Arizona Court of Appeals, 1995

Russo v. Catalina Foothills Unified School District No. 16

Russo v. Catalina Foothills Unified School District No. 16
Arizona Court of Appeals · Decided December 14, 1995 · Fernandez, Livermore, Pelander
185 Ariz. 253; 914 P.2d 1345; 109 Educ. L. Rep. 415; 205 Ariz. Adv. Rep. 55; 1995 Ariz. App. LEXIS 275

Russo v. Catalina Foothills Unified School District No. 16

Opinion of the Court

OPINION

LIVERMORE, Presiding Judge.

In Roosevelt Elementary School District v. Bishop, 179 Ariz. 233, 877 P.2d 806 (1994), oxxr supreme coxxrt held the existing statutory school financing stnictxire unconstitutional because it caused gross disparities in school facilities. Within a week of the decision, the court responded to motions for clarification from certain school districts and from the Arizona School Boards Association concerning the application of the decision to the issuance of school bonds in the futxxre but before new school financing legislation was enacted. The coxxrt’s order, dated July 28, 1994, stated:

The motions for clarification ask us to expressly state that this coxxrt’s opinion dated Jxxly 21,1994, did not purport to and does not affect the bonded indebtedness described in the motions. It has been represented to us that all parties to this case agree on that issue. We, too, agree. Thus, pending legislative compliance with oxxr opixxion and further order of this coxxrt, which woxxld have prospective application only,
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the public school system shall continue under existing statutes, and the validity and enforceability of past and fixture acts, bonded indebtedness and obligations incurred under applicable statutes, as long as they are in force and effect, are assxxred.

Plaintiff Steven Russo, a resident of defendant Catalina Foothills School District, sued for declaratory relief that bonds issued pxxr-suant to elections held after the Roosevelt decision were invalid. He appeals from an order dismissing his complaint. We affirm.

The essential basis of Russo’s argument is that “the bonded indebtedness described in the motions” was indebtedness already approved in school district elections. Consequently, it is contended, bonds issued on the basis of elections held after Jixly 1994 were not authorized by the coxxrt’s clarifying order and are thus invalid. We disagree for two *254reasons. First, while the motion for clarification by the individual school districts described only bonds immediately ready for issuance, inferentially, therefore, already approved in elections, the motion of the Arizona School Boards Association was much more general and described the potential effect of the court’s ruling on the market for school bonds issued prior to the enactment of new legislation. Neither motion referred to electoral authorization of bonds. In this posture, we do not believe that the clarifying order’s reference to “bonded indebtedness described in the motions” can fairly be read to refer only to bonded indebtedness approved in pre-Roosevelt elections. Second, the language of clarification expressly authorizes future bonded indebtedness under existing statutes until they are invalidated by legislative replacement or future court action. See Washakie County School Dist. v. Herschler, 606 P.2d 310 (Wyo. 1980).

Affirmed. Appellee’s request for attorneys’ fees on appeal is denied.

FERNANDEZ and PELANDER, JJ., concur.

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