Voshell v. Peterson

50 P.2d 941, 142 Kan. 448, 1935 Kan. LEXIS 1
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedNovember 1, 1935
DocketNo. 32,700
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 50 P.2d 941 (Voshell v. Peterson) 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
Voshell v. Peterson, 50 P.2d 941, 142 Kan. 448, 1935 Kan. LEXIS 1 (kan 1935).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Dawson, J.:

Plaintiff, a taxpayer of school district N'o- 30, in McPherson county, brought this action under authority of R. S. 60-1121 to enjoin an alleged illegal tax levy which the defendant county clerk was about to spread on the tax rolls of the school district.

The pertinent facts were these: At the annual meeting'held on May 31, 1935, the school-district electors adopted a budget for the ensuing year beginning July 1,1935, and ending June 30, 1936. An itemized budget for teachers’ salaries, fuel, supplies, 'etc., totaling $7,218.50, was prepared, and a statement of cash on hand, $491.21, and a balance of $2,508.41 in hands of county treasurer was appended. This budget was transmitted to the county clerk on a form prescribed by the state tax commission, accompanied by a certificate that a levy to raise $7,000 would be required.

Pursuant to a method prescribed by the state tax commission and on a printed form prepared by it, the county clerk set down some of the budgetary figures of the school district, together with some. [449]*449figures from his own records and perhaps those of the county treasurer, and made an independent calculation as to the amount of money the school district would require, and concluded that the district’s budgetary needs would be sufficiently met by a levy which would raise $5,757.02 instead of the $7,000 as certified by the school district.

Plaintiff’s cause of action was predicated on the assumption that the county clerk’s calculation was based on an unauthorized and erroneous theory; that according to the budgetary requirements of the district and the amount of cash on hand and in the county treasury to the district’s credit a levy to raise $1,896.61 would be sufficient; and that the proposed levy to raise $5,757.02 was illegal and excessive and should be enjoined.

The school district was not impleaded in the action. The county clerk joined issues on plaintiff’s petition by a general denial.

The cause was tried by the court without a jury. No dispute of fact was developed. Exhibits of the district’s budget and of the county clerk’s method of calculating the required sum to be raised by taxation were in evidence. The latter, somewhat abridged, reads:

“County Clerk's Form
[Prepared by the state tax commission]
“Turkey Creek (common) school district No. 30, McPherson county, Kansas.
“general fund
“Requirements:
“2. Amount of budget adopted for period 7-1-35 to 6-30-36 as certified by district...................................... $7,218.50
“3. Amount needed to maintain school 7-1-36 to 12-31-36 (not to exceed 50% of line 2) ................................ 3,609.25
“6. Total requirements, 5-1-35 to 12-31-36 ................... $10,827.75
“Revenues:
“7. School-district treasurer’s balance, 4-30-35 ................ $491.81
“8. County treasurer’s balance, 4-30-35 ...................... 4,070.37
“9. Total amount of 1934 ad valorem tax levied (including intangible and dog tax) ................................... 7,281.14
“10. Less 5 percent for delinquent taxes ...................... 364.06
“12. Less: Taxes apportioned by county treasurer ............ $6,349.33
“13. Total deductions........................................ 6,713.39
“14. 1934 tax in process of collection, 4-30-35 .................. 567.75 Receipts from other sources, 5-1-35 to 12-31-36.
[450]*450‘T9. State and county aid (3 apportionments)................. §200.00
“20. Intangible tax (1935) ................................... 35.23
“21. Dog tax (1935) ......■................................... 60.00
“23. Back tax collections (estimated).......................... 120.00
“26. Total revenue available, 5-1-35 to 12-31-36................ §5,545.16
“27. Net 1935 tax requirements (line 6 above minus line 26).... 5,282.59
“28. Add 9 percent of line 27 for delinquent taxes.............. 475.43
“29. Total 1935 ad valorem tax requirements.................. 5,757.02”

Plaintiff’s estimate of the district’s requirements were predicated on the following:

“2. Amount of budget adopted for period 7-1-35 to 6-30-36 as certified by district .................................... $7,218.50
“26. Total revenue available 5-1-35 to 12-31-36 .............. 5,478.49
“27. Net 1935 ad valorem requirements...................... 1,740.01
“28. Add 9 percent of line 27 for delinquent taxes............ 156.60
“29. Total 1935 ad valorem tax requirements ................ 1,896.61”

The trial court adopted plaintiff’s calculations in toto, gave judgment in his favor, enjoined the extension of any levy on the tax rolls intended to raise any greater sum than $1,896.61, and particularly enjoined any levy designed to raise any money to pay the expenses of the school district for the period July 1,1936, to December 31, 1936.

Defendant appeals, suggesting first that no judgment prejudicial to the fiscal affairs of the school district should have been made without the latter being a party to the action. This point might be good if it had been raised below, but the record shows nothing of the sort. The same short answer must be made to the argument that the county clerk was hot authorized to reduce the district’s certified financial requirement of $7,000 to the sum of $5,757.02 as calculated by him.

Coming to the question at issue: Did the county clerk’s method of calculating the district’s levy requirement vitiate his conclusion that a tax levy to raise $5,757.02 should be spread? The method and form used by the county clerk were prescribed by the state tax commission. That tribunal took into account the fact that the school year does not coincide with the fiscal year, and that the expenses of the first few months of each school year are met — and by operative necessity must be met — from the balance of funds carried over from the taxes collected the preceding year.

There is nothing in the budget law which requires that the school-district treasury shall have no cash on hand at the close of the [451]*451fiscal year. Indeed, the statute contemplates the contrary. R. S. 1933 Supp. 79-2934, in part, directs—

“Any balances remaining in any fund at the end of the current budget year shall be carried forward to the credit of said fund for the ensuing year.”

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

Related

Smith v. City of Prairie Village
264 P.2d 1053 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1953)
Lowden v. King
78 P.2d 29 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1938)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
50 P.2d 941, 142 Kan. 448, 1935 Kan. LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/voshell-v-peterson-kan-1935.