People ex rel. Pixley v. Lodi High School District
People ex rel. Pixley v. Lodi High School District
Opinion of the Court
Action to exclude defendant from exercising any power as a high school district. Defendant had judgment, from which and from an order denying motion for a new trial plaintiff appeals.
Appellant contends: 1. That section 1670 of the Political Code, as amended in 1895, which provides for the organization of high schools in cities, incorporated towns, and school districts having a population of one thousand inhabitants or more, violates section 1, article XIV, amendments of the national constitution, in that it deprives the taxpayer of his property without due process of law; it also violates section 12, article XT, of the constitution of this state, because it confers legislative powers upon the high school district; and also violates section 25, article IV, of that constitution, because it is a special law; and 2. It is contended that the proceedings taken in organizing defendant corporation did not comply with the requirements of law.
1. The feature of the Political Code, found in subdivisions 14 and 15 of section 1670, which relate to the levy of a special tax for the support of these schools, is especially assailed. Subdivision 14 of this section, as it was amended in 1895, requires the high school board to furnish to the authorities whose duty it is to levy taxes—in this case the board of supervisors (Chico etc. Board v. Supervisors, 118 Cal. 115)—-the first day of September, an estimate of the cost of purchasing a suitable lot, of procuring plans .... and erecting a building .... and of conducting the school for the school year”; and “each year thereafter to present to said authorities .... an estimate of the amount of money required for conducting the school for the school year.” Subdivision 15 provides that: “’When such estimate shall have been made and submitted, it shall be the duty of the authorities whose duty it is to levy taxes in said .... school district .... to levy a special tax upon all the taxable property of said .... school district, sufficient in amount to maintain the high school. Said tax shall be computed, entered upon the tax-roll, and collected, in the same manner as other taxes are computed, entered and collected.” The same question was here under the act of 1891 (Stats. 1891, p. 182). As the law then read, it was held unconstitutional because it left
Section 25 of article IV of the constitution contains thirty-three subdivisions specifying certain matters relating to which “the legislature shall not pass local or special laws.” Appellant designates the following subdivisions as violated by section 1670: “10. For the assessment or collection of taxes; 11. Providing for conducting elections .... except on the organization of new counties; .... 19. Granting to any corporation . . . . any special privilege, et cetera; .... 27. Providing for the management of common schools; 28. Creating offices, or prescribing the powers and duties of officers, in counties .... election or school districts; .... 33. In all other cases where a general law can be made applicable.”
Section 6 of article IX of the constitution provides that “our public school system shall include primary and grammar schools, and such high schools, evening schools, normal schools, and technical schools as may be established by the legislature, or by municipal or district authority; but the entire revenue derived from the state school fund, and the school tax, shall be applied exclusively to the support of primary and grammar schools.”
Section 5 of the same article malíes it the duty of the legis
Under the constitution! admonition, the legislature has provided a system of public schools, consisting of the primary, grammar, and high school, the latter of which is designed io be preparatory to admission in the state university. Graduates of the grammar school are admitted into the high school without examination. It cannot be doubted that it is within the power of the legislature to provide a plan for the organization and establishment of high schools, and we do not understand that the people of the state in this action are attempting to discredit a power expressly given the legislature by them in our organic law. The objection is to the plan itself, and not to the power to prescribe a plan. The plan is by no means complex or anomalous.
