In re School Code of 1919

The following opinion was transmitted to the Governor:

Hon. John G. Townsend, Governor—Sir:

In execution of the purpose indicated in our letter to you of September third, 1919, we sat in Dover on September twelfth to give to any attorney the opportunity to be heard and heard arguments for and against the constitutionality of the recent legislation called the School Code made by several of the able lawyers of the State, and have carefully considered the subject matter laid before us, and herein submit our views and conclusion.

The act in question was passed pursuant to the mandate contained in section 1 of article 10 of the Constitution.

[1, 2] To be constitutional it must have been general. To be general it must provide for free public schools for all of the children of the state. A general law providing for the establishment and maintenance of a system, uniform or otherwise, of free public schools and made applicable to every school district, town or city, incorporated or otherwise, without the consent and even against the will of such school district, town or city, would if properly enacted be a valid exercise of this constitutional mandate. Such an act would overrule and annul the provisions relating to free public schools contained in acts relating to school districts, incorporated and unincorporated, and to incorporated *411Boards of Education. Such bodies whether incorporated or not are mere agencies of the State for executing the governmental function of providing free schools. No contractual relations arose either from the enactment of their charters and the acceptance thereof and action thereunder or otherwise. Therefore, the State in the exercise of this governmental function can at any time choose new agencies to carry out this public purpose, whether such agents be bodies corporate created before or after the adoption of the Constitution of 1897. Such we believe are general principles applicable to the Act under consideration.

The validity of said Act has been attacked on the following grounds, viz.:

1. Because it did not receive the concurrence of two-thirds of all the members elected to each House of the General Assembly.

2. Because it is a delegation of legislative power to the school districts of the state.

3. Because it requires the assessment and collection of capitation taxes that will not be uniform in the county in which they are to be levied, and property taxes that will not be uniform in the territorial limits of the authority lev3dng the same.

4. Because it impairs the obligation of contracts by changing, lessening and taking away the security of the holders of school bonds without their consent.

5. Because it requires the collection of taxes based upon an assessment from which the taxables are given no right of appeal or opportunity to correct mistakes, thereby depriving them of their property without due process of law.

6. Because it treats of two subjects, only one of which is expressed in the title.

There may have been one or two other specific objections made,but they were covered in the discussion of the grounds stated.

Our conclusions are these:

[3] 1. School districts in this state, created by special acts of the Legislature, and the districts and boards created by the act in question, are not acts of incorporation within the meaning of section 1, art. 9, of the Constitution. They are neither private nor municipal corporations, but may be regarded as public quasi *412corporations. Coyle v. McIntire, 7 Houst. 44, 89, 30 Atl. 728, 40 Am. St. Rep. 109. They are not separate, independent or permanent corporations, but integral parts of the general educational system of the State, and created for the purpose of perfecting such system and making the administration of the school laws more convenient and effective. The General Assembly is required by article 10 to provide for the establishment and maintenance of a general and efficient system of public schools, but there is no requirement that legislation thereunder shall have the coneurtence of two-thirds of each House. It is entirely competent for the Legislature, in providing for such a system of public schools, to create school districts with certain corporate powers, but they are parts of the system and not such independent educational corporations as are contemplated by article 9. They are agencies of the State government, created for the purpose of aiding in carrying out the requirements of the Constitution respecting the establishment and maintenance of a public school system, and may be altered or abolished by the Legislature at any time. We must, therefore, assume that any legislative act that constitutes a part of the general system of public schools, including acts incorporating school districts, and boards of education, requires only the concurrence of a majority of all the members elected to each House. Said article 9 may embrace certain educational institutions, but it can have nothing to do with the establishment and maintenance of a general system of public schools fully provided for and made mandatory on the Legislature by article 10 of the Constitution, which is independent and complete in itself.

