NOTICE: This opinion is subject to motions for reargument under V.R.A.P. 40 as well as formal
revision before publication in the Vermont Reports. Readers are requested to notify the Reporter
of Decisions by email at: JUD.Reporter@vermont.gov or by mail at: Vermont Supreme Court, 109
State Street, Montpelier, Vermont 05609-0801, of any errors in order that corrections may be made
before this opinion goes to press.
2018 VT 117
No. 2018-054
Robert A. Skiff, Jr. et al. Supreme Court
On Appeal from
v. Superior Court, Chittenden Unit,
Civil Division
South Burlington School District June Term, 2018
Robert A. Mello, J.
Paul S. Gillies of Tarrant, Gillies & Richardson, Montpelier, for Plaintiffs-Appellees.
Pietro J. Lynn and Sean M. Toohey of Lynn, Lynn, Blackman & Manitsky, P.C., Burlington, for
Defendant-Appellant.
Garrett A. Baxter, Montpelier, for Amicus Curiae Vermont League of Cities and Towns.
Richard T. Cassidy of Rich Cassidy Law, South Burlington, for Amicus Curiae Vermont School
Boards Association.
PRESENT: Reiber, C.J., Skoglund, Robinson, Eaton and Carroll, JJ.
¶ 1. CARROLL, J. Following the South Burlington School District’s decision to
discontinue the “Rebels” name for the District’s athletic teams, a group of residents in South
Burlington presented a petition for a district-wide vote on whether to reinstate the name. The
District refused to include the item in a district-wide vote and residents appealed, alleging that the
District violated their rights under the Vermont Constitution and seeking an order compelling the
District to include the item on the ballot. The trial court denied the District’s motion to dismiss,
concluding that residents presented sufficient facts to support their request. The District then filed
this interlocutory appeal. We conclude that neither the applicable statutes nor the Vermont
Constitution compels the District to put the petitions to a district-wide vote. Therefore, we reverse
the court’s order and remand for entry of judgment for the District.
¶ 2. The facts, when viewed in the light most favorable to residents, are as follows.1
Students in South Burlington attended Burlington High School until the 1960s when South
Burlington opened its own high school. The new high school adopted the name “Rebels” for its
sports teams after it was used during a game that South Burlington played against Burlington,
where students formerly attended school. Although the name did not originate from a connection
to the Civil War, over the years, individual students at times waved the Confederate flag at high-
school football games. The practice was banned by school officials, but some individuals
continued to use the name “Rebels” to express racist attitudes and beliefs at the school.
¶ 3. In 2015, there was a request that the District cease using the name “Rebels” because
of the associated racist bigotry and intolerance. The request was included as an action item on the
school-board agenda and the school board engaged in a discussion regarding the topic. Some
board members expressed their view that the moniker was not meant to be racist, but to symbolize
those who are critical thinkers and do not necessarily follow the mainstream. After consideration,
1
In addition to the pleadings, the trial court considered affidavits and exhibits filed by the
parties and testimony taken at a hearing on residents’ motion to stay in assessing the motion to
dismiss. By considering these materials, the court essentially converted the motion to dismiss to
one for summary judgment. When the court considers matters outside the pleadings in deciding a
motion to dismiss, a party is entitled to have the motion treated as one for summary judgment and
to be accorded reasonable time to present pertinent and material matters under Vermont Rules of
Civil Procedure 12(c) and 56. Condosta v. Condosta, 139 Vt. 545, 546-47, 431 A.2d 494, 495
(1981) (per curiam); see V.R.C.P. 12(c) (explaining that when matters outside the pleadings are
considered, “the motion shall be treated as one for summary judgment and disposed of as provided
in Rule 56”). Because the parties were provided with the required notice and an opportunity to
respond, there is no need to remand to the trial court to review the motion a second time. On
appeal, we apply the summary-judgment standard in reviewing the trial court’s order and we give
residents, as the nonmoving party, “the benefit of all reasonable doubts and inferences.” Buxton
v. Springfield Lodge No. 679, Loyal Order of Moose, Inc., 2014 VT 52, ¶ 2, 196 Vt. 486, 99 A.3d
171 (quotation omitted). Our recitation of the facts when viewed in this manner is not an
endorsement of their accuracy.
2
the board reached a consensus to keep the name, but asked the superintendent to suggest ways to
rebrand the name to express a positive connotation and not be misunderstood as an endorsement
of the Confederacy or slavery. The superintendent presented five recommendations in a January
2017 memorandum, but the Board took no action at that time.