By section 1610, as amended by the act of 1895, “any .... school district having a population of one thousand inhabitants or more may, by a majority vote of the qualified electors voting at the election held for the purpose .... establish and maintain a high school at the expense of such .... school district.” It is made the duty of the board of school trustees, whenever a majority of the heads of families in any school district, as shown by said census, shall unite in a petition to that board “for the establishing and maintaining of a high school therein,” to petition the county superintendent of schools “for a determination of the question”; and it is made the duty of the county superintendent thereupon to call an election for that purpose, to “be conducted in the manner prescribed for conducting school elections”; the election officer must report the
2. The objection that the proceedings did not comply with the requirements of the law is not well taken. The petition is directed to the “trustees of Salem school district of the county of San Joaquin,” naming them. This was sufficient without directing the petition to the board of trustees; it states the population of the district to be more than one thousand; it gives the boundaries of the proposed district and shows that they include the whole of Salem school district. The body of the petition does not state that the signers constitute “a majority of the heads of families” of the district, but appended to it, and forming a part of it as submitted to the trustees, is a certificate signed by the school census marshal for Salem school district, in which he certifies that the petition “contains the names of a majority of the heads of families in the above named school district as shown by the last school census report.” Section 1670, supra, provides that, “whenever a majority of the heads of families .... shall unite in a petition to the .... board of school trustees,” et cetera. We think the petition was sufficient. (Frederick v. San Luis Obispo, 118 Cal. 391.) It is objected that the petition of the trustees to the county superintendent of public schools to call an election was insufficient because it is unverified and is not authenticated by the clerk; also because it begins, “We, the undersigned school trustees,” and contains, “Wow, therefore, we, the undersigned trustees; and your petitioners will ever pray,” and bears these names over the' word “trustees,” and is indorsed “petition by trustees,” et cetera. The point is that the act requires a petition to the board of trustees and a petition by the board of trustees. The section requires the trustees “to petition the county superintendent of schools to call an election in ... . said school district, for the determination of the question.” Wo form of petition is prescribed. This petition was sufficient. It was quite full
It is claimed that the evidence is insufficient to support the finding that the petition was signed by a majority of the heads of families in the district. There was evidence that the signers to the petition were heads of families, but no direct evidence appears in the transcript that they constituted a majority of the heads of families. It appears, however, that the census marshal correctly took the census of all the heads of families, and that the original sheets used hy the marshal and showing this census were before the school trustees when the petition was presented to them, and were also used at the trial of this case. They furnished evidence from which, by comparison of the names on the petition with those on the sheets, the fact could be determined whether a majority of all the heads of families signed the petition. We must presume that this evidence was sufficient, inasmuch as it does not appear in the record. It was the duty of the defendant to make out its case at the trial, but on the appeal by plaintiff it became the duty of the latter to show error affirmatively. If, for any reason, these census sheets did not prove what .they purported to show, they should have been printed in the record; It was admitted at the trial that the district had a population of over one thousand.
It is claimed that the county superintendent of schools had no power to nominate the election board. The statute in terms directs the county superintendent to call the election and to appoint three qualified electors of the district to conduct the election. He named J. D. Huffman, O. II. Ferdun, and E. L. Graham. Graham was sick and did not attend, and an elector, S. W. Sollars, was chosen to fill^the vacancy. Huffman testified: “I was one of the officers appointed to conduct the election. E. L. Graham did not attend. . . . Upon ascertaining this fact the officers of the election and three or four other electors present selected Mr. Sollars in Mr. Graham’s place. He was a bystander and freeholder. He took the oath and acted. I was one of the judges and Mr. Ferdun the other. We were electors.” On cross-examination he testified: ‘T don’t know but what I and Mr. Ferdun named Mr. Sollars between us, without reference to any other of the electors present. I don’t know
It is objected that the polls should have been opened earlier and closed earlier. (Citing People v. Caruthers School Dist., 102 Cal. 184.) Section 1597 of the Political Code, provides that in districts such as this one “the polls must not be opened before 9 o’clock A. M., nor kept open less than four hours.” The notice of election required the polls to be kept open from 2 o’clock P. M. until sunset. This was a sufficient compliance with the law.
The 'superintendent of schools directed the notice of election to be published in the “Lodi Sentinel,” a weekly newspaper published in said district, and the proof is that it was so pub
It is objected that the notice did not remain posted for the fifteen days required by law. The proof is that it was duly posted on May 6, 1S9G. The election was held on May 23d, following. It was not necessary to prove that the notice remained posted each day after it was posted.
There are numerous other assignments, but we find none importing prejudicial error.
The judgment and order should be affirmed.
Cooper, C., and Britt, C., concurred.
For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion the judgment and order are affirmed.
