and approved by the excise board for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1924, was unauthorised, illegal, null and void, contrary to and subversive of the rights of the taxpayers of school district No. 85, Kay county, and violative of the provisions of the Constitution of this state. It contends that no funds were legally provided by the tax levy or otherwise to pay the alleged claims.

Contracting the statement of facts, we may say that the school district sought to be charged has in every manner affirmative--1 y and definitely declined to make provision or to pay transfer fees, whereas the county excise board has by its act sought to make provision for the school district to pay these charges included in the second cause of action, and the trial court, by its judgment, has directed payment therefor to be made in both causes of action.

We may well consider what is commonly called the transfer law; it is contained in article 20, chapter 86, the same being sections 10591 to 10610. C. O. S. 1921. The particular section directly applicable here is section 10606, wh!ch in the usé of words makes if the duty of the school hoards from which transfers are made to include in their annual estimate a transfer item. The statute is as follows:

“It shall be the duty of the .school boards from which transfers have been made, in compliance with this act, to include in their annual estimate . the amount for transfer fund as shown by statement referred to in section 5 of this act.”

The school board of district No. 85 obeyed the will of the school district expressed by the records of the annual meeting, rather than the appellees’ interpretation of the statute.

If we consider the provisions of section 10606, supra, mandatory, then the school board failed to perform its duty. If we consider the provisions of th'e statute directory, the school board elected not to be governed thereby, but, on the other hand, to be directed by the will of the school district as expressed by the minutes of the annual meeting, and section 10339, C. O. S. 1921, which section provides in part:

“Following the annual school meeting- and on the first Tuesday in July, it shall be the duty of the school district board to meet and make out the report required by law to be filed with the excise board showing the fiscal condition of the school district at the close of the previous fiscal year and the statement of the estimated needs thereof for the current or ensuing fiscal year.”

As to powers of the assemblage at the annual meeting, see section 10342, C. O. S. 1921, and Tilley v. Overton, 29 Okla. 292, 116 Pac. 945.

In Palmer v.Yale Consolidated School, 115 Okla. 70, 241 Pac. 495, we are afforded a helpful and sound decision. There a transfer was made, but the Yale consolidated school refused to receive the pupil for the reason that no levy had been made by the transferring school district and because instruction ought not to be given the “transferred” without compensation. The excise board was made a party defendant, and mandamus was sought to compel the levy to be made by that board. The excise board, in conjunction with the transferring district No. 1, showed requested transfers amounting to $1,700, and a levy of 15 mills required and voted in district No. 1 for estimated n’eecls. exclusive of transfer items. This court there held to three basic principles: (1) The school district was not authorized to cause a tax levy to be made in any one year for school purpos'es in a sum greater than a 15-mill levy by reason of the restriction contained in section 9, art. 10, *272 Constitution. (2) The right of transfer was dependent upon an estimate made and approved therefor. (3) That school distiict No. 1 and the excise board were justified, “in the exercise of th'eir judgment,” in eliminating the item estimated for transfer fees so as to reduce the estimated needs to 15 ¡mills, and that it was within the exercise of discretion to eliminate wholly the item lor transfer fe'es, rather than to include such item and reduce the other estimated needs.

See, also, School Dist. No. 61, Payne County, v. Consolidated District No. 2, Logan County, 110 Okla. 263, 287 Pac. 1110, as to the provisions of section 10602, C. O. S. 1921, concerning notice of application for transfer being directory rather than mandatory.

The Palmer Case, supra, is decisive of the issu'e here presented in the first cause of action, for there was no estimate made and approved, nor levy made to pay that claim alleged. Since a recovery for the transfer fees is dependent upon an appropriation therefor, and since there was no such item contained in the estimate made and approved for the fiscal year 1923, the first cause of action must fail. There can be no quantum meruit recovery. The lack of power to contract such indebtedness bars every form of action and every legal device by which recovery is sought. Fairbanks-Morse Co. v. Geary, 59 Okla. 22, 157 Pac. 720. The structural base of municipal finance, for current indebtedness, is the pay as you go plan.

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Bluebook (online)
1928 OK 689, 276 P. 186, 135 Okla. 270, 1928 Okla. LEXIS 911, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/school-dist-no-85-v-school-dist-no-71-okla-1928.