O’CONNELL, J.
This is an appeal from a decree of the circuit court of Wallowa county declaring invalid the action of the defendant District Boundary Board in making changes in the boundaries between three school districts.
The requests for the boundary changes were made in two petitions filed with the defendant boundary board, in each case by three legal voters of the proposed new districts in accordance with ORS 329.730, which provides in part as follows:
“(1) The district boundary board may establish new districts on petition of three legal voters of a proposed new district if it finds that a new district is necessary for the proper instruction of children living in the area of the proposed new district.
“(2) Upon petition of at least three interested legal voters, the boundary board may change, divide or abolish the districts of its county if it finds:
“(a) The proposed change will have no substantial adverse effect upon the ability of the districts affected to provide the educational program required by law.
“(b) The proposed change will result in improvement of the educational facilities available to the children in the area transferred or in the area comprising a newly created district or in areas of districts being abolished and attached to existing or newly created districts or will result in substantial operating economies in the districts affected.
“(c) The proposed change, division, or abolition of a district is not made solely for tax advantages to the property owners in the district or area to be changed, divided or abolished.”
The changes requested in the petitions were made by the boundary board after giving notice as required by OES 329.730 (4),
and after holding a hearing upon the proposed changes. The minutes of the board show that the chairman of the board reviewed the requirements which govern the boundary board when acting upon a petition for annexation, after which members of the audience were invited to express their support or opposition. Both points of view were expressed and were recorded in the board’s minutes. The minutes also reported the action of the board in passing upon the two petitions. The action on both petitions was reported in substantially the same manner. The minutes report the action on one of the petitions as follows:
“Motion made by Dr. James Coffman, seconded by C. Baymond Johnson that the petition from the residents of School District #7 (Lostine) petitioning for annexation to School District #12 (Wallowa) be granted on the basis that paragraphs (a), (b) and (c) of sub-section (2) OES 329.720 had been fully discussed by the Boundary Board and the granting of the petition would not be contrary to the Oregon Eevised Statutes, and the requirements of the above mentioned paragraphs could all be answered in favor of the petition.
“A roll call vote was called for. The following is a result of this vote. * * * [indicating the yeas and nays]
“This motion, carried. The secretary was instructed to so notify the districts involved.”
The trial court held that the hoard “did not make the findings of fact contemplated and required by statute as the basis for its action, and that, therefore, the said Boundary Board did not have jurisdiction to change the boundaries” of the designated school districts.
We do not construe OBS 329.730 as requiring the boundary board to recite findings of fact based upon evidence of record. It is true that the statute authorizes the board to make boundary changes only “if it finds” the prescribed conditions. But this is merely a statement of the standards circumscribing the board’s authority. ORS 329.730 is silent as to the character of hearing procedure preliminary to a boundary board’s final action in changing district boundaries. However, in
School District No. 68 v.
Hoskins, 194 Or 301, 312-313, 240 P2d 949 (1952), it was held that “inasmuch as the law requires the posting of notices, it may be implied therefrom that the legislature intended a hearing should be held.” The type of hearing intended was not specifically described. However, the court did say that the purpose of the meeting was to make it possible for persons opposed to any proposed change “to remonstrate and to present evidence in opposition,” and that “the Board, in determining the question, should give consideration to the entire record.” It was said that the board acted in a “quasi-judicial” capacity. In spite of the reference to the right “to present evidence” and to the board’s “quasi-judicial” function and its duty to “give consideration to the entire record,” it seems
clear that the court did not treat the statute as requiring an adversary hearing at which testimony would be taken and recorded and from which formal findings of fact would be made.
The court held that there was no appeal from the decision of the board and that the remedy by way of writ of review, although appropriate to attack the board’s jurisdiction and the illegality of its procedure, would “not lie to correct mere errors in the exercise of rightful jurisdiction, or to inquire whether the rulings of an inferior tribunal upon the law and the evidence, and in the application of the law to the facts, are correct.” (194 Or at 314). Thus in referring to the board’s quasi-judicial function, it does not appear that the court intended to describe the board as a judicial tribunal but simply intended to describe the exercise of judgment or discretion which is equally necessary in the exercise of either the judicial or legislative function.