Van Dyke, J., Harrison, J., Garoutte, J.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- THE PEOPLE ex rel. REUBEN PIXLEY v. LODI HIGH SCHOOL DISTRICT, et cetera
- Cited By
- 15 cases
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- Published
- Syllabus
- High School Districts—Constitutional Law—Delegation of Power of Taxation—Advisory Estimate of Superintendent.— Section 1670 of the Political Code, as amended in 1895, providing for the organization of high schools in cities, towns, and school districts having a population of one thousand inhabitants or more, is not unconstitutional as delegating legislative power of taxation to the county superintendent. His estimate made to the board of supervisors is only advisory, and that board is authorized in its discretion to determine the amount of taxation and to levy a tax sufficient to maintain the high school for the current year, or to erect the necessary buildings, as the case may be. Id.—Power of Legislature—Special Tax—Submission to Vote.—The legislature may by general law authorize a tax for a special purpose, without submitting the proposition to a vote of the people; and when the people have voted to organize a high school district under a law which gives the supervisors power to levy a special tax to support the school, it is not necessary that the tax should he submitted to a vote of the people. Id.—Special Legislation—General Law — Classification.— Section 1671 of the Political Code, as amended in 1895, is not special legislation, but is general in its operation and purpose, and is based upon a reasonable classification of high schools, and gives to all inhabitants of the state similarly situated equal opportunity to avail themselves of the benefits of such schools. Id.—Special Power of Taxation—Authority of Legislature —The law is not special merely because it vests in the hoard of supervisors power to levy a tax for high schools which the general laws of the state do not give to the board, nor because it gives to the high school board initiatory powers with respect to taxation not possessed in other school districts. The legislature may constitute high schools, and provide for their support by methods different from those adopted for like purposes as to other schools. Id.— Proceedings for Organization — Sufficiency of Petition.— A petition for the organization of a high school district, directed, to the trustees of the school district, naming them, though not directed to the board of trustees, stating the population of the school district to be more than one thousand, and showing that the boundaries of the proposed high school district are the same as those of the school district, and to which is appended a certificate signed by the school census marshal, certifying that the petition contains the names of a majority of the heads of families in the school district, “as shown by the last school census report,” though that fact is not stated in the body of the petition, is a sufficient compliance with the law. Id.—Pboof of Signatube by Majobity of Heads of Families'—Census Sheets—Pbesumption upon Appeal.-—The original census sheets used by the census marshal, showing the last census made by him before the signing of the petition, furnish evidence from which the fact could be determined whether a majority of all the heads of families signed the petition, and where such sheets are not in the record upon appeal it will be presumed in support of the judgment that the evidence was sufficient. Id.—Petition of Tbustees to Call Election—Authentication.—The petition of the trustees of the school district to the county superintendent of schools to call an election need not be verified nor authenticated by the clerk, and, no form thereof having been prescribed by law, such a petition, beginning: “We, the undersigned trustees,” et cetera, and subscribed by them as trustees of the school district, and indorsed as a petition by them as such trustees, sufficiently indicates its purpose, and is prima facie authority to the county school superintendent. Id.—Nomination of Election Boabd—Filling Vacancy—Validity of Election.—The county superintendent is required to call the election, and to appoint three qualified electors to conduct the election; but where one of the electors so appointed was sick and could not attend, and the vacancy was filled by the appointment of another qualified elector in his stead by the remaining two appointees, such appointment, if irregular, did not affect the validity of the election, provided the result of the election was not thereby changed. Id.—Houbs of Opening Polls—Sufficiency of Notice.—Under section 1597 of the Political Code, providing that in such districts “the polls must not be opened before 9 o’clock A. M., nor kept open less than four hours,” a notice of election requiring the polls to be kept open from 2 o’clock P. M. until sunset of May 23d, is a sufficient compliance with the law. Id.—Posting of Notice—Sufficiency of Pboof.—Proof made that the notice of election was posted fifteen days before the election is sufficient to show a posting for fifteen days, as required by the law; and it is not necessary to prove that the notice remained posted each day after it was posted.