Lyon v. Strock

Per Curiam,

The decree dismissing the bill in this case is affirmed on the following excerpts from the well-considered opinion of the court below: “This is a taxpayer’s bill, brought by the plaintiff on behalf of himself and other citizens, praying for a perpetual injunction restraining the school board of the school district of the Borough of Bedford from proceeding, in the manner prescribed by law, to determine, by a vote of the qualified electors of the borough, whether or not the indebtedness of the school district should be increased to an amount not exceeding $50,000, for the purpose of erecting a high school building. The facts are undisputed; the total assessed valuation for the territory embraced within the limits of the borough......for the year 1921 is $860,159; the net indebtedness......of the borough......is $47,700; the net indebtedness of the school, district, which is coextensive in territory with the borough, is $7,500. Plaintiff contends that, in calculating and determining the limitation upon the borrowing power of the school district, the debt of the borough and the debt of the district are to be taken collectively. By that method the indebtedness of this, territorial district is $55,200. Article IX, section 8, of the Constitution of the State limits the debt of any municipality to a sum not exceeding 7% of the assessed value of taxable property therein; the maximum limit of the borrowing capacity of the governmental agencies [here involved], based upon this theory, is reached, therefore, at $60,211.13. It is obvious...... that, with a borrowing capacity of $60,211.13 and an indebtedness of $55,200, an increase of the municipal *543debt by $50,000 would, if the position taken by plaintiff is sound, be inhibited by this constitutional provision. If, however, the indebtedness of the borough and the indebtedness of the school district are to be considered distributively, and not collectively, then it is equally obvious that the school district, with an indebtedness of $7,500, and with a borrowing capacity limited to $60,-211.13, has a right to increase the district debt by the amount proposed, and the impending action by the school board is legal......A school district' is [an] agency for the administration of an important function of the State, as provided in article X of the Constitution; for the purpose of conducting this work, the school district is regarded as a quasi municipal corporation: School District of the City of Erie v. Fuess, 98 Pa. 600, 606; Ford v. Kendall Sch. Bor. District, 121 Pa. 543, 547; ......Pittsburgh v. Sterrett Subdistrict School, 204 Pa. 635, 645......Whether or not a school district is to be regarded as but a quasi municipality, it has been placed, nevertheless, in exactly the same category with true municipalities in determining its borrowing capacity; this is absolutely clear from the language, of the first clause of section 8, article IX, of the Constitution...... as follows: ‘The debt of any county, city, borough, township, school district, or other municipality or incorporated district, except as provided herein......shall never exceed seven per centum upon the assessed value of the taxable property therein.’ If, therefore, the school district is to be regarded as a separate and distinct municipality, for the purpose of limiting its borrowing capacity, then we are satisfied that there is to be applied to it this doctrine, held by the courts of many of the states, that its debts and the debts of another municipality occupying the same territory are to be regarded distributively and not collectively......Tuttle v. Polk & Hubbell, 92 Iowa 433, 441; Campbell v. City of Indianapolis, 155 Ind. 186, 211, 213; State ex rel. v. Tomahawk Common Council, 96 Wisconsin 73, 94; Wilson v. Board *544of Trustees, 133 Ill. 443, 476; Kennebec Water Dist. v. City of Waterville, 96 Maine 234, 255;......Ex parte City of Newport, 141 Ky. 329, 37 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1034 (see p. 1108); Adams v. East River Savings Inst., 136 N. Y. 52, 57; Board of Education of City of Huron v. National Life Ins. Co., 94 Fed. Rep. 324, 327;...... Dillon on Municipal Corporations, 5th ed., vol. 1, p. 346, s. 192. The principle announced in the foregoing cases, and as to which we find no contradictory opinion anywhere, is thus put in Ruling Case Law, vol. 19, page 987: ‘It sometimes happens that there are two governmental bodies exercising different public functions within precisely the same boundaries, as when the boundaries of a city are coincident with those of......a school district. In such cases, if each body is a distinct and independent corporation, its indebtedness should be reckoned separately, but, if one of the bodies is not a separate corporation, but merely a board or department of the other, its indebtedness must be included as part of the indebtedness of the. corporation.’ We have been referred to no case in Pennsylvania where this question has been squarely decided and by diligent' search we have been unable to find any. McGuire v. Phila., 245 Pa. 287, 294, cited by the learned counsel for plaintiff, is not authority for his position; in that case, part of the debt assumed by the school district, after the passage of the Act of May 18, 1911, P. L. 309, still remained an obligation of the city, — the general indebtedness of that municipality was not reduced by the Act of 1911. While the school district had agreed to pay this debt, it still remained part of the financial obligations of Philadelphia. In Long v. Cheltenham Twp. Sch. Dist., 269 Pa. 472, 475, no more was decided than that the word ‘municipality,’ as used in section 15, article IX, of the Constitution, when taken in connection with its context, was not intended to include a school district.”

As consistent with the foregoing excerpts from the opinion of the learned court below, we call attention to *545the following provisions of the School Code: “The several [school] districts......shall be and hereby are vested, as bodies corporate, with all necessary powers to enable them to carry ont the provisions of this act” (Act of May 18, 1911, P. L. 309, 314, article I, section 119). “The board of school directors in any school district ......in order to......erect......any school building,......may create and incur an indebtedness against any such school district, and issue bonds to secure the same, for any and all such purposes, or may create and incur an increase of any existing indebtedness against any such school district......to any amount that the total indebtedness of such, school district......shall never exceed seven per centum upon the assessed value of the taxable property for school purposes therein”: Act of June 4, 1915, P. L. 844, 845.

The decree is affirmed at cost of appellant.