State ex rel. Board of Education v. Benton

45 N.W. 794, 29 Neb. 460, 1890 Neb. LEXIS 275
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedMay 6, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 45 N.W. 794 (State ex rel. Board of Education v. Benton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Board of Education v. Benton, 45 N.W. 794, 29 Neb. 460, 1890 Neb. LEXIS 275 (Neb. 1890).

Opinion

Cobb, Ch. J.

The school district of the city of Omaha, as relator, in the name of the state, applied for a peremptory writ of mandamus against the auditor of public accounts, compelling him to accept the statement and register the bonds of the relator, issued for public uses, in the amount of $215,000, under the laws of this state.

The relator represents that the city of Omaha, on March 16, 1889, was a duly incorporated metropolitan city of 80,000 inhabitants, constituting one school district; that since November 1, 1889, it has had a board of education of fifteen members, duly elected and qualified as such; that at a regular meeting of the board November 11, 1889, there were present ten members, taking part in all matters acted upon, and by their affirmative vote consented and ordered that a proposition be submitted to a vote of the electors of the city for authority to issue bonds in the sum of $215,000, 215 in number of the denomination of $1,000 each, dated January 1, 1890, to bear interest at five per cent per annum, payable semi-annually, the principal to become due in twenty years from date and payable with the interest at the Nebraska fiscal agency in New York city, the proceeds of said bonds to be used for the purchase of school sites and the erection of school buildings to be used for school purposes in said school district, designating the locality of the sites, the amount of money required, and the cost of the school buildings; that the proposition be submitted at the time and places of holding the next city election thereafter, notice thereof to be given ten days before the election in one or more daily newspapers published within the city; that said notice was so published and said proclamation was so issued, and said election was held in [462]*462the manner and form prescribed by law, and the returns thereof made by the regular election board of said city and canvassed by said board of education; that the majority of the ballots polled at the election were in favor of the proposition and were returned and canvassed in the manner and within the time prescribed by law, showing that the proposition was duly carried and adopted by the. city. In pursuance of which the board of education prepared said bonds, which, on the face of each, expressed the fact that they were issued under the provisions of subdivision 17 of chapter 79 of the Compiled Statutes of Nebraska, 1889, were signed by the president and secretary of the board, specifying the rate of interest, and the time and place of payment of both principal and interest; each bond was for the sum of $1,000.

That subsequently, before this application, the relator submitted to the auditor of public accounts a written statement of the proceedings had and set forth, with a full statement of the assessed valuation of, and the number of children of school age residing in, said district, and the total bonded indebtedness thereof, which statement was certified under oath by the members of said board of education, and therewith submitted the bonds, so prepared, and requested the auditor to record the statement and register the bonds, which he refused and still refuses to do; that said statement showed that the aggregate school tax of said district did not exceed two per cent upon all taxable property of the district in the year 1888, or 1889, or 1890.

The relator therefore prays that the auditor be compelled to record the statement and register the bonds in his office, and that a peremptory writ of mandamus be issued to carry the order of the court to that end into effect.

Attached to the information of the relator was the statement submitted to the auditor and a stipulation by the relator, and by the attorney general on the part of the respondent, that:

[463]*463I. The history of the bonds as presented to the auditor is to be attached to relator’s petition as a part thereof.

II. The title to the site on which the high school building is situate, and for which the $75,000 contained in the proposition, is to be used in the erection of an addition thereto, is in the city of Omaha, and not in the school district, but that the title is so held by the city in trust for the use of the school district.

’ III. The polling places at the election to vote the bonds were located at the city polling places and not at the school houses in the wards of the city.

IY. The judges and clerks appointed by the mayor for the city election were the same that acted on the bond proposition.

Y. There were polled for mayor, 12,337; for treasurer, 12,318 ; for police judge, 12,288; for comptroller, 12,395; and the following on the bond proposition: For the bonds, 4,930, and against the bonds, 2,992 votes.

The relator agrees to produce the poll books used by the judges and clerks of election on the bond proposition.

That the levy of taxes, in the aggregate, not including the interest on the bonds in controversy, is — mills, and no more, for the year 1890.

Lee S. Estelle,

Attorney for Relator.

¥m. Leese,

Attorney General.

The attorney general, for the respondent, demurred to the petition, for the reason that it does not set up facts sufficient for a cause of action entitling the relator to a writ oí mandamus. In support of this pleading he argues in his brief:

I. That under sec. 25 of subdivision 17 of chap. 79 of Comp. Stats., 1889, a vote of the district is only necessary to authorize an expenditure for sehool sites and buildings greater than $25,000, to be reported to the city council, who are required to make the levy, to be collected as other taxes, without authority to issue bonds.

[464]*464II. That the authority to issue bonds, under sec. 28 of the same law, is under proclamation of the board of education of the district, for the submission of the proposition to the qualified voters at school meetings, at a regular election, or at an election called for that purpose; that the regular election of this state is held yearly, on the first Monday of June, and the places of election are at the school houses of the wards of the city as nearly as may be at the center of each ward. This is the only regular election of a school district in metropolitan cities, and is that referred to in sec. 28.

III. That the majority of all the ballots polled at such an election, “or at any regular election,” is necessary to authorize the issuance of bonds; that the total vote polled for the office of mayor was 12,337, and the total for the school proposition submited, 4,930, and 2,992 in the negative; lacking 1,239 votes of the required majority. There was but a single set of judges and clerks appointed for the election, and, therefore, but one election held.

IV. While the law provides that no stone or brick school house shall be built on any site without first obtaining the title in fee, it is admitted that the title to the site of the high school building, sought to be improved at a cost of $75,000 in the proposition submitted, is not in the school district, but is in the city of Omaha.

V. Sec. 27, chap. 18, provides the mode of submitting propositions to be voted on for any authorized purpose. Sec. 28, chap.

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Bluebook (online)
45 N.W. 794, 29 Neb. 460, 1890 Neb. LEXIS 275, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-board-of-education-v-benton-neb-1890.