From Casetext: Smarter Legal Research

Miles v. State of Georgia

Court of Appeals of Georgia
Oct 18, 1957
101 S.E.2d 173 (Ga. Ct. App. 1957)

Opinion

36825.

DECIDED OCTOBER 18, 1957. REHEARING DENIED OCTOBER 31, 1957.

Validation of school bonds, etc. Before Judge Roddenberry. Bacon Superior Court. May 16, 1957.

J. Edwin Peavy, Kopp Peavy, Ben L. Patterson, for plaintiffs in error.

Dewey Hayes, Solicitor-General, T. J. Townsend, Memory, Barnes Memory, S. F. Memory, Jr., contra.


1. An advertisement notifying voters of a school district of a bond election and which stated that the funds derived from the sale of such bonds would be used "for the purpose of providing funds to build, construct and equip new educational facilities such as school buildings, libraries, auditoriums, cafeterias, gymnasiums, athletic fields and buildings, and structures useful in connection therewith, adding to, improving and equipping existing properties and facilities of the Bacon County School System and acquiring the necessary property therefor and paying expenses incident thereto" was not subject to the criticism that it indicated that the funds were to be used for two or more distinct purposes, or that it submitted more than one proposition to the voters, within the rule laid down in Rea v. City of LaFayette, 130 Ga. 771 ( 61 S.E. 707).

2. In the absence of allegations of particular facts showing a contrary secret and undisclosed intention on the part of the school board to use the money derived from the sale of bonds for another purpose, the advertisement submitting the question of the issuance of bonds to the voters is the best evidence of the intent of the board as to the purposes for which such funds will be used, and a mere general allegation by the intervenors of a contrary intent on the part of the board without alleging specific facts to show such contrary or secret intent was properly stricken on demurrer.

3. Where the evidence failed to show affirmatively that the results of the election would have been different but for the alleged irregularities in conducting it, the election will not be set aside on account of mere irregularities.

4. ( a) Decisions of the courts of sister States, if in point, are persuasive authority for this court, but are not controlling.

( b) A decision of the Supreme Court announcing an applicable principle of law is controlling on the Court of Appeals and must be followed.

( c) Under the foregoing principles the ruling of the Supreme Court in Walsh v. City Council of Augusta, 67 Ga. 293, 306 (4), that the assets or indebtedness due a municipality cannot be deducted from its bonded indebtedness and taken into consideration in computing its total bonded indebtedness under the constitutional provision limiting such bonded indebtedness to seven per cent of the assessed value of the taxable property within the municipality, is binding on this court in this case, and as applied to the facts herein, requires a ruling that money held in a sinking fund and irrevocably pledged to be applied to retire outstanding bonded indebtedness but not yet so applied, cannot be deducted from the total bonded indebtedness of the school district in computing such total for the purpose of determining whether it exceeds seven per cent of the assessed value of all taxable property within the district under the limitation imposed by Art. VII, Sec. VII, Par. I of the Constitution of 1945 (Code, Ann., § 2-6001).

DECIDED OCTOBER 18, 1957 — REHEARING DENIED OCTOBER 31, 1957.


By a resolution dated February 13, 1957, the Bacon County Board of Education, which has control of the educational affairs of the Bacon County School District, determined to issue bonds in the amount of $225,000 for certain purposes which were set out in the publication of a notice calling for an election on March 19, 1957, by the voters of the school district to vote on the question as to whether such bonds should be issued. The election was held on the date fixed, and the consolidated returns showed the vote to be 642 for the issuance of said bonds and 632 against. The Solicitor-General of the Waycross Judicial Circuit, in which Bacon County School District is located, filed his petition to validate said bonds on March 26, 1957, in the Superior Court of Bacon County. The school district, through its properly constituted officers, filed an answer on April 6, 1957, admitting all the pertinent allegations of the petition and praying that said school bonds be confirmed and validated. J. A. Miles and others, after obtaining an order of the court permitting their intervention in the case, filed their petition on April 6, 1957, in which they set up that they were citizens and taxpayers of Bacon County, having property interests in the action of the board of education, and in which they contended that the election held for the purpose of voting on said bonds was not properly and lawfully called on account of certain defects in the notice or legal advertisement, and that the election was not properly and lawfully held in that there was a complete disregard of the secret ballot law in certain named districts of the county, and further contending by way of amendment that the issuance of $225,000 in bonds would cause the total bonded indebtedness of the school district to exceed the limitation of seven per cent of the assessed value of all taxable property within the district as fixed by Art. VII, Sec. VII, Par. I of the Constitution of 1945. The State of Georgia filed its general and special demurrers to the intervention. The issues thus made by the pleadings came on for a hearing and determination by the court on May 16, 1957, at which hearing the court sustained demurrers to two paragraphs of the intervention and thereafter, after hearing evidence on the remaining issues in the case, the court entered a final order and judgment confirming and validating said bonds and authorizing and empowering the school district to issue and sell said bonds, the same to be valid and binding obligations of the Bacon County School District. The intervenors filed their bill of exceptions complaining of the final judgment and of the ruling of the court sustaining the demurrers to two paragraphs of the intervention. Such other facts as are necessary to a consideration of the issues raised before this court by the assignments of error will be stated in the opinion.