¶ 4. At the school board’s meeting on February 1, 2017, the superintendent reported that
he was recommending that the “Rebel identifier” be retired. He explained that the
recommendation was based on, among other things, shared stories from students, staff, and
families, and research about the impact of racial bias on children. He stated that biases existed in
the community and that the “Rebels” name felt exclusive to members of the student community.
Many residents attended this meeting and it was live-streamed by the local newspaper. Following
the superintendent’s presentation, the board voted to discontinue using the “Rebels” name.
¶ 5. Soon thereafter, a group of District voters signed a petition requesting a district-
wide vote on whether to retain the “Rebels” name. The ballot question read: “Should the name of
all South Burlington School District sports teams be the ‘South Burlington Rebels’ and should the
South Burlington City Council and South Burlington School Board be required to make official,
retain, and maintain this name for all South Burlington School District sports teams?” The petition
was signed by more than five percent of the District’s voters and presented to the school board.
On May 10, 2017, the school board considered the petition and declined to include the question
on the ballot for a vote.
¶ 6. Residents filed an appeal in the Chittenden Superior Court Civil Division under
Vermont Rule of Civil Procedure 75, alleging that the refusal violated the right to “instruct” in
Chapter I, Article 20 of the Vermont Constitution and seeking a declaratory judgment that a vote
on the petition was required. The District moved to dismiss the action on the ground that the
school board had discretion not to warn the petitions because they did not concern business
delegated to the voters.
3
¶ 7. The court determined that the purpose of Article 20 was to “assure that the people
will have the opportunity to play a central role in determining what is in their own best interests,
that their elected representatives will know what their constituents expect of them, and that the
Legislature will be available to redress grievances.” The court recounted historical practices of
sending instructions to representatives, both nationally and in the state. The court noted that in
Vermont at the municipal level voters gathered on town meeting day to instruct their
representatives. The court interpreted this Court’s prior case law on Article 20 as holding that a
school board can constitutionally refuse to warn an advisory article if the article “does not at all
relate to school district business or any matter falling within school district authority.” The court
construed the right to instruct as a collective, rather than individual, right based on the fact that the
right to instruct was paired with the right to assemble and concluded that the sole means to
effectuate this collective right in a location without a formal town meeting was through a district-
wide vote. The court did not consider whether Article 20 is self-executing because it concluded
that several statutes, including 17 V.S.A. § 2642(a)(3)(A), were enacted to effectuate the
constitutional protection. Because the facts construed in the light most favorable to residents
showed that the ballot item related to District business and the petition was signed by more than
five percent of the voters, the court concluded that residents had presented sufficient facts that, if
proven, would entitle them to mandamus relief to compel the District to place the issue on the
ballot. Therefore, the trial court denied the motion to dismiss.
¶ 8. The trial court then granted the District’s motion for interlocutory appeal and stayed
the trial court proceedings pending this appeal.
¶ 9. “On appeal, this Court reviews a motion for summary judgment de novo,
employing the same standard as applied by the trial court.” Provost v. Fletcher Allen Health Care,
Inc., 2005 VT 115, ¶ 10, 179 Vt. 545, 890 A.2d 97 (mem.). A party is entitled to summary
4
judgment if “there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to
judgment as a matter of law.” V.R.C.P. 56(a).
¶ 10. Residents are seeking relief in the nature of mandamus, which is a command from
a court requiring an official to perform a specific act. Wool v. Menard, 2018 VT 23, ¶ 11, __ Vt.
__, 185 A.3d 577. Mandamus is available only when “the right sought to be enforced is certain
and clear.” Royalton Taxpayers’ Protective Ass’n v. Wassmansdorf, 128 Vt. 153, 159, 260 A.2d
203, 207 (1969). The party seeking such relief must demonstrate that it “has a clear, legal right to
the performance of the particular duty at the hands of the [official], and that the law affords no
other adequate remedy.” Id.
¶ 11. We conclude that the District did not have a duty imposed by law to include the
petitioned article in a district-wide vote. See Bargman v. Brewer, 142 Vt. 367, 369-70, 454 A.2d
1253, 1255 (1983) (explaining that mandamus is to enforce “a simple and definite duty, imposed
by law, and arising under conditions admitted or proved to exist” (quotation omitted)). Because
the article involved nonbinding, advisory questions outside of the electorate’s authority to grant or
refuse at town meeting, the District was not required to present the article to voters under 17 V.S.A.
