Chambers v. Solner
Chambers v. Solner
Opinion of the Court
(after stating the facts as above). The contention in this case arises over the respective claims of the common council and the school board of the city of Nome to the control and management of the school funds. The common council insists that it has the direction and control of this fund, and is authorized and empowered by statute to expend it; the school board traverses this claim, and asserts its jurisdiction over the school fund, and urges that the school board alone has the legal authority to manage the expenditures of these funds; and it is to determine the respective powers of these departments that this case is submitted to the court.
The case presents some anomalous features, and the court finds few precedents to assist it in the determination of the important questions at issue. The statutory provisions are very general in their phraseology, and the case must be de
Section 201 of the Civil Code, found in chapter 21, at page 394 of Carter’s Annotated Alaska Codes (Act June 6, 1900, c. 786, 31 Stat. 521), gives to the common council certain powers,.and among others':
“Fourth. By ordinance to provide for necessary street improvements, fire protection, water supply, lights, wharfage, sewerage, maintenance of public schools, protection of public health, police protection, and the expense of assessment and collection of taxes.”
The next provision in that section empowers the council to levy and collect taxes.
Section 202 is as follows:
“In addition to the officers heretofore provided by this act, there shall be elected a school board of three directors, who shall have the exclusive supervision, management, and control of the public schools and school property within said corporation, and shall be elected in the same manner and for the same term as the council.”
If these two sections stood alone, the court would have little difficulty in determining the respective spheres of the two bodies in question. Section 203, as amended by the act approved March 3, 1901 (31 Stat. 1438, c. 859), however, contains a clause which, it is claimed, gives to the common council the control of the funds in question. This section provides that the treasurer of the corporation shall be “ex officio treasurer of the school board,” and then provides for the treasurer’s bond and oath of office. It then provides that 50 per cent, of all license moneys paid within the corporation shall be paid over by the clerk of the District Court to the treasurer of the said corporation, and then follows this clause:
“All moneys received by tbe treasurer from the clerk of the court for licenses shall be used, under the direction of the council, for school purposes.”
There is no territorial Legislature in the District of Alaska. In the creation of a municipal corporation it is essential to the proper management of its affairs that there be such a body, and Congress, in providing for the incorporation of towns, wisely gave to the common council certain restricted legislative powers. They constitute the only legislative bodies within the territory of Alaska, and are to be viewed within their respective corporate boundaries as having the powers given to them by Congress, and such other powers as are to be inferred from the responsibilities and duties imposed upon them by law. The duty and power is imposed upon them, by the fourth clause of section 201, “by ordinance to provide for * * * the maintenance of public schools.” This clause in the organic act imposes upon the council the duty to provide by ordinance for the maintenance of the public schools by taxation, and by such other methods of raising money as are necessary to meet that requirement. No other duty or power is given to the common council until we reach •that clause in the amendment of March 3, 1901, providing that “the money received by the treasurer of the corporation from the clerk of the court for licenses shall be used, under the direction of the council, for school purposes.” Viewing this clause in the light of the legislative duty of the common council to provide the funds for the maintenance of the public schools, and the clause in section 202, vesting “exclusive supervision, management, and control” in the school board, I have no doubt as to the construction which
This view is further borne out by the fact that section 203,. as amended, provides that “the treasurer of the corporation shall be ex officio treasurer of the school board.” While this clause is not of much force as a guide to the construction of the statute, yet it affords some light. It shows that there was in the mind of Congress a distinction between the functions of the municipal corporation and the school board. The
Another clause in this amendment of March 3, 1901, affords some light upon the gloom of the situation. It is the last proviso, which reads as follows:
“Provided, that where it is made to appear to the satisfaction of the district court that the whole amount heretofore or hereafter received by the treasurer of the corporation from the clerk of the court is not required for school purposes, the court may from time to time, by orders duly made and entered with a statement of the facts upon which they are based, authorize the expenditure of the accumulated surplus, or any part thereof, for "any of the municipal purposes enumerated in this chapter.”
This clause makes it clear that the common council has no control, for municipal purposes at least, over any portion of the school fund, until it is segregated and set apart for the use of the corporation by the order of the District Court. If, now, the council had control of both the municipal and school funds, why should Congress impose upon the District Court the duty of ascertaining the fact and making the segregation of the school fund? This clause is persuasive that Congress meant that the court should hear the contention between these two bodies, and set apart any surplus of the school fund to the control of the council. It would seem reasonable to conclude that otherwise the council could not control any part of it.
It must be a fair construction of this statute to say, too,
From a full comparison and reasonable construction of all these provisions, it appears clear to the court that the purpose of the common council is the legislative duty to provide for “the maintenance of public schools” within the corporation. The council has no authority to expend any portion of the school fund,- except that portion which is segregated by the court under the amendment of March 3, 1901, and set apart for municipal purposes. Section 202 is adopted from the Code of Oregon, where the school board has the exclusive supervisión, management, and control of the public schools and school property, which is claimed for the board here, and I am constrained to accept that construction of the statute which confers upon the school board the same broad powers and duties imposed by the laws of Oregon. The school board of Nome is the only body having any authority to expend the school fund. It is the duty of that board to employ teachers, provide for school buildings, and to supervise, manage, and control the public schools and school property, so long as there is a fund for the maintenance of the same, derived either through ordinances passed by the common council of Nome or from funds received from the clerk' of the District Court.
It follows that the common council of Nome has no authority to order the treasurer to pay any sums of money out of the school fund, for any purpose whatever, much less to pay a portion of the salary of the town clerk and town treasurer therefrom. The demurrer to the complaint will ‘be overruled, and, upon answer or other pleading admitting the facts in the complaint to be true, the injunctioin prayed for may issue against the payment of the warrants in question.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- CHAMBERS v. SOLNER, Treasurer of Nome
- Status
- Published