Since the statute is silent as to the type of hearing intended and the Administrative Procedure Act (OBS 183.010 to 183.510) is not applicable, we must derive the legislative purpose through other sources.
The choice is between a trial type of hearing and a speech making type hearing.
The important inquiry in making the choice between the two types of hearing is whether an adversary hearing procedure is constitutionally necessary and if not, whether the legislature nevertheless deemed it desirable in the particular area of regulation.
Certainly an adversary hearing in proceedings to fix school district boundaries is not necessary in the sense that it is required to satisfy procedural due process under either the United 'States or the Oregon Constitutions. Generally it is said that such a hearing is not necessary because an alteration of school district boundaries is a legislative decision. Typical is the statement in
Zilisch v. Auer,
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O’CONNELL, J.
This is an appeal from a decree of the circuit court of Wallowa county declaring invalid the action of the defendant District Boundary Board in making changes in the boundaries between three school districts.
The requests for the boundary changes were made in two petitions filed with the defendant boundary board, in each case by three legal voters of the proposed new districts in accordance with ORS 329.730, which provides in part as follows:
“(1) The district boundary board may establish new districts on petition of three legal voters of a proposed new district if it finds that a new district is necessary for the proper instruction of children living in the area of the proposed new district.
“(2) Upon petition of at least three interested legal voters, the boundary board may change, divide or abolish the districts of its county if it finds:
“(a) The proposed change will have no substantial adverse effect upon the ability of the districts affected to provide the educational program required by law.
“(b) The proposed change will result in improvement of the educational facilities available to the children in the area transferred or in the area comprising a newly created district or in areas of districts being abolished and attached to existing or newly created districts or will result in substantial operating economies in the districts affected.
“(c) The proposed change, division, or abolition of a district is not made solely for tax advantages to the property owners in the district or area to be changed, divided or abolished.”
The changes requested in the petitions were made by the boundary board after giving notice as required by OES 329.730 (4),
and after holding a hearing upon the proposed changes. The minutes of the board show that the chairman of the board reviewed the requirements which govern the boundary board when acting upon a petition for annexation, after which members of the audience were invited to express their support or opposition. Both points of view were expressed and were recorded in the board’s minutes. The minutes also reported the action of the board in passing upon the two petitions. The action on both petitions was reported in substantially the same manner. The minutes report the action on one of the petitions as follows:
“Motion made by Dr. James Coffman, seconded by C. Baymond Johnson that the petition from the residents of School District #7 (Lostine) petitioning for annexation to School District #12 (Wallowa) be granted on the basis that paragraphs (a), (b) and (c) of sub-section (2) OES 329.720 had been fully discussed by the Boundary Board and the granting of the petition would not be contrary to the Oregon Eevised Statutes, and the requirements of the above mentioned paragraphs could all be answered in favor of the petition.
“A roll call vote was called for. The following is a result of this vote. * * * [indicating the yeas and nays]
“This motion, carried. The secretary was instructed to so notify the districts involved.”
The trial court held that the hoard “did not make the findings of fact contemplated and required by statute as the basis for its action, and that, therefore, the said Boundary Board did not have jurisdiction to change the boundaries” of the designated school districts.
We do not construe OBS 329.730 as requiring the boundary board to recite findings of fact based upon evidence of record. It is true that the statute authorizes the board to make boundary changes only “if it finds” the prescribed conditions. But this is merely a statement of the standards circumscribing the board’s authority. ORS 329.730 is silent as to the character of hearing procedure preliminary to a boundary board’s final action in changing district boundaries. However, in
School District No. 68 v.