§§ 2642-2643. Further, we conclude that the “right to instruct” in Article 20 of the Vermont
Constitution is an individual right and does not require the District to present a petitioned advisory
article to voters. Therefore, we reverse the trial court’s order and remand for entry of judgment in
favor of the District.
I. Statute
¶ 12. Residents do not assert a violation of 17 V.S.A. § 2642 and § 2643 directly, but
their entire argument is based on their assertion that the statutory provisions are meant to effectuate
their constitutional rights. Residents argue that they have a constitutional right to use 17 V.S.A.
§ 2642(a) and § 2643(a) to bring nonbinding petitioned articles for a district-wide vote because
5
otherwise they assert that there is no mechanism for them to effectuate their constitutional right to
instruct the Board as provided in Article 20 of the Vermont Constitution.
¶ 13. In a subchapter in Title 17 entitled “Town Meetings and Local Elections in
General,” there are statutory provisions regarding the warning and notice required in advance of
town meeting. The statute states that the warning for an election must, in separate articles,
“specifically indicate the business to be transacted” and “shall also contain any article or articles
requested by a petition signed by at least five percent of the voters of the municipality.” 17 V.S.A.
§ 2642(a)(3)(A). These laws regarding petitioned articles and town voting also apply to school
districts. 16 V.S.A. § 551.
¶ 14. This Court has on several occasions considered the circumstances in which the
statute obligates a town to put petitioned articles to a district-wide vote. In sum, those cases,
described in more detail below, hold that a municipality (or a school board) has discretion to refuse
to include a petitioned article in a town-meeting vote if the subject matter of the article concerns a
matter outside of the voters’ authority.
¶ 15. We begin with Royalton Taxpayers’ Protective Association v. Wassmansdorf, 128
Vt. 153, 260 A.2d 203 (1969), in which the petitioners filed suit seeking an order directing the
town selectboard to warn a special town meeting under a prior version of § 2642(a).2 The
petitioners argued that the town was required by statute to hold a special town meeting for a vote
on whether to reject the grand list submitted by the town listers because the matter had been duly
petitioned by five percent of the voters. This Court noted that the power to create the grand list is
given to the listers, and the petitioners had not presented authority “to show that a town meeting
has the power to reject a grand list, once the same has been lodged by the listers with the town
2
Wassmansdorf and cases following it in the late 1960s and early 1970s involved a prior
version of the statute, but “the language of those statutes was sufficiently similar to 17 V.S.A.
§ 2642(a) to warrant a similar interpretation here.” Clift v. City of S. Burlington, 2007 VT 3, ¶ 6
n.*, 181 Vt. 571, 917 A.2d 483 (mem.).
6
clerk, which the article impliedly admits was done.” Id. at 159, 260 A.2d at 206-07. This Court
held that the intent of the statute was not to compel a special meeting for a vote that would be for
a “useless, frivolous or unlawful purpose.” Id. at 160, 260 A.2d at 207. Therefore, we concluded
that the statute required a vote on a petition “when the purpose stated in such petition set forth a
clear right which was within the province of the town meeting to grant or refuse through its vote.”
Id. Because “the resulting votes [from the petitioned special meeting] would be nugatory,
unavailing and void of any determination of right,” we denied the request for mandamus relief.
¶ 16. In Whiteman v. Brown, 128 Vt. 384, 264 A.2d 793 (1970), voters presented a
petition to the school district, seeking to hold a special meeting to hold a vote on whether to retain
an auditor. This Court explained that the statutory “duty to warn relates to ‘business to be
transacted’ ” and therefore if an article does not present proper business for a town meeting the
statute does not compel its inclusion. Id. at 387, 264 A.2d at 795 (quoting statute in effect at that
time). Because the authority to employ auditors was a matter within the district’s, rather than the
voters’, control, this Court denied the voters’ request for mandamus.
¶ 17. In Pominville v. Addison Central Supervisory Union-Middlebury Union High
School District #3, 154 Vt. 299, 575 A.2d 196 (1990), residents petitioned the school district to
include an article proposing a lower budget than the one proposed by the board. The board
declined to include the article on the warning for the town-meeting vote. Residents then filed suit
seeking to compel the inclusion of the article. This Court concluded that the board properly refused
to include the article because there was an existing process for rejecting and revising the school
budget and that including the alternate proposal for voters’ consideration would mean the review
process in the statute would be “ignored and the will of the Legislature defeated.” Id. at 302, 575
A.2d at 197.
