Walker v. Bennett

118 S.E. 779, 125 S.C. 389, 1923 S.C. LEXIS 269
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJuly 26, 1923
Docket11283
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 118 S.E. 779 (Walker v. Bennett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walker v. Bennett, 118 S.E. 779, 125 S.C. 389, 1923 S.C. LEXIS 269 (S.C. 1923).

Opinions

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Cothran.

This is a proceeding, in the original jurisdiction of the Court, instituted by the plaintiffs, as taxpayers and residents of the County of Greenville and of the territory embraced within the limits of the so-called Parker School District No. 8A, for an injunction, restraining the defendants as trustees of said school district, from issuing and *391 selling a certain issue of school bonds in the amount of $300,000.00.

Prior to the pasage of Act February 17, 1923, hereinafter more particularly defined, there were, in the territory just outside the limits of the City of Greenville, the following separate school districts: Unión No. 8A; Sam-Poe No. SB; Mills-Dunean No. 8C; West Greenville No. 8D, and City View No. 8E.

Extensive plans have been developed by the citizens interested for the improvement of the school facilities in this territory; they involve the consolidation of the five school districts named into one school district, with a centralized control.

Accordingly, on February 17, 1923, an Act was passed by the General Assembly, purporting to effect the desired consolidation, incorporating the new school district and defining the powers .and duties of the Board of Trustees, among which are the powers of school districts generally, under the statute, to issue bonds.

After the approval of the Act referred to, the Board of Trustees, upon petition duly signed by one-third of the qualified electors and one-third of the resident freeholders within said territory, proceeded to order an election upon the question of the issuance of bonds in the sum of $300,-000.00 for school purposes; at that election the votes cast were 231 for, and 6 against, the bonds. Thereafter the result of the election was' declared and the bonds authorized to be issued. After advertisement for bids, that of Stacy and Braun of Toledo, Ohio, was accepted for par, plus a premium of $1,800.00.

Before the bonds were issued or delivered, this action was instituted. The objections urged by the plaintiffs to the validity of the proposed issue of bonds are:

(1) That the Act of 1923 is an attempt to incorporate a school district in contravention of the Constitution, Art. 3, § 34, Subdivision 4.

*392 (2) That the Act is in contravention of the Constitution, Article 3, § 17, which requires that every Act shall relate to but one subject, and that shall be expressed in the title.

(3) That there are now outstanding against School District 8E, one of the constituent districts, bonds to the amount of $24,000.00; that that is the debt of the constituent district and not of the consolidated district; and that the issue of the new bonds will create an excess of the debt of School District 8E, over IS per centum, and over 8 per centum of the assessed valuation of its property, in contravention of the Constitution, Article 10, § S.

As to the first objection: The constitutional provision is as follows:

“The General Assembly of this State shall not enact local or special laws concerning any of the following subjects or for any of the following purposes; to wit:
* * *
* * *
“III. * * *
“IV. To incorporate School Districts.”

The main object of the Act of 1923, as plainly appears upon its face, was to consolidate the five school districts into one. The Constitution contains no delegation of power to the General Assembly in reference to the consolidation of school districts and no limitation of its power in reference thereto; and, consequently, its powers in regard thereto are referable to the reservoir of general powers, except when limited by the Constitution. Consolidation is not incorporation, and an inhibition against incorporation should not apply to consolidation.

Section 1738 of Volume 1, Code of Laws A. D. 1912, authorizes County Boards of Education to consolidate school districts upon certain conditions, and the Act of 1923 specifically directing the consolidation of these particular school districts, may be regarded as an amendment to Sec *393 tion 1738, a special provision in a general law, permitted by the Constitution.

The fact that the Act of 1923 attempts to incorporate the new district does not at all make the Act one of incorporation, for the necessary result of a consolidation, either by the County Board of Education, as authorized by Section 1738, or by the Act of 1923, is the incorporation of the new district as consolidated. So much of the Act of 1923 as purports to incorporate the new district is, therefore, superfluous.

There is certainly as much difference between incorporation and consolidation, as there is between incorporation and amendment, and it has been held in the case of State v. McCaw, 77 S. C., 351; 58 S. E., 145, that an amendment to the Act incorporating a school district does not come within the inhibition of the Constitution. It appears in that case that the School District of Yorkville was created by a special Act in December, 1888, prior to the Constitution of 1895 containing the inhibition under discussion. In February, 1907, an Act (25 St. at Large, p. 731), was passed providing for a material extension of the school district and that the new district “be declared a separate school district, and to be known as the School District of York-ville.” Objection was made that .the Act was violative of the constitutional provision in question, but the Court held:

“Nor is it repugnant to Subdivision V [now IV] of that section, as the statute does not incorporate the school district, but is, in effect, only an amendment of a previous statute of incorporation.”

So in the case of Burriss v. Brock, 95 S. C., 104; 79 S. E., 193. The Act of 1895 (prior to the Constitution) created a special school district of the City of Anderson. The Act of 1913 enlarged it by annexing certain adjacent territory beyond the corporate limits, and provided for the issuance of bonds. The. same objection to the Act was interposed, but the Court, in line with the McCaw Case and *394 State v. Brock, 66 S. C., 357; 44 S. E., 931, held that the amendment did not constitute the incorporation of a new school district, although, as a matter of fact, a new district was created; the creation of the new district being simply an incident of the valid exercise of the legislative power of amendment.

In the case of Columbia v. Smith, 105 S. C., 348; 89 S. E., 1028, the Court quotes with approval the following from the McCaw Case:

“A statute, therefore’ which could be enacted as a special provision in a general law will not be declared unconstitutional merely because it is in form a separate Act, but will be regarded as an amendment of the general • law upon the subject.”

And in Grocery Company v. Burnet, 61 S.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
118 S.E. 779, 125 S.C. 389, 1923 S.C. LEXIS 269, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walker-v-bennett-sc-1923.