Root v. Board of Education
Root v. Board of Education
Opinion of the Court
On May 26, 1894, the plaintiff, Georg-e A. Root, brought suit in the court of com: mon pleas of Hamilton county, to restrain the defendant, the Board of Education of the school district of Cincinnati, from excluding his son from Woodward high school, the school being-under the supervision and control of the defendant. The plaintiff did not reside in the Cincinnati district, but in a special school district of Columbia township, Hamilton county. Under a resolution that had previously been adopted, the defendant exacted the payment of $17.50 as tuition in advance for the quarter ending July 1, 1894. This the plaintiff refused to pay, claiming the right to have his son admitted without such payment, under the provisions of the act of the legislature passed May 21,1894. There was no objection to the ad
The cause was heard on a demurrer to the petition. The court held the law to be invalid, sustained the demurrer, and dismissed the petition. The only question involved in the case is the validity of the statute. The material sections are as follows:
£< Section 1. That hereafter all bona fide residents of that portion of any county containing a city of the first grade of the first class not within the corporate limits of such city, and not within any school district which maintains a high school with a four years’ course of study of similar character to the high schools of súch city, shall be admitted into and receive instruction in any such high school of such city or school district on the same terms and conditions as to tuition fees and otherwise, as are now or. may hereafter be prescribed for pupils of such schools residing within such city, or school district.
£ £ Sec. 2. The board of education or other proper board of such city or school district shall, after this act shall have been in force one year, and annually thereafter, make an estimate of the additional funds required for the maintenance of such high school under the provisions of this act, and certify such estimate to the commissioners of the respective county, who, in addition to their other powers of taxation, are hereby authorized and directed to assess and levy upon all the taxable property of such portion of said county not within the corporate limits of such city, and not within the limits of any such school district maintaining such a high school a sufficient tax annually to provide such additional funds; provided, that nothing*596 in this act shall be so construed as to render nugatory the stipulations under which any bequest, devise, donation or endowment has heretofore been made or given for the support and maintenance of any such high school. * * * *
“Sec. 3. This act shall take effect and be in force from and after its passage.”
A number of objections are made to the validity of the law. The principal one is to the mode of levying the tax authorized by the second section. The claim is that the provision for levying it is not uniform as required by section 2 article XII of the constitution. It is a tax on property and must therefore, conform to this provision. The section referred to requires the board of education of the city, after the act has been in force for one year, and annually thereafter, to make an estimate of the additional funds that will be required, for the support of the high school under the provisions of the act, and certify the amount to the commissioners of the proper county, who are then directed to assess and levy a sufficient tax to provide such additional funds upon all the taxable property, not of the entire county, but upon such portions of it, not within the corporate limits of such city, and not within the corporate limits of any school dis - trict that maintains a high 'school with a course of study similar in character to the high school of the city.
Now, unless a tax district can be said to be created by this statute, within which all the property subject to taxation is to be assessed for the purpose of raising the additional funds, it is manifestly invalid, for want of uniformity. Field v. Commissioners, 36 Ohio St., 476. It is claimed by the plaintiff that the tax district is not the county,
There is no question but that it would be competent to the legislature to create, or provide for the creation of a special district in any county for the maintenance of a high school. It might embrace the whole county, or a part of it, provided that all property in it-is taxed alike for the maintenance of the school. Such is not this case. The city, through its board determines' the amount of the levy to be made, pays no part of it. Those who have the tax to pay have no voice whatever in determining the amount of it. It signifies nothing to say that the tax »is levied by the commissioners. When the amount has been ascertained
A special district for taxation should, during the operation of the law creating it, be permanent and definite. Here both these characters are wanting. Until the commissioners have made a levy under the law, no one can tell with certainty what property in the county will be assessed and what not; and their determination may be changed by the judgment of some court on the question, whether some district does, or does not, maintain a high school similar in character to that of the particular city. Again, there is nothing- to prevent any district from raising the standard of its high school to that of the particular city, or even above it, in which case the district would be diminished, or, possibly left without any property in it subject to taxation. These considerations show that any attempt to liken the provisions of this statute to the creation of a special taxing district is illusory, and wholly fails of its object.
This is not a case in which the invalid portion of the law may be rejected without affecting the entire statute. The provisions of the first and second sections are dependent. We cannot assume that the legislature would have authorized the children of nonresidents to attend the high school of the particular city, as is done by the first section, without the provision'as to taxation, contained in the second. The invalidity of this section emasculates the law and renders the entire act invalid. The conclusion here reached makes it unnecessary to consider the other objections to the statute.
Judgment affirmed.
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