¶ 18. More recently, in Clift v. City of South Burlington, 2007 VT 3, this Court reiterated
the discretionary authority granted to towns and districts regarding petitioned articles under the
7
statute. In that case, city voters sought an order requiring the city to include an advisory article
urging the city council to ask state legislators to enact legislation concerning parental notification
prior to abortion for minors. The city declined to include the article and the voters appealed. We
cited Wassmansdorf and its progeny for the proposition that the statute compels municipalities to
present an article to voters “only when ‘the purpose stated in such petition set[s] forth a clear right
which [i]s within the province of the town meeting to grant or refuse through its vote.’ ” Id. ¶ 6
(quoting Wassmansdorf, 128 Vt. at 160, 260 A.2d at 207). We concluded that the petition sought
in Clift was indistinguishable from these other cases because neither the city’s voters nor the city
council was obligated to advise the Legislature on pending legislation. Id. ¶ 7. We emphasized
that “[a]llowing the City discretion to warn advisory articles, such as the one presented by
petitioners, furthers the Council’s ability to balance the efficient transaction of city business with
the provision of a local forum for discussing state and national issues.” Id.
¶ 19. Taken together, these cases demonstrate that the statutory duty of the board to warn
items concerning the “business to be transacted,” 17 V.S.A. § 2642(a)(2), means that petitioned
items of business must be within the authority of voters to decide at town meeting. In the context
of a school district, the petitioned items of business must be within the authority of voters to decide
at a district meeting.
¶ 20. Residents argue that the issue they sought to put to voters is consistent with
Wassmansdorf because the advisory vote would inform the school board and thus would not be
“useless, frivolous or unlawful.” 128 Vt. at 160, 260 A.2d at 207. They contend that the reason
the advisory petition in Clift was not required to be put to voters was because it was unrelated to
town business, not because the result of the advisory vote would have had no binding effect.
Accepting this argument, the trial court distinguished Wassmansdorf and the cases following it,
explaining residents “are not seeking to have the voters take an action that, under the law, can only
be taken by someone else. To the contrary, [residents] seek only an opportunity for the voters to
8
instruct their own School Board to do something that the School Board clearly has the authority to
do, namely, change the name of its sports teams back to the ‘Rebels.’ ”
¶ 21. This is too broad a reading of the word “useless” used in Wassmansdorf. The case
explains that the town had no duty to hold a special meeting where the results would be “useless,
frivolous or unlawful” and further elaborates that a town cannot be compelled through mandamus
to include petition items that would produce results that are “nugatory, unavailing and void of any
determination of right.” 128 Vt. at 160, 260 A.2d at 207. This latter language clarifies that
“useless” as used in the case means something that would have no binding effect. In other words,
officials cannot be compelled to include items for a town vote where the result of the vote is not
legally binding because it is beyond the authority of the voters to decide at town meeting.
¶ 22. This interpretation is consistent with the construction of the statutory language “the
business to be transacted,” 17 V.S.A. § 2642(a)(2), in the several other cases described above that
limit the petition requirement to matters over which voters have authority to act. The statute does
not include a right to include articles for a vote over which voters may have an opinion, but
ultimately do not have the power to decide. Certainly, a town or school district can include a
petitioned, nonbinding, advisory question on the ballot, but it is not required to do so under the
statute. This is particularly true in an action for mandamus relief where relief is available only
when “the right sought to be enforced is certain and clear.” Wassmansdorf, 128 Vt. at 159, 260
A.2d at 207. To grant mandamus, the right to include the matter for a vote must be clear.3
¶ 23. To suggest that “usefulness” is the touchstone of the legal test, and that an advisory
vote is not “useless” because it will inform town officials, would lead to a result at odds with our
3
In Baird v. Town of Berlin, 126 Vt. 348, 231 A.2d 110 (1967), a petition was filed to
hold a special meeting on the issue of whether to reconsider a prior vote authorizing purchase of
new land and this Court concluded that the selectboard was bound to act on the petition under the
prior version of the statute. This holding is entirely consistent with our construction of the modern
statute in that the matter to be voted on in Baird—purchasing land for building a school—was
within the control of voters.
