State ex rel. Burnett v. French

208 P. 664, 111 Kan. 820, 1922 Kan. LEXIS 355
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJuly 8, 1922
DocketNo. 24,345
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 208 P. 664 (State ex rel. Burnett v. French) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Burnett v. French, 208 P. 664, 111 Kan. 820, 1922 Kan. LEXIS 355 (kan 1922).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

West, J.:

This action was brought on the relation of the county attorney against the county commissioners and certain high-school districts to have chapter 247 of the Laws of 1921 declared unconstitutional and void, and a declaratory judgment, rendered touching the power and duty of the board of county commissioners regarding the Reno county high school; or if the chapter should be held valid, a declaratory judgment fixing “the official status of all members of the board of‘trustees, who live in the territory, which in legal effect will bear no part of the taxes for the support of the Reno county high school, and that their offices be declared vacant and that all their acts in making a levy of taxes 'shall be declared illegal and void,” and that the county treasurer be enjoined from apportioning any of the Reno county high-school fund to any other purpose than that for which it was collected and that such purpose be declared to be illegal and void, and that the county treasurer be ordered and directed to credit and rebate and repay the amount of all such taxes to the taxpayers as shown by the records of his office.

The petition alleged in substance that the accredited high schools of Reno county other than the Reno county high school authorized [822]*822by the sessions of 1920 and 1921 increased the levies for school purposes; that the various boards of certain high schools had issued excessive amounts of bonds and erected costly and extravagant buildings, and increased the burden of taxation and certain high schools had made long contracts and increased salaries; that the tax laid for school purposes has greatly increased and in a majority of accredited high-school districts had become so excessive as to be a burden; that the county treasurer threatened to apportion the county high-school fund so that each accredited high school will receive such proportion thereof as its taxable property bears to the taxable property of the entire county; that the various school boards in the accredited high-school districts have made excessive levies, and if the accredited high-school districts should receive the amount apportioned to them under the provisions of the act of 1921, they would receive large sums in excess of their requirements; and if the act is valid the six members of the Reno county board of trustees will all reside in territory which will not actually contribute any part of the tax for the maintenance of the school and will have ceased to be residents of the territory in which such school is taxed, and are, therefore, by virtue of this act, out of office and all their acts void.

A demurrer to the petition was filed. The court reserved its ruling until after the introduction of the evidence.

It was testified that the tax valuation for 1921 was 1105,745,689; that the county high-school levy was “ten and eight-tenths cents on the hundred dollars — one and eighty [eight] one-huhdredths mills on the dollar”; that the county commissioners changed the county-commissioner districts of Reno county but did not change the residence of any of the trustees of Reno county high school with reference to their commissioner districts. It was admitted that the present trustees of the Reno .county high school were reelected before the passage of the act of 1921. It was testified that there are several school districts in Reno county that do not maintain a high school. There are twelve accredited high schools, including the county high school at Nickerson.

Both parties introduced their evidence and the cause was briefed and argued.

The trial court made findings of fact and conclusions of law to the effect that the title of the property of the Reno county high school at Nickerson is in the county and that such school must be [823]*823supported and maintained by the entire county and not by any particular part; that the taxes involved were carried on the tax rolls as a county levy for Reno county high-school purposes and’ appear on the tax receipts as a county levy for the county high school; that this levy is carried on the tax rolls and shown on the tax receipts as a distinct levy for county high-school purposes in addition to the several and separate levies made for the ten rural and two city high-school districts, each of which was provided for by separate levies. It was found that the levy of ten and eight-tenth cents for county high-school purposes was arrived at by the county high-school commissioners notifying the county commissioners that they estimated they would need about $35,000 for the maintenance of the Reno county high school at Nickerson for 1921 and 1922; that the county clerk, to determine the rate of levy, took the assessed valuation of the parts or districts of the county outside of the rural high-school districts and city districts and estimated the-number of mills necessary to levy against the assessed valuation of such outside districts to raise the amount required for the county high schools and then levied such rate against the entire county; that by this method the county would collect approximately $79,-180.20 in excess of the amount needed by the Reno county high school, which is intended to be returned to the districts from which collected, “thus leaving less than three-sevenths of the territory of the county to furnish the taxes with which to support the Reno county high school.”

It was concluded as matters of law that the county high school is county property and its trustees county officers and that it is conducted for the benefit of the entire county and controlled by it, and that the levy should be against the entire county. The excess over $35,000 should be returned to those who paid it and the treasurer should be restrained from paying any of this money to the rural high-school or city districts. The demurrers therefore were overruled.

The defendants appeal and various assignments of error are made, but the chief question is the validity of the statute.

In the ordinance accepting the grant of land from congress provision was made for large tracts to be devoted to educational purposes. (Gen. Stat. 1915, §§ 95-103.) In the act of admission it was provided that sections 16 and 36 in every township be set aside to the state for the use of schools. Article 6 of the constitution enjoins [824]*824upon the legislature to establish a uniform system of common schools “and schools of a higher grade.” A perpetual school fund is provided and higher institutions of learning are required. The old idea was to'give a child the benefit of a grade-school education or its equivalent and then if he wanted to go to college, have him enter a preparatory school. But it soon dawned on the minds of our educators that .local high schools are more convenient and desirable than some distant academy and so it was that in 1886, the legislature enacted chapter 147, “An act to authorize the establishment and maintenance of county high schools.” This act made it possible for a county of six thousand population or over, by a vote, to have a county high school. At the same session, acts were passed making provision for high schools in certain named counties. Two counties were specially provided for by the legislature of 1891, one by the legislature of 1893, and four by the legislature of 1895. In 1897, chapter 180 was enacted relating to the establishment of county high schools in counties of le^s than 2,500 population — authorizing the county commissioners to negotiate with the school districts at the county seat for a high school after a prescribed petition or election had been circulated or held.

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Bluebook (online)
208 P. 664, 111 Kan. 820, 1922 Kan. LEXIS 355, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-burnett-v-french-kan-1922.