State ex rel. Allen v. Vaughan
State ex rel. Allen v. Vaughan
Opinion of the Court
This is a suit by the collector of St. Louis county to recover school taxes levied for the years 1882 and 1883, upon the lands of the defendant lying in the commons adjacent to the town of Bridgeton in that county.
The agreed facts upon which the case was tried are these : The Bridgeton school, mentioned in the petition, and for the benefit of which the taxes were levied, is the “Bridgeton Academy,” incorporated by the act of February 12, 1864. The taxes were duly and properly levied by the trustees of the town of Bridgeton, provided the said trustees had authority to levy the same for such purposes upon- the lands described in the petition. Opposition was made in 1876, by the tax payers ,of Bridgeton and the Bridgeton commons, to the levy of
By the act of congress of March 13, 1812, certain outlots and commons were reserved for the support'of ■schools. The legislature passed acts for the sale of these lands and the investment of the proceeds and the ■appropriation of the income to the support of schools. By the act of March 21, 1863 (Acts of 1863, p. 246), all ■the commons, with the inhabitants thereof, belonging to the corporation known as “The Inhabitants of the ■town of Bridgeton” were attached to the town for ■school purposes. By tlie second section, the inhabitants of the common lands have conferred upon them ■all the rights of the inhabiiants of the town in educating their children at the public schools. The school funds belonging to the town and to the inhabitants of the ■commons are consolidated, and put under the management of the trustees of the town. The act says': “And -the said inhabitants of said commons, and their property within the limits of said commons, shall no longer be under the jurisdiction and control of the trustees ■or directors of any other school district for school purposes.”
The legislature, by the act of February 12, 1864 ■(Acts of 1863 and 1864, p. 650), created a corporation by the name of “ The Trustees of the Bridgeton Academy,’-’ to be under the management of nine trustees, six of ■whom are to be residents of the town of Bridgeton, and
The act of March 16, 1870 (Acts of 1870, p. 167), amending the charter of the school, gives the trastees of the town of Bridgeton power “to levy a tax, not exceeding one per centum annually on all taxable property of the town of Bridgeton and the common lands attached to said town * * * for the support of Bridgeton Academy.”
1. The point made that Bridgeton Academy is a private corporation, and, for that reason, taxes cannot be levied to support it, cannot be sustained. When the act creating the corporation was passed, the commons had been attached to the town for school purposes. The act, as a whole, shows clearly that the inhabitants of the town and of the commons are incorporated for school purposes. This case, in this respect, is unlike that of Perryman v. Bethune, 89 Mo. 159. The institute has conferred upon it all the public school funds going to the town and to the district of country known .as the commons, and the children in both districts of country are alike entitled to the benefit of the school. It is one of the common schools of the state, and is designed to carry out in part the public school system of the state, and is a public corporation. 1 Dillon on Municipal Corp. [3 Ed.] sec. 22.
The tenth section of the charter enacts that the children of the town and commons “shall only be charged a small fee, not exceeding fifty cents per month.
2.' The further claim is that the special act incorporating the academy has been repealed. No express repeal is claimed, but the contention is that the special act is repealed by force of general laws. Section 1 of chapter 46, and section 1 of chapter 47, Revised Statutes, 1865, recognize the continued existence of these schools organized under special acts. The same is true of section one of the act of March 21, 1870. Section 15 of that act relates to the board of education or school directors of any city, town, village or district, before that date organized under any general law, and has no application to these schools organized under special acts. The first section of the act of April 26, 1877 (Acts of 1877, p. 407), simply authorizes any city, town or village with the territory attached thereto, to organize into a single school district. There is nothing in the act showing any intention to repeal any special act. Section 7142, Revised Statutes, 1879, likewise provides that any city, town or village may, with the territory attached thereto, be organized into a single school district to be known as school district of--■. That section goes on to say : “And every city, town and village which has heretofore organized under any law of this state, as a board of education, shall hereafter be known and styled school district of - — ,” etc. The legislature, in speaking hereof “aboard of education,” manifestly has reference to boards authorized to be formed under that name by prior general laws. No language is used which can,
The fact that no taxes were levied from 1876 to 1882 cannot change the result.
The judgment is affirmed.
Reference
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