9
prior cases in which the petitions could have similarly been viewed as giving useful information
about a topic to elected town officials. This point is well illustrated by Kirchner v. Giebink, 150
Vt. 172, 552 A.2d 372 (1988), in which the plaintiffs submitted a petition for a town vote on
whether to nullify the selectboard’s decisions regarding the town sewer system. Like residents’
claim in this case, the petition could have provided information to the selectboard on how the town
voters felt about the town sewer project, but this Court held that the selectboard acted within its
authority in declining to include the petitioned item for a vote. Relying on Wassmandorf, this
Court explained that the town selectboard did not have a duty to call a meeting on the plaintiffs’
petition because the result of any vote would have no effect. “If the [selectboard] had the power
to make the agreement, then it is legally binding and the voters could not undo it. Thus, the meeting
would be useless under Wassmansdorf.” Id. at 178, 552 A.2d at 376. This illustrates that “useless”
as used in Wassmansdorf means without legal effect.
¶ 24. Here, the item—the name of the District’s sports teams—that residents sought to
include in a district-wide vote is not a matter within voters’ authority to decide at a district-wide
meeting. The powers of the electorate are delineated by statute and include discrete items,
including voting for the annual salaries for school-board members and authorizing the amount of
money to be expended. 16 V.S.A. § 562. The electorate is neither given authority to specifically
designate the name of school teams nor general authority over that area. In contrast, the school
board has broader, more general powers, including determining “the educational policies of the
school district” and taking “any action that is required for the sound administration of the school
district.” Id. § 563(1), (2). Residents recognize that the power to select a moniker for the school
sports teams lies with the school board and have characterized their petition as seeking a
nonbinding, advisory vote on the issue.4 Because the petition sought a vote on an item that was
4
The language of the petition itself appears mandatory and does not indicate that the vote
is intended to be advisory or nonbinding. The petition includes the question “Should the name of
10
outside of the voters’ authority to decide and its result would have no binding effect, the District
was not required by statute to include it in a district-wide vote, but could have elected to do so if
it wished.
II. Constitutional Right to Instruct
¶ 25. The Vermont Constitution includes a “Right to assemble, instruct and petition,”
which provides “That the people have a right to assemble together to consult for their common
good—to instruct their Representatives—and to apply to the Legislature for redress of grievances,
by address, petition or remonstrance.” Vt. Const. ch. I, art. 20. Residents argue that even if the
statute itself does not compel the District to put the petitioned article to a vote, the District was
required to include it to effectuate residents’ right to instruct in Article 20 of the Vermont
Constitution. We conclude that Article 20 does not provide a collective right to vote on advisory
articles that “instruct” a municipality or school board, and to the extent that Article 20 contains an
individual right to inform one’s representatives, residents have failed to allege any deprivation of
that right in this case.5
¶ 26. In Clift v. City of South Burlington, the voters argued that even if the Town was
not required by statute to include their advisory petitioned article, “the City’s action in refusing to
warn the advisory article was a violation of petitioners’ right to assemble under Chapter I, Article
all South Burlington School District sports teams be the ‘South Burlington Rebels’ and should the
South Burlington City Council and South Burlington School Board be required to make official,
retain, and maintain this name for all South Burlington School District sports teams?” (Emphasis
added.) The petition then explains that a yes vote means “The name of all South Burlington School
District sports teams will be ‘South Burlington Rebels.’ ” Nonetheless, for purposes of resolving
the motion for summary judgment, we accept residents’ characterization of the petition as
advisory.
5
Amicus curiae the Vermont League of Cities and Towns argues that the right to instruct
in Article 20 applies solely to informing the representatives of the General Assembly because the
constitutional provision refers to “Representatives” with an upper-case “R” as opposed to
“representatives” with a lower-case “r,” which is used in other places in the Vermont Constitution.
Because we conclude that Article 20 does not provide an enforceable right to compel a district-
wide vote in this case, we do not reach this question.
11
20 of the Vermont Constitution.” 2007 VT 3, ¶ 9. This Court summarily rejected the voters’
argument that “a town-meeting vote on a petitioned advisory article is a constitutional right.” Id.
