Billings School District v. Loma Special School District

219 N.W. 336, 56 N.D. 751, 1928 N.D. LEXIS 196
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMay 7, 1928
StatusPublished

This text of 219 N.W. 336 (Billings School District v. Loma Special School District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Billings School District v. Loma Special School District, 219 N.W. 336, 56 N.D. 751, 1928 N.D. LEXIS 196 (N.D. 1928).

Opinion

Christianson, J.

The controversy involved on his appeal grew out of the organization of Loma special school district in Cavalier county in this state. Certain territory within the boundaries of the ■plaintiff Billings school district was included within the boundaries of Loma special school district, and Billings school district insti *754 tutee! this action to enjoin the defendant school district, the members of the board of education thereof, the county superintendent of schools, the county treasurer, and the county auditor of Cavalier county from levying or assessing taxes or exercising any control over, or carrying on any educational functions whatsoever in, said territory or in any manner treating the same as a part of the defendant Loma special school district. There was also included in Loma special school district certain territory formerly within Storlie school district; and Storlie school district asked for and was granted leave to intervene in the action. The plaintiff and the intervener assail the validity of the organization of Loma special school district, and assert that the territory sought to be included in such defendant school district, formerly within the boundaries of the plaintiff and intervener school districts, was never legally detached from such districts and has at no time become a part of the defendant school district.

The trial court rendered judgment in favor of the defendant sustaining the organization of Loma special school district and holding that the territory in dispute was a part of such district. The plaintiff and intervener have appealed from the judgment and demanded a trial anew in this court.

The questions presented involve a consideration of the following provisions of the Compiled Laws of North Dakota 1913, relating to the incorporation of villages and the organization of special school districts:

Section 3840: “Persons intending to make application for the incorporation of a village as hereinafter provided shall cause an accurate survey and map to be made of the territory intended to be embraced within the limits of such village; such survey shall be made by a practical surveyor, and show the courses and distances of the boundaries thereof, and the quantity of land contained therein, the accuracy of which survey and map shall be verified by the affidavit of such surveyor written thereon or annexed thereto.”

Section 3841: “Such persons shall cause an accurate census to be taken of the resident population of such territory as it may be, on some day not more than sixty days previous to the time of presenting such application to the board of county commissioners, as hereinafter provided; which census shall exhibit the name of every head of a family residing within such territory on such day and the number of persons then be *755 longing to such family; and it shall be verified by the affidavit of the person taking the same.”

Section 3842: “Such survey, map and census when completed and verified as aforesaid shall be left at some convenient place within said territory for examination by those having an interest in such application, for a period of not less than thirty days.”

Section 3843: “Such application shall be by petition subscribed by the applicants, and also by not less than one-third of the whole number of qualified voters residing within such territory; and such petition shall set forth the boundaries thereof, the quantity of land embraced according to the survey, and the resident population therein contained according to such census, and such petition shall have attached thereto or written thereupon affidavits verifying the facts alleged therein, and it shall be presented at the time indicated in the notice of such application or as soon thereafter as the board can receive and consider the same.”

Section 3844: “The board of county commissioners on hearing such application shall first require proof either by affidavit of by oral examination of witnesses before them that the said survey, map and census were subject to examination in the manner and for the period required by § 3842; and if the board is satisfied that the requirements of this chapter have been fully complied with, it shall then make an order declaring that such territory shall with the assent of the qualified voters, thereof as hereinafter provided be an incorporated village by the name specified in the application aforesaid, which name shall be different from that of every other town in this state, and it shall also include in such order a notice for a meeting of the qualified voters resident in said proposed village at a convenient place therein to be by them named, on some day within one month therefrom, to determine whether such territory shall be an incorporated village.”

Section 3845. (Provides for the notice of election.)

Section 3846. (Relates to the hours of voting.)

Section 3847. (Provides for the appointment of election officials.)

Section 3848. “The qualified voters of said proposed incorporated village shall vote by ballot, having thereon the words, Tor incorporation, yes,’or the words Tor incorporation, no;’ . . . if a majority of such ballots shall have thereon the toord ‘yes,’ such territory shall from that time be deemed an incorporated village and shall thereafter, for all *756 purposes except the payment of any prior bonded i-ivdebtedness, be separate and disconnected from any civil township of which if theretofore formed a part and to have continuance thereafter by the name and style specified in the order made by the board of county commissioners as hereinbefore provided; and the inspectors of such election shall make a statement showing the whole number of ballots cast at such election, the number having the word, ‘yes’ thereon, and the number having the word ‘no’ thereon, which statement shall be verified by the affidavit of such inspectors and shall be returned, to the board of county commissioners at its next session which, if satisfied with the legality of such election, shall make an order declaring that said village has been incorporated by the name adopted, which order shall be conclusive of such incorporation in all suits by or against such corporation; and the existence of such corporation by the name and style aforesaid shall thereafter be judicially taken notice of in all courts in this state without specially pleading or alleging the same.”

Section. 1243 : “When a petition signed by one-third of the voters of a city, incorporated or platted town or village, or a school district in which is located a city or incorporated or platted town or village entitled to vote at such election, is presented to the council, commission or board of trustees of such city, incorporated or platted town or village or school district, asking that such city, incorporated or platted town or village or school district be organized as a special school district, such council, commission or board of trustees shall within ten days order an election for such purpose, notice of which shall be given, and the election conducted and the returns made in the manner provided by law for the annual school election; and the voters of such city, incorporated town or village or school district shall vote for or against organization as a special school district at such election.”

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Bluebook (online)
219 N.W. 336, 56 N.D. 751, 1928 N.D. LEXIS 196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/billings-school-district-v-loma-special-school-district-nd-1928.