Stanbery v. SMITH

377 P.2d 8, 233 Or. 24, 1962 Ore. LEXIS 473
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 19, 1962
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 377 P.2d 8 (Stanbery v. SMITH) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stanbery v. SMITH, 377 P.2d 8, 233 Or. 24, 1962 Ore. LEXIS 473 (Or. 1962).

Opinion

GOODWIN, J.

Robert C. Stanbery, a taxpayer in School District 104-42 Joint (Sylvan, in Multnomah and Washington Counties) challenged in the circuit court the plan of organization for Administrative School District No. 48 (Washington County) made under the provisions of ORS 330.505 to 330.780. He appeals from a judgment dismissing his petition.

By the enactment of the above-mentioned statutory scheme in 1957, each county of the state was required to constitute a “County Committee for the Reorganization of School Districts.” With the help of the county school superintendent, and pursuant to the statutory scheme, the Washington County committee made a *26 “comprehensive plan for the reorganization of school districts within the county.”

One of the factual problems with which the Washington 'County committee was confronted was the existence of the .Sylvan district, which lies athwart the county line and includes taxable property in both Washington and Multnomah counties. The comprehensive plan for the reorganization of Washington County’s school districts contemplated a single administrative district, wholly within that county, for grades one through twelve. The new district would exclude all portions of the existing Sylvan grade school district. (It had voted against an earlier plan to unite with the new district.) This exclusion would require a financial adjustment between the new district and the Sylvan district. For several years, taxes from the Sylvan district had gone into Beaverton High School (Union High School Dist. No. 10 Joint). The Beaver-ton physical plant would, under reorganization, belong exclusively to the new Washington County administrative district. Accordingly, all parties agree, the Sylvan district would have to be paid an equitable amount of cash for its .share in the assets of the old high school district.

On or .about September 14, 1959, there was prepared and circulated within the County a mimeo *27 graphed pamphlet entitled “Proposed School District Reorganization Plan for the Beaverton Area.” This pamphlet contained the following:

“SIX: That all assets and liabilities, including all bonded indebtedness, of each of the existing elementary districts included in the proposed administrative .school district, and all assets and liabilities, including all bonded indebtedness, of the existing Union High School District 10 Jt., be assumed by the proposed administrative school district. That the new district, after its formation shall pay over to district No. 42 Jt-Sylvan, $150,-680.87, as an equitable adjustment for the value of that district’s interest in the assets of the Union High School District 10 Jt.”

A public hearing was had on 'September 14, 1959, presumably pursuant to statute. The minutes thereof do not reveal whether the above-quoted portion of the plan was specifically discussed. The record does show, however, that on September 17, 1959, the Washington *28 County committee had another meeting and revised its comprehensive plan so as .to reduce the amount to be paid the ’Sylvan district .from $150,680.87 to $61,-757.94. The county committee decided that all unearned interest on the bonded indebtedness of the Union High School district must be included as a liability of the High ’School district in the calculations of the net assets to be distributed to Sylvan upon reorganization. When the unearned interest upon existing bonds was added to .the liabilities of the High «School district and the result again calculated by the formula which was being followed in .such cases, the net assets of the high .school district were inevitably reduced. The amount to be paid the Sylvan district was thus reduced from $150,680.87 to $61,757.94.

All parties accept the figures as accurate and accept the formula employed in arriving at them, except that .Stanbery challenges the propriety of including the unearned interest as a liability. He contends that only the debt should be counted, and that interest to become due in the future should be treated as future operating expense rather than as a capital debt item.

Stanbery apparently learned of the change in the amount to be paid his (Sylvan) district a day or two *29 before tbe next scheduled step in the statutory reorganization plan. This was tbe bearing before tbe State Board of Education. In any event, Stanbery bad not attended tbe September 17 meeting of tbe county committee, and bad only secondary information about it. Stanbery does not contend that there was anything irregular about the notice, or tbe manner in which any meeting or bearing was convened, but does contend that be was not guilty of any lack of diligence in attempting to follow tbe reorganization proceedings.

At tbe bearing called pursuant to ORS 330.560, the State Board of Education was represented by two of its members together with a Mr. Patch, tbe staff executive concerned with various reorganization plans throughout tbe state. Stanbery was among the more than 300 persons who attended this meeting. Tbe minutes of tbe meeting contain, among many other unrelated exchanges, tbe following:

“Robert C. Stanbery, Sylvan: * # * I have several questions to be answered. Tbe first one is concerning tbe proposed monies to be received by tbe Sylvan District from the Union High School District “ * * and bow did tbe value shrink from $150,650.87 [sic] which was in tbe original September 14 plan to today’s $61,757.94 * *
*30 “Mr. Patch: * * * You ask further regarding the change in the amount of money that was to he allocated to the Sylvan district as a result of the adjustment made by any reorganization and I would ask Mr. G-ray [member of Washington County committee] to give an explanation of that:
“Mr. Gray: That came about with an original error through the county. Certain bonded indebtedness was included which should not have been. Do you wish to amplify that Mr. 'Scrafford [county school superintendent] ?
“Mr. Seraf.ford: When I first asked for figures on Beaverton High 'School from the County Treasurer I received only part of what I needed.”

The dialogue then passed on to other subjects, and nothing further was said at that meeting or at any other time, .so far as the record reveals, concerning the shrinkage of Sylvan’s equity in the Beaverton assets. Stanbery understandably says now that he was not satisfied with the answers he received from Messrs. Gray and Scrafford, but he did not say so at the meeting.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Miller v. City of Portland
338 P.3d 685 (Oregon Supreme Court, 2014)
Saxon v. Division of State Lands
570 P.2d 1197 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1977)
Application of Portland General Elec. Co.
561 P.2d 154 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1977)
Application of Portland General Electric Co.
550 P.2d 465 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1976)
School District No. 7 v. Weissenfluh
387 P.2d 567 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1963)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
377 P.2d 8, 233 Or. 24, 1962 Ore. LEXIS 473, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stanbery-v-smith-or-1962.