Hoskins, 194 Or 301, 312-313, 240 P2d 949 (1952), it was held that “inasmuch as the law requires the posting of notices, it may be implied therefrom that the legislature intended a hearing should be held.” The type of hearing intended was not specifically described. However, the court did say that the purpose of the meeting was to make it possible for persons opposed to any proposed change “to remonstrate and to present evidence in opposition,” and that “the Board, in determining the question, should give consideration to the entire record.” It was said that the board acted in a “quasi-judicial” capacity. In spite of the reference to the right “to present evidence” and to the board’s “quasi-judicial” function and its duty to “give consideration to the entire record,” it seems
clear that the court did not treat the statute as requiring an adversary hearing at which testimony would be taken and recorded and from which formal findings of fact would be made.
The court held that there was no appeal from the decision of the board and that the remedy by way of writ of review, although appropriate to attack the board’s jurisdiction and the illegality of its procedure, would “not lie to correct mere errors in the exercise of rightful jurisdiction, or to inquire whether the rulings of an inferior tribunal upon the law and the evidence, and in the application of the law to the facts, are correct.” (194 Or at 314). Thus in referring to the board’s quasi-judicial function, it does not appear that the court intended to describe the board as a judicial tribunal but simply intended to describe the exercise of judgment or discretion which is equally necessary in the exercise of either the judicial or legislative function.
Since the statute is silent as to the type of hearing intended and the Administrative Procedure Act (OBS 183.010 to 183.510) is not applicable, we must derive the legislative purpose through other sources.
The choice is between a trial type of hearing and a speech making type hearing.
The important inquiry in making the choice between the two types of hearing is whether an adversary hearing procedure is constitutionally necessary and if not, whether the legislature nevertheless deemed it desirable in the particular area of regulation.
Certainly an adversary hearing in proceedings to fix school district boundaries is not necessary in the sense that it is required to satisfy procedural due process under either the United 'States or the Oregon Constitutions. Generally it is said that such a hearing is not necessary because an alteration of school district boundaries is a legislative decision. Typical is the statement in
Zilisch v. Auer,
197 Wis 284, 294, 221 NW 860 (1928):
“Whether the boundaries of a local governmental unit like a city or a school district should be changed ‘is not a question of law or fact for judicial determination, but purely a question of policy, to be determined by the legislative department.’ * * * The policy outlined in sec. 40.85 of the Statutes presents a question of political expediency for the legislative department of our government.”
Other cases, including our own, have expressed a similar idea.
Whether the board’s action is denominated as legislative or judicial is, however, unimportant and the attempt to make the distinction is perhaps fruitless. Davis, after setting forth a number of attempts to define legislative and adjudicative functions, notes that each lacks precision in some respect.
He concludes that:
“These various difficulties are avoided by saying simply that adjudication resembles what courts do in deciding cases, and that rule making resembles what legislatures do in enacting statutes. Then particular problems of classification can be resolved by keeping an eye on the consequences of the particular classification.”
It is true that the board’s action in altering school district boundaries may affect a citizen in a variety of ways; in the amount of taxes he will have to pay, the distance his children will have to travel to school, the quality of instruction his children will receive, and other consequences. But residents and taxpayers do not have any personal or property rights in a particular school district boundary arrangement which are entitled to be asserted in an adversary proceeding in frustration of the board’s effort to carry out its policy-making function.
The failure of the legislature to provide in the
statute for a bearing suggests that the legislature did not feel that it was necessary for the delegated power to be exercised in a judicial manner. The inference becomes even stronger when the traditional legislative function is delegated to a regulatory body made up of elected representatives of the people, as is the school district boundary board.
In the present case the board’s minutes disclosed the basis upon which it proceeded in making the boundary change. It was not necessary to record any more specifically the facts which it considered in arriving at its conclusion.
If the board acts capriciously or beyond the delegated power, its action may be attacked in a proper proceeding.
The decree of the lower court is reversed and the cause is remanded with directions to dismiss the petitions for writ of review.