West. Line Consol. SD v. Greenville Mun. SD
This text of 433 So. 2d 954 (West. Line Consol. SD v. Greenville Mun. SD) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
WESTERN LINE CONSOLIDATED SCHOOL DISTRICT, et al.
v.
GREENVILLE MUNICIPAL SEPARATE SCHOOL DISTRICT.
Supreme Court of Mississippi.
Robertshaw & Merideth, J. Robertshaw, Greenville, Taylor Webb, Leland, for appellants.
*955 Roy D. Campbell, III, Campbell & DeLong, Greenville, for appellee.
Before BROOM, P.J., and HAWKINS and DAN M. LEE, JJ.
HAWKINS, Justice, for the Court:
Western Line Consolidated School District and the Washington County Board of Education appeal from a ruling of the Chancery Court of Washington County that the inhabitants of a certain area of their school district were not entitled under the provisions of the Mississippi Code to a referendum on whether this area would become a part of the Greenville Municipal Separate School District. We hold the chancellor was correct and affirm.
FACTS
On August 3, 1982, the City of Greenville adopted an annexation ordinance, proposing the annexation into the municipality of approximately nineteen square miles. Part of the area to be annexed was already in the Greenville Municipal Separate School District (municipal district), and the remainder was in the Western Line Consolidated School District (Western Line district).
On September 3, 1982, Western Line filed with the city a petition signed by more than twenty percent of the voters residing within the area of Western Line proposed to be annexed, requesting a referendum on the question of the inclusion of this area within the municipal district. Western Line filed this petition under the provisions of Mississippi Code Annotated section 21-1-59 (Supp. 1982), discussed infra.
After adopting the ordinance the city filed a petition for its approval in the Washington County Chancery Court. This petition bore cause number 43,166 of the court.
On September 27, 1982, the Board of Supervisors of Washington County filed a complaint for a declaratory judgment in the chancery court, seeking a construction of section 21-1-59. Named as defendants were the municipal and Western Line school districts. Both school districts answered, and on December 2, 1982, the Washington County Board of Education moved to intervene. Western Line is one of the attendance centers of the county school district.
This suit is primarily between the municipal district on one side and Western Line and the county district on the other, and they have carried the ball in this contest.
At issue in the controversy is which statute controls in any extension of the city limits into the Western Line district, section 21-1-59, or Mississippi Code Annotated section 37-7-611 (1972). If the former, then a referendum is required. If the latter, upon approval by the chancery court of the annexation ordinance, the area of Western Line would automatically become a part of the municipal district, and be severed from the county district.
The chancellor found that the provisions of section 21-1-59 were inapplicable to the proposed annexation and dismissed the action.
Western Line and the county board have appealed.
LAW
The view will be clearer if we give a history of the two statutes. Section 37-7-611, which would be clearly applicable unless dispossessed by section 21-1-59 in this particular case, began with Chapter 23, Section 6 of the Mississippi Laws of 1953. The particular portion of this section follows:
Where the corporate limits of any municipality which constitutes a municipal separate school district, either with or without added territory, are extended so as to include the whole or any part of an existing adjacent school district in the county school system, then such adjacent school district, or such part thereof as is included within the corporate limits of the municipality by reason of the extension thereof, shall thereby automatically be merged with and become a part of such municipal separate school district; ...
*956 1953 Miss. Laws ch. 23.
This section was codified as Section 6411-06 in the Mississippi Code of 1942, as amended. The section was amended by Chapter 29, Laws of Extraordinary Session of 1959, and thereafter codified as our present Mississippi Code Annotated section 37-7-611 (1972). The amendment makes certain clarifications as to school buildings in the county district and procedures in the event only a portion of a district served by an attendance center is in the area proposed to be annexed into the city. This amendment, however, is not at issue in this case.
It is apparent that in the event section 37-7-611 is applicable to this case no referendum is required, or indeed authorized. To the extent the city gains approval of its ordinance by the chancery court, the area including Western Line will automatically become a part of the municipal district.
Section 21-1-59 began with Chapter 29, Mississippi Laws of 1928, which reads as follows:
No municipality shall be created or shall change its boundaries so as to include within the limits of such municipality any of the buildings or grounds of any state institution unless and until consent thereto shall have first been obtained in writing from the board of trustees of such institution, or such other governing board or body as may be created for the control of such institution. Any proceeding creating a municipality or enlarging the boundaries of any municipality which does not comply with this section shall be void and of no effect.
This law was codified into section 3374-18 of the 1942 code, and remained unchanged and later became section 21-1-59 of the 1972 code.
In 1977, the Legislature added a paragraph to this section providing that in the event the proposed municipal annexation crossed county lines it would have no effect on the school district in the adjacent county unless consented to in writing by the board of trustees in the adjacent county school district. See 1977 Miss. Laws ch. 379. The preamble to this act reads:
AN ACT to amend Section 21-1-59, Mississippi Code of 1972, to provide that when a municipality expands across county lines the existing school districts shall not be affected without the consent of the affected school district; and for related purposes.
Finally, the Legislature, in 1978, by Chapter 312 amended the act by adding two final paragraphs which brought about this present controversy. We set out the present act and designate when each paragraph became law.
The preamble states:
AN ACT to amend Section 21-1-59, Mississippi Code of 1972, to provide for a referendum for municipalities in certain counties to determine whether a municipal expansion shall affect the public school system in the annexed area; and for related purposes.
1978 Miss. Laws ch. 312 (emphasis added).
No municipality shall be created or shall change its boundaries so as to include within the limits of such municipality any of the buildings or grounds of any state institution, unless and until consent thereto shall have first been obtained in writing from the board of trustees of such institution, or such other governing board or body as may be created for the control of such institution. Any proceeding creating a municipality or enlarging the boundaries of any municipality which does not comply with this section shall be void and of no effect.
1928 Miss. Laws ch. 29.
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