1. In the advertisement which constituted the notice of the bond election and which was addressed to the qualified voters of Bacon County, Georgia, it was stated that the funds derived from the sale of such bonds would be "for the purpose of providing funds to build, construct and equip new educational facilities such as school buildings, libraries, auditoriums, cafeterias, gymnasiums, athletic fields and buildings, and structures useful in connection therewith, adding to, improving and equipping existing properties and facilities of the Bacon County School System and acquiring the necessary property therefor and paying expenses incident thereto." Paragraph 11 of the intervention attacked the wording of this advertisement on the ground that it "was so vague, indefinite, confused and misleading in character as to not fairly and adequately inform the voters of the purpose for which the bonds are to [be] issued, and it was not such notice as is required by § 87-201 of the Code of Georgia."

It is contended in connection with this ground of attack that the notice failed to specify how much of the $225,000 to be raised by the bond issue was to be used for each of the separate items enumerated in the advertisement, and that if the notice was intended to inform the voters that the funds were to be used to construct and equip any additional facilities, it was misleading in further indicating that it was to be used in adding to, improving and equipping existing facilities and that if the notice was intended to inform the voters that the funds were to be used to construct and equip gymnasiums and auditoriums, it misinformed and misled the voters by indicating that a portion of such funds was to be used for building other buildings and structures as set out in the notice. The plaintiff demurred to the allegations of this paragraph on the ground that it set forth no legal cause for denying validation of the bonds and on the further ground that the allegations of that paragraph, when taken in connection with Exhibit "A" (a copy of the advertisement) attached to the intervention, showed on its face that the notice of the election was legal and regular in every respect. The trial court sustained this ground of demurrer and struck from the intervention paragraph 11.

This paragraph of the intervention and the demurrer thereto raises the question of whether or not the advertisement expressed a singleness of purpose in accordance with the rule laid down by the Supreme Court in Rea v. City of LaFayette, 130 Ga. 771 ( 61 S.E. 707). The notice was not subject to the criticism that it indicated that the bonds were to be voted for the purpose of providing funds for two or more distinct purposes. The purposes stated were all related to providing additions and improvements to school facilities in Bacon County. As was said in Hart v. Board of Education, 299 Missouri 36 (252 S.W. 441), and quoted in 4 A.L.R. 2d Anno. 617, 631, "If it can be said that the proposed improvements are not naturally related or connected, then it is clear that separate submissions are required; if on the other hand the several parts of the project are plainly so related that, united, they form in fact but one rounded whole, it is equally clear that they may be grouped together and submitted as one proposition." This test, as applied to the proposition submitted by the advertisement in this case, clearly shows that the advertisement did not submit more than one proposition to the voters. See Moody v. Board of Commrs. c. of Appling County, 29 Ga. App. 21 (3) ( 113 S.E. 103); Brand v. Town of Lawrenceville, 104 Ga. 486 (2) ( 30 S.E. 954).

2. In paragraph 12 of the intervention, the intervenors alleged that the real purpose for the issuance of the bonds was to provide funds to build and equip a gymnasium and auditorium and that the advertisement, to the extent that it purported to inform the voters that the purpose of the bond issue was to raise funds to build and equip other buildings and structures and to improve and equip existing facilities of the school system, was misleading to and misinformed the voters. The plaintiff demurred to this paragraph on the same grounds as it demurred to paragraph 11 of the petition, and the trial court sustained this demurrer and struck paragraph 12 from the petition. This ruling was not error. Allegations in a petition must yield to contradictory facts shown in exhibits attached thereto ( Harris v. Ackerman, 88 Ga. App. 128 (1), 76 S.E.2d 132), and where the facts shown by the exhibit contradict the facts alleged by way of conclusion in the petition, and where the facts shown in the exhibit show that the petitioner has no cause of action, the petition is thus subject to demurrer. In the instant case, the advertisement, a copy of which was attached to the petition as an exhibit, was the best evidence of the intention of the school board with respect to the use of the bond funds and in the absence of allegations of facts showing that the board had a secret, undisclosed intention to use the funds for some purpose other than that indicated by the advertisement or facts showing the deliberate perpetration of a fraud on the voters by the board, this advertisement must be taken as the best evidence of the board's intention with respect to the use of these funds. It follows that this paragraph was properly stricken on demurrer.

