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New Mexico Advisory Opinions January 01, 2010: NM Att. Gen. OPINION ON. 10-04

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Collection: New Mexico Attorney General Opinions
Date: Jan. 1, 2010

Advisory Opinion Text

BY: Elizabeth A. Glenn
Deputy Attorney General

TO: The Honorable Phil A. Griego
New Mexico State Senator
P.O. Box 10
San Jose, NM 87565

The Honorable Nancy Rodriguez
New Mexico State Senator
1838 Camino La Canada
Santa Fe, NM 87501

The Honorable Luciano "Lucky" Varela
New Mexico State Representative

CONCLUSION:

1. A school distriet is required to use funds for the purposes specified in the resolution passed by the local school board for issuing the bonds, the notice of election on the bond issuance and in the question posed on the ballot. The district is not bound by representations of district officials and employees regarding the use of bond proceeds that are not ret1ected in the resolution, notice and ballot question.

2. An answer to the second question is not required because New Mexico law does not permit a school district to change the use of bond proceeds from that specified in the resolution, notice and ballot.

FACTS:

The following ballot question was submitted to and approved by qualified electors of the Santa Fe Public School District in a regular school district election held on February 3, 2009:

Shall the Santa Fe Public School District issue $160,000,000 of general obligation bonds to (1) erect, remodel, make additions to and furnish school buildings within the district (2) to purchase or improve school grounds (3) to purchase computer software and hardware for student use in public schools (4) to provide matching funds for capital outlay projects funded pursuant to the Public School Capital Outlay Act; or any combination of these purposes?

The ballot question was included in the Resolution and Proclamation issued by unanimous vote of the Board of Education for the District at a meeting on November 5, 2008. The Resolution and Proclamation was filed with the Santa Fe County Clerk and public notice of the election was published as required by applicable law. See NMSA 1978, § 1-22-5 (1991). The brochure included a description of projects at specitlc schools that would be funded by the bonds, if approved. The District administration also held PowerPoint presentations throughout the District outlining the District's plans for the bond proceeds, including specific projects to be funded.

After the bonds were approved, the District used the proceeds for some projects that were not described in the District's plan presented to the public and voters. It is not alleged that the District's use of the bond proceeds was outside the scope of the actual ballot question.

ANALYSIS:

The New Mexico Constitution limits the purposes for which a school district may incur debt. Article IX, Section 11 provides, in pertinent part:

[N]o school district shall borrow money except for the purpose of erecting, remodeling, making additions to and furnishing school buildings or purchasing or improving school grounds or any combination of these purposes, and in such cases only when the proposition to create the debt has been submitted to a vote of such qualitled electors of the district .,. and a majority of those voting on the question has voted in favor of creating such debt.

The state constitution contains similar limitations on debt incurred by the state, counties and municipalities. N.M. Const. art. IX, §§ 8, 10, 12. Article IX, Section 9 provides:

Any money borrowed by the state, or any county, district or municipality thereof, shall be applied to the purpose for which it was obtained, or to repay such loan, and to no other purpose whatever.

See also N.M. Atry Gen. Op. No. 58-234 (1958) (a municipality could not divert general obligation bond proceeds from the purpose approved by voters); N.M. Att'y Gen. Op. No. 5656 (1953) (county could not change use of bond proceeds from that specified in the notice of the bond election); N.M. Att'y Gen. Op. 1807 (1916) (school district was required to use bond proceeds for purpose specified in notice of election and approved by voters).

In a slightly different context, the New Mexico Supreme Court expressly declined to go outside the language of the ballot proposition to determine voter intent. In Board of Educ. v. Hartley, 74 N.M. 469, 394 P.2d 985 (1964), the Court addressed the constitutionality of a school bond election. The Court held the election invalid because the resolution calling for the election, notice of election and ballot broadly described the purpose of the bonds as "for school purposes," which the Court found insufficient under Article IX, Section 11. In reaching its decision, the Court rejected the contention that the language used in the election materials "sufficiently informed the electorate of the purpose of bond issue and ... does not violate the constitution because it must be presumed that the money raised from the sale of the bonds will be used for constitutional purposes .... " Id. at 472,394 P.2d at 987. According to the Court:

we cannot, by assuming that the proceeds would be properly used, read into the language ["for school purposes"] that they would not be improperly used. There is no way to determine what was in the minds of the various electors who voted on the issuance of the bonds as to what they thought "school purposes" meant.

Id. at 472-473,394 P.2d at 988.

The majority of cases from other states addressing the issue hold that statements and representations made by public officials, the news media and others to the general public in a campaign for or against a government bond issue do not affect the validity of the bonds unless they are part of the official proceedings necessary for the issuance of the bonds.

An important reason underlying the majority view, which the New Mexico Supreme Court touched on in Board of Educ. v. Hartley, is that the official proceedings the election resolution, notice and ballot - are the most reliable indicia of the voters' intent. For example, in City of Los Angeles v. Dannenbrink 234 Cal. App. 2d 642, 44 Cal. Rptr. 624 (Cal. Ct. App. 1965), the California Court of Appeals addressed allegations that voters were misled by campaign statements made by public officials and private citizens in connection with a charter amendment authorizing revenue bonds. According to the court:

[I]f the enlightenment of the electorate should be a subject of judicial inquiry, the court could not infer that the knowledge of the voters was limited to what appeared in the campaign propaganda of the protagonists. The full text of each proposed charter amendment ... was mailed to every voter well in advance of election day. No public official or private citizen is authorized to change the substance or effect of such a proposal by the characterization he employs in advocating its adoption or defeat.

44 Cal. Rptr. at 632. Accord Mills v. S.F. Bay Area Rapid Transit Dist., 261 Cal. App. 2d 666, 68 Cal. Rptr. 317, 320 (Cal. Ct. App. 1968) (citing Dannenbrink for the proposition that "statements disseminated to the general public" before a bond election "cannot be deemed to modify the intentionally broad language of the proposition in fact submitted to the voters, the call of election published to them, and the statutes authorizing the procedure adopted"). See also Detroit United Ry. v. Citv of Detroit, 255 U.S. 171 (1921) (refusing to invalidate an election approving the acquisition of a city railway system based on city officials' representations regarding the election's purpose and effect; "the motives of the officials, and of the electors acting upon the proposal, are not proper subjects of judicial inquiry ... so long as the means adopted for submission of the question to the people conformed to the requirements of the law"); Public Servo Co. of Ind.v,City of Lebanon, 46 N.E.2d 480 (Ind. 1943) (addressing a challenge to a utility

Limiting evidence of voter intent to the official proceedings avoids the uncertainty regarding the results of an election that would otherwise inevitably result. As observed in the Associated Students opinion, "if whenever a group of voters considered that their electoral will had been frustrated, they could argue for implementation of their understanding of the sense of official assurances, preelection statements, publicity and unofficial discussions, an intolerable number of disputes would result." 155 Cal. Rptr. at 255.

In light of the arguments expressed by the majority view, as discussed above, we believe that a New Mexico court reviewing the issue would conclude that a school district may use bond proceeds for the purposes specified in the bond resolution, notice of election, ballot proposition and other official bond proceedings. Unless they are part of the official proceedings, statements made by school officials and members of the administration regarding the use of the proceeds or the effect of the vote taken at the election cannot be used to modify the ballot proposition and do not bind the district.

Deputy Attorney General