¶ 27. Nonetheless, residents in this case attempt to distinguish Clift and assert that the
right to instruct in Article 20 includes the right to have a district-wide vote on petitioned,
nonbinding articles related to town business.6 Residents assert that Article 20 guarantees access
to elected officials and that because some towns do not have a traditional town meeting at which
residents can discuss “other business,” there must be an opportunity to instruct officials through
inclusion of nonbinding articles in a district-wide vote. Residents invite us to look at various
historical sources to reach this conclusion. See Chittenden Town Sch. Dist. v. Dep’t of Educ., 169
Vt. 310, 320, 738 A.2d 539, 547 (1999) (explaining that in construing state constitutional
provisions, this Court relies on several sources of information: “examination of the text, historical
analysis, sibling state constructions of similar provisions, and analysis of economic and
sociological materials”).
¶ 28. We need not delve deeply into the contours of the right to instruct in Article 20 to
conclude that it does not entitle residents to mandamus relief in this case. To the extent that an
enforceable right exists under Article 20, it is an individual right and not a collective one. This is
evident from the language of the Vermont Constitution and our prior cases. Article 20 is part of
Chapter I of the Vermont Constitution entitled “A Declaration of the Rights of the Inhabitants of
the State of Vermont.” This heading signifies that the rights that follow are personal to Vermont’s
inhabitants. Moreover, Article 20 begins with the preface “That the people have a right to,” which
is indicative of a personal right. Indeed, we have construed other articles in Chapter I, which begin
6
Residents’ constitutional argument is intertwined with their statutory argument. They
have not fully explained how the statutory requirements relate to the constitutional rights alleged.
For example, they offer no answer to the question of whether the statutory requirement that a
petition be signed by five percent of the voters is also the threshold to trigger the constitutional
right alleged.
12
with the same language “That the people have a right to,” as providing individual rights. See State
v. Rheaume, 2005 VT 106, ¶ 8, 179 Vt. 39, 889 A.2d 711 (considering whether law enforcement
violated defendant’s individual right to be free from unreasonable intrusions under Article 11);
Shields v. Gerhart, 163 Vt. 219, 227, 658 A.2d 924, 930 (1995) (concluding that Article 13 “sets
forth a single, specific right of the people to make themselves heard, a fundamental characteristic
of democratic government”). Finally, to the extent our prior cases have construed rights embodied
in Article 20, this Court has viewed the rights provided therein as individual ones. See, e.g., In re
Devenport, 129 Vt. 546, 559-60, 283 A.2d 452, 458-59 (1971) (holding that school board’s
decision to fire teacher because she was involved in assisting students in drafting petition to seek
permission to walk out violated her individual right to petition government guaranteed by First
Amendment to U.S. Constitution and Article 20 of Vermont Constitution).
¶ 29. Residents have not alleged that the District has denied them individually the right
to instruct their school-board members. Indeed, the facts construed in a light most favorable to
residents demonstrate that residents individually had many opportunities to instruct individual
board members and the District as a whole on their opinion about the “Rebels” name. Residents
also have not shown how the relief that they are seeking—inclusion of their advisory article in a
district-wide vote—will effectuate their individual right. Therefore, even assuming that Article
20’s right to “instruct” is self-executing, we conclude that it does not entitle residents to the
mandamus relief they are seeking.
¶ 30. Residents’ desire to inform their school board on matters the school board is vested
with deciding does not equate to a right to a district-wide, advisory vote on the issue. The Vermont
Constitution creates a representative, not a direct, democracy. See Vt. Const. ch. II, § 2 (“The
Supreme Legislative power shall be exercised by a Senate and a House of Representatives.”). The
power of the people is delegated to government officials, who are “at all times, in a legal way,
accountable to them.” Vt. Const. ch. I, art. 6. In the case of local school boards, “school directors
13
are public officials who derive their power from the law.” Buttolph v. Osborn, 119 Vt. 116, 119,
119 A.2d 686, 688 (1956). The right of individuals to directly vote on and decide issues is limited
in this representative form of government. If school officials are acting within the powers
designated to them by the Legislature, they have discretion to act as they deem best. Here, the
Board had discretion whether to submit the advisory ballot item to a district-wide vote. The
recourse for voters is not through petition, but election. If the public is dissatisfied with the
performance of school directors, “[t]hey may, in due course, replace their school directors at the
end of their respective terms.” Id. at 123, 119 A.2d at 690; see 16 V.S.A. § 423 (providing that
“electorate” votes to elect directors of school board).
Reversed and remanded for entry of judgment for defendant.
FOR THE COURT:
Associate Justice
14