Court Opinion

ID: 6543706
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-19 22:17:52.787535+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:55:54.416817
License: Public Domain

Bunn, C. J. This proceeding was commenced by petition on the part of appellee, in the Scott county court, at its July term, 1895, against appellant, for a ■distribution of funds alleged to be in the treasury of the county to the credit of appellant, but which, it was alleged, belonged in fact to appellee in part, and were the subject of apportionment between appellant and appellee districts. The prayer of the petition was granted by the county court, and an order of apportionment entered, from which respondent appealed to the circuit court, where the judgment of the county court was sustained, and judgment entered accordingly. Prom this judgment, also, the respondent, district No. 15, appealed to this court. On the third Saturday in May, 1894, as the law provided, the qualified electors of School District No. 15, as then constituted, met and, among other things, voted a school tax to defray the expenses of a school for a portion of the ensuing school year. It appears from the record that, at the time of said election, the tax thus voted was estimated to be sufficient to produce the sum of $800, which, added to the school revenue to be derived from other sources, and soon to come in, amounted in the aggregate to the estimated sum of $1,200, estimated to be sufficient to defray the expenses of operating the schools for six months. Presumably, the directors of appellant district No. 15, in compliance with the law (section 7049 of Sand. & H. Dig.), made their estimate to the annual meeting of the district on the said third Saturday in May, 1894, of the expenses of the district for that year, including the expenses of a school for the period of three months for •the next year, after deducting the probable amount of school moneys to be apportioned (the state fund and so forth), and also submitted an estimate of the expenses per month of continuing the school beyond the term of three months; and an estimate of whatever else might, be necessary for the comfort and advancement of said school. These estimates are required to be made by the directors to the assembled electors of the district at the-time of the annual meeting aforesaid, to the end that the electors may be the better enabled to vote intelligently on the subject of how long the school should continue during the year, and the rate of taxation necessary to-insure the desired object. These estimates therefore form the basis — the only basis — for the taxation thus sought to be had upon the property of the district. In September, 1894, the directors of appellant district contracted with a sufficient number of teachers, and during the term expended other funds sufficient to have the school continue for the period aforesaid, and these incidental expenses and contracts for the teaching force absorbed nearly all the revenues which actually come into the county treasury to the credit of appellant district. The school was taught, beginning the latter part of September, 1894, and closing in March,* 1895, having been patronized and attended by students residing in the town of Waldron and the adjacent territory included in said district No. 15, although the record shows a portion of the children in the town of Waldron attended the school conducted under the auspices of the friends of appellee school district a portion of the year. It appears that the appellant district No. 15, before the formation of appellee separate school district of Waldron, included all the territory, no more, no less, afterwards included in both districts; that is to say School District No. 15 was the original district, which included, besides a suburban territory, the town of Waldron. When the annual school election at which the tax aforesaid was voted bn the third Saturday in May, 1894, was held, the special School District of Waldron had no existence, and of course it did not enter into the estimates, except as it was a part of the original district No. 15, and the tax was voted in the name of the latter and for its benefit, and was so extended on the tax books against the property of the original district, and, it appears, was collected and turned into the treasury to the credit of said district No. 15, to be drawn out upon the warrant of its directors. It appears also from the record that the appellee district, the special School District of Waldron, was organized on the 7th day of July, 1894, and that, at the instance of certain persons in Waldron and in the remainder of district No. 15, the attorney general of the state instituted proceedings in the nature of quo warranto against the special district to have its organization declared invalid, and that, upon final hearing on appeal, this court, in . January, 1895, held the organization of the special School District of Waldron to be valid. Beavers v. State, 60 Ark. 124. The present proceeding, although begun in the summer of 1895, has for its object the.apportionment by the county court of the entire current revenues of School District No. 15, derived from taxation-and otherwise, as aforesaid, for the school year of 1894-1895, and is based upon section 6992 of Sand. & H. Dig., which reads as follows, to wit: “In case there be a surplus fund on hand at the time of the formation of said (new) district, it shall be entitled to a proportionate part of said fund, the same to be ascertained and determined by the county court of the county in which said new district may be created, as in the judgment of said court may be considered right and proper.” This section, we conceive, is made applicable to special school districts, as well as to common school districts, by the provisions of section 7113 of Sand. & H. Dig. In the case of the organization,‘by the county court, of a new district out of the territory of an old one, it will be seen from the statute quoted that it is only the sur-plus, or funds in excess of what is reasonablj7 necessary to operate the schools of the old district, that are subject to apportionment by the county court clothed in such case with power to do what is right and proper in the premises. The tax voted by the electors of the original district No. 15, on the third Saturday in May, 1894 — the annual school meeting — became a source of revenue to that district to be appropriated to the objects named by the electors of that district, and subject alone to be drawn upon by its directors for such designated purposes. There was no other contingency than such as might arise from changing and varying valuation of property on the tax books. The report of the election presumably was duly made to the county court, and that court had no discretion in the matter. Its duty was to ascertain the rate voted by the electors of the district, and then cause the extension to be made on the tax books — a purely ministerial function, refusing to perform which it. doubtless could have been compelled to perform. Maddox v. Neal, 45 Ark. 121. Equally incumbent upon the directors of School District No. 15 was it to see that the school was taught as directed by the electors, and consequently to make all necessary contracts with teachers, and to .pay incidental expenses that might become necessary to attain the object in view. When the tax was placed on the tax books — “levied,” as it is termed, it related back to the election on. the subject, and took effect from that event, in so far as it concerned the interest of the district and the conduct of the officers managing and controlling its affairs. The directors, after the election, might anticipate the revenue thus to be derived, in making contracts with teachers and .in making contracts for other things pertaining to the conduct of the schools for the current term. In fact, such is nearly alwáys a necessity. The appellee never in fact became an operative organization until its organization was declared to be valid by this court in January, 1895, a little before the school of the old district No. 15, would close. The statute authorizing the county court to apportion a surplus of the common fund on the formation of. new district, which we have quoted, makes only the surplus fund on hand apportionable by the county court. The fund sought by the petition of appellee to be apportioned is not a surplus fund. On the contrary, it is the fund voted, collected and set apart to sustain the school for the current year, of School District No. 15, against which and on the faith of which the directors had the right to contract and obligate themselves officially; and to that extent the fund was already' devoted, and must be appropriated to the faithful performance of these contracts and obligations; and to that extent they are not surplus funds, but funds legitimately pledged and from the beginning bound. Our opinion is, therefore, that if there remained a surplus or excess of the funds derived as aforesaid in the county treasury, after all the expenses of the year’s school had been paid, that surplus, whatever it might be, should be apportioned as provided in the section quoted, for that, and that alone, is to be regarded as the surplus referred to therein. Reversed and remanded. Riddick, T., being absent, did not participate.