[4] 2. The act in question is not a delegation of legislative power to any school districts. Such districts being parts of the State government, created by the Legislature for educational, or public school purposes, the power given to them by the Code to accept its provisions, is an exercise of power by agencies of the state and not a delegation of legislative power within the meaning of the case of Rice v. Foster, 4 Har. 479, relied upon by the contestants. The power given by section 121 to certain special school districts to accept the Code is not a submission of the right to determine whether it shall be a law, but the granting of *413an option to accept the law already in force and effective as to all districts. And that is the test recognized by all the authorities. If the existence of the law depends upon the vote of the people or the will of one man even, it is an unconstitutional delegation of legislative power; but if the law is complete in and of itself, the fact that it provides for an acceptance of any of its provisions by certain state agencies does not make it a delegation of legislative power and, therefore, invalid. This principle is applicable to the act under consideration. To hold otherwise would overlook the important element of the act hereinbefore indicated, viz.: that it establishes by sweeping general provisions a new general system of government of all of the free schools of the state, whether it be accepted or not by any one, or all, or none, of the school districts, school committees, or boards of education; and that it stands as the law relating to such schools independent of such acceptance, rejection or failure to accept.

There can be no doubt that the School Code was in force and operation before an acceptance of its provisions by any district. State and county boards of education were created by the act and clothed with certain powers and duties co-extensive with the state or county and operative from June thirtieth of the present year whether its provisions were accepted or not. In a sense it revolutionized the public school system of the State, and its existence required the approval of no one.

[5] 3. The act is not invalid because the taxes assessed and collected thereunder would not be uniform. The Constitution provides that the capitation tax shall be uniform throughout the county, and requires that such tax shall not be less than three dollars, nor more than six dollars annually. We are unable to see that the requirement of the statute affects in any wise the uniformity of the capitation tax. It may be uniform so far as anything in the Code is concerned. The Constitution (article 8, § 1) also provides that “all taxes shall be uniform upon the same class of subjects within the territorial limits of the authority levying the tax,” and it is contended that property taxes could not, under the act, be uniform within the territorial limits of the authority levying the same—which mearis the county.

*414But we think the words “within the territorial limits levying the same,” mean the school district in which the taxes are to be used; and that the Levy Court is, under the statutory provision, merely the agent, or machinery, through which the taxes are actually levied and collected. The Levy Court has no discretion in the matter at all, the duty is mandatory and must be performed for the district that furnishes the budget. The taxes must, of course, be unifrom in the school district, and that in our opinion would be a compliance with the constitutional requirement.

■ [6] 4. The act is not invalid because it provides for the collection of taxes based upon a county assessment previously made, and from which no right of appeal is given in the Act. The assessment upon which the school taxes are based was made for county purposes, for county taxes, and under the law any taxable has an opportunity to make complaint to the Assessor, Board of Assessment, and Levy Court for the remedying of any wrongs, or the correction of any errors in the assessment. If the same assessment is used as the basis for school taxes, there can be no more reason for another opportunity for complaint and correction than there would be before the levying of another county tax based on the same assessment. The general assessment continues for four years, subject to annual revision, and. it is not essential that more than one right of appeal, or complaint, should be given no matter what may be the nature of the tax.The important thing is the right and opportunity to be heard as to the assessment.

[7] 5. The act does not divest vested rights or impair the obligation of contracts within the meaning of the Federal Constitution. No security is taken from the owner of school bonds that he held or enjoyed before the passage of the Code. The property of the district which constituted his security when the bonds were issued remains the same, and his right to enforce the collection of principal or interest when due may be enforced by appropriate action in the courts of the State. The new districts created under the Code expressly assume all the obligations of the old, and the only change that would affect the bondholder at all would be in the remedy for the collection of his debt. There *415could be no deprivation or lessening of his contractual rights, the obligations would remain unimpaired.

[8] 6. The Act does not treat of two subjects within the meaning of the Constitution. It does treat in a general way of the care, training and education of dependent children brought into this State, and while this is a subject that may seem to be not closely related to the subject of free public schools embraced in the title, we do not think the one subject is so incongruous or foreign to the other as to make the Act invalid. In no law, perhaps, could the training and education of such children be more appropriately treated of than in an Act providing for a system of free public schools for the State.

[9] It may not be necessary to state the limit of our duty, or power, in replying to your communication, but lest there may be some persons who have a mistaken notion of our duty we will say, that the only thing we are called upon to do, and the only thing we can properly do under the law, is to express to your our opinion upon the constitutionality of the School Code.

In conclusion we say, that after the most thorough and careful examination we have been able to give your question in the time we thought was proper under the circumstances, we are of the opinion that the law known as the School Code is constitutional and valid.

Yours respectfully,

Charles M. Curtis, Ch.

James Pennewill, C. J.

William H. Boyce, J.

Henry C. Conrad, J.

Herbert L. Rice, J.

T. Bayard Heisel, J.