3. The intervenors alleged in their petition that the election held on March 19, 1957, was not properly and lawfully held in that there were not provided in the Ware, Taylor, Warnock and Rockingham districts, these districts being four of the seven districts in the county, booths or enclosures equipped with conveniences for marking the ballots and so arranged that it was impossible for anyone to see a voter in the act of marking his ballot; in that in all of the districts of the county there was a complete failure and disregard of the requirements of Code § 34-1908 with regard to the furnishing of printed instruction cards in each of the voting booths; in that in the Douglas district of said county, the election managers required more than 30 voters to place their ballots in the ballot box without permitting them to detach the number strip from the ballot, thus making it possible for anyone subsequently counting or handling the ballots to determine the exact manner in which a voter marked his ballot, and that these 30 ballots exceeded by at least 20 of the majority by which the election was carried. Error is assigned in the bill of exceptions on the judgment on the ground that the evidence showed these facts and therefore demanded the verdict and judgment invalidating the election.

"No election shall be defeated for noncompliance with the requirements of the law, if held at the proper time and place by persons qualified to hold it, unless it is shown that, by such noncompliance, the result is different from what it would have been had there been proper compliance." Code § 34-3101. Assuming that the evidence in this case was sufficient to prove each of these allegations, in view of the foregoing rule, it was not sufficient to require that the bond election be invalidated and set aside. The allegations of the petition in this regard merely show certain irregularities in conducting the election, but nowhere is it alleged that but for these irregularities the election results would have been different. Neither is this essential fact shown by the evidence. As was said by the Supreme Court in Hastings v. Wilson, 181 Ga. 305, 307 ( 182 S.E. 375), quoting Norman v. Indiana, 51 Ind. App. 425 ( 99 N.E. 812), "`Where an election has been fairly and honestly conducted, it will not thereafter be invalidated by mere irregularities which are not shown to have affected the result. All provisions of the election laws are mandatory if enforcement is sought before election in a direct proceeding for that purpose; but after election they should be held directory only, in support of the result, unless of a character to obstruct the free and intelligent casting of the vote, or the ascertainment of the result, or unless the provisions affect an essential element of the election, or unless it is expressly declared by the statute that the particular act is essential to the validity of an election, or that its omission shall render it void.'" Under the evidence in this case and specifically in view of the testimony of the election managers who held the election in the districts in question which testimony was uncontradicted that they conducted the election the best they knew how and complied with the requirements of the law and in the absence of an affirmative showing that a different result would have been reached in the election had these irregularities not occurred, this assignment fails to show error.

4. Art. VII, sec. VII, par. I of the Constitution of the State of Georgia of 1945 (Code § 2-6001) limits the debt of any political division of this State (which includes the school district in question) to seven per cent of assessed valuation of taxable property. It is undisputed that this $225,000 bond issue, plus existing bonded indebtedness of approximately $57,000 would exceed the permissible limit of $273,650.30 (representing seven per cent of total assessed valuation of $3,909,290), unless the school district be allowed to credit against this amount the sum of $53,768.37 which it holds in a sinking fund appropriated to the purpose of retiring outstanding bonds on maturity. That the general rule in other States is to the effect that such credit is permissible, see cases cited in 125 A.L.R. 1393, and such would seem to be the better practice, since the money has been set aside for this purpose and can not legally be used for any other. We are, however, bound by the decisions of our Supreme Court. In Walsh v. City Council of Augusta, 67 Ga. 293, it was held that redeemed bonds and cash on hand could not be so credited. The court stated that the city's assets, or indebtedness to her, could not be deducted from the debt owed so as to make that per centum less. Examination of the original record in the Walsh case shows that the municipality there alleged: "The sum named as the indebtedness of the municipality is subject to a deduction of $160,750, being the amount of bonds redeemed by and cash on hand held by the Sinking Fund Commission of the municipality under the Act of August 27, 1789, by which the bonded debt of the city is being steadily and largely reduced." This constitutes a holding that outstanding bonded indebtedness can not be reduced by the amount credited against it in a sinking fund for the purpose of redeeming outstanding bonds, but which has not actually been used for that purpose. That this constitutional provision is subject to strict construction, see City Council of Dawson v. Dawson Waterworks Co., 106 Ga. 696, 732 ( 32 S.E. 907); Davis v. Dougherty County, 116 Ga. 491, 494 ( 42 S.E. 764). It follows that the bond issue sought to be validated would raise the indebtedness of the school district beyond the constitutional limitation, for which reason the judgment validating the bonds was erroneous.

Judgment reversed. Gardner, P. J., and Townsend, J., concur.


Summaries of

Miles v. State of Georgia

Court of Appeals of Georgia
Oct 18, 1957
101 S.E.2d 173 (Ga. Ct. App. 1957)
Case details for

Miles v. State of Georgia

Case Details

Full title:MILES et al. v. STATE OF GEORGIA et al

Court:Court of Appeals of Georgia

Date published: Oct 18, 1957

Citations

101 S.E.2d 173 (Ga. Ct. App. 1957)
101 S.E.2d 173

Citing Cases

Berrie v. State of Georgia

This would clearly require the voters to pass upon several independent and unrelated propositions. The…

Lucas v. Townsend

The Supreme Court may have agreed with the three-judge court that the decision to combine multiple projects…