Beatty v. Walker

1893 OK 3, 32 P. 53, 1 Okla. 178, 1893 Okla. LEXIS 19
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 27, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1893 OK 3 (Beatty v. Walker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beatty v. Walker, 1893 OK 3, 32 P. 53, 1 Okla. 178, 1893 Okla. LEXIS 19 (Okla. 1893).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Burford, T.:

This case was submitted to the court below upon an agreed statement of facts, which is as follows:

John IT. Beatty, W. H. Richardson, G. W. Jackson, J. A. Ryan, N. Z. Hurd and H. J. Smith, and Delos Walker, D. D. Leach, A. S. Sherwood, A. V. Francis and J. M. ITousel respectfully present to the court a submission of the following controversy between them without bringing an action, and agreed upon the following, to-wit:

The plaintiffs claim to be the duly elected, qualified and acting members of and constitute the school board of Oklahoma City.

The defendants claim that they are the duly elected, *180 qualified and acting members of and constitute said school board of Oklahoma City.

It is agreed:

"First: That Delos Walker was elected president of said school board on the first Tuesday of April, i89r, at a school meeting held in the city of Oklahoma City.
“Second: That D. D. Leach, A. S. Sherwood, A. V, Francis and J. M. Housel were each and all elected members of said board from their respective wards on the first Tuesday in April, [892, at a school meeting held in said city of Oklahoma City.
"Third: That each and all of the defendants took the oath of office and qualified, as required by Chap, seventy-nine (79) of the statutes of Oklahoma.
"Fourth: That the city of Oklahoma City is a municipal corporation, and ever since the 25th day of December, 1890, has been a city of the first class, having two thousand five hundred (2500) inhabitants.
"Fifth: That the first annual election in said city was held on the first Tuesday in April, 1892.
"Sixth: That it was proclaimed that at said election, in addition to other officers, there should be elected one member of the school board from each ward, who should hold their offices for one year, and one inember of the school board from each ward who should hold their offices for two years.
"Seventh: That in pursuance of said proclamation, the qualified voters of said wards and said city met in their respective wards and elected the plaintiffs and one Williams and one Wyatt members of said board of education from their respective wards.
"Eighth: That certificates were issued, in pursuance of chapter fifteen of the Oklahoma statutes, to the plaintiffs, and said Williams and Wyatt, certifying that they had been respectively elected members of said board, and thereupon and prior to the first Tuesday in May, 1892, the plaintiffs and each of them appeared before the county clerk of Oklahoma county and took and subscribed the oath of office, to perform their duties faithfully, and ever since have been claiming to act as members of, and to legally constitute said board.
"Ninth: That it is intended by the words ‘school *181 meeting,’ in speaking of the election of the defendants, to mean mass meeting of all those entitled to vote in the city of Oklahoma City, in contradistinction of a regular election in said wards and city at regular polling places in each ward, such as herein referred to in describing the election of the plaintiffs; and all the parties to this submission are and were qualified to act as members of said school board from the respective wards of said city, were residents and electors of the respective wards, from which they were respectively elected.
“Tenth: Chapter 79 of the Oklahoma statutes was, at the time of its passing, known as Council Bill No. 2, and was passed by the legislature and became a law prior to the passage of chapter 15 of the Oklahoma statutes, which was known at the time of its passing as Council Bill No. 76.
“Eleventh: That the defendants, ever since their election, have been acting as the regularly elected school board, said Walker as president and said Leach as secretary.' Having full control of all school matters and the books and papers belonging to said board, and, notwithstanding a demand has been made on them as said board to turn over their respective offices to the plaintiffs, and upon Delos Walker to turn over the papers, etc., etc., of his office as president to John Beatty, and upon the said Leach to turn over the papers, etc., etc., of his office as secretary to W. H. Richardson, they, and each of them, have refused so to do, and are now in possession of everything pertaining to said board and said offices
“Twelfth: That the plaintiffs, prior to the first Tuesday of May, duly met and organized by electing John H. Beatty president and W. H. Richardson secretary of said school board.
“The court is at liberty to draw inferences of fact and none of the admissions herein are to affect either party or be used except for the purpose of this submission.
“The questions desired to be submitted herein are as follows:
“First: Is chapter 79 or chapter 15, or both, to govern elections of the school boards in cities of the first class ?
*182 “Second: Are the plaintiffs or the defendants duly elected and qualified members of the school board of Oklahoma City ?
“Third: Are the plaintiffs or the defendants entitled to act as such board ?
“Fourth: Is Delos Walker president of the board or J. H. Beatty ?
“It is agreed between the parties hereto that the judgment of the court upon the case here submitted may be the same in form, practice and proceed with like effect as if this was a proceeding in the nature of information or ‘quo warranto’ wherein the plaintiffs were relators and the defendants were respondants, and that if judgment of the court should be for the plaintiffs a writ of ouster shall issue thereon against the defendants and each of them, and if the judgment of the court shall be for the defendants it shall also be for the dismissal of this proceeding.
Delos Walker, J. H. Beatty,
J. M. I-Iousel, N. Z. ITurd,
D. D. Leacit, G. W. Jackson,
A. V. French, H. F. Smith,
W. H. Richardson.”' A. S. Sherwood,

Upon the above stipulation the district court found for the defendants, and judgment was entered dismissing said proceedings.

From the judgment the plaintiffs appeal to this court, and we are called upon to determine which of the school boards claiming the right to govern the schools of Oklahoma City are in law entitled to have that privilege.

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Related

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1899 OK 87 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1899)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1893 OK 3, 32 P. 53, 1 Okla. 178, 1893 Okla. LEXIS 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beatty-v-walker-okla-1893.