Black v. Early

106 S.W. 1014, 208 Mo. 281, 1907 Mo. LEXIS 252
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 24, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 106 S.W. 1014 (Black v. Early) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Black v. Early, 106 S.W. 1014, 208 Mo. 281, 1907 Mo. LEXIS 252 (Mo. 1907).

Opinion

LAMM, J.

Plaintiffs, Black, Buhl and Delaney, resident taxpayers of the district, for themselves and [287]*287forty others unnamed (designated in the petition and the briefs as “the Forty”), on June 2, 1906, sued in the circuit court of Knox county to enjoin the collection of taxes levied against, their properties for the year 1905 and about to be levied for the year 1906 for the support of the public school of the School District of the Town of Hurdland, and to pay the interest on certain bonds of said district and to create a sinking fund to pay the principal.

A preliminary writ went. Thereat the venue of the cause was changed to the Hannibal Court of Common Pleas on plaintiffs’ application. At a hearing there, the chancellor made the preliminary writ permanent as to the taxes for the year 1905. As to the taxes of 1906, it was dissolved.- The decree, having split the relief, proceeded to halve the burden of costs, taxing one modicum against plaintiffs and the other against defendants, and from that decree the parties. litigant prosecute cross-appeals.

The case was lodged in this court on the 26th day of June, 1907. On the same day defendants filed a motion to advance. There was no counter showing made on the allegations of that motion. Therefrom it appeared that a proceeding in quo warranto, involving the life of the School District of the Town of Hurdland, was pending here for hearing at the October term, 1907. Therefrom it further appeared that because of the non-payment of taxes by plaintiffs (and “the Forty”), and because one of the plaintiffs, as treasurer of the School District of the Town of Hurdland, whose bond was made by his co-plaintiffs as sureties, refused to turn over the money of said district then in his hands, without suit (litigation being pending on said bond, see State ex rel. v. Delaney, 122 Mo. App. 239), the public school in the School District of the Town of Hurdland had been first crippled and then closed.

The premises considered, the Court In Banc ad[288]*288vanced this case to he heard with the quo warranto, and assigned it to Division One to he heard at said October term. At that term both cases were argued and submitted, and the reasons good for use in advancing the case for speedy hearing, still existing, justify us' in determining it speedily in advance of the quo warranto — since, whatever may be the outcome in the latter cause, no apparent public good can be furthered by putting the public school of Hurd!and in the way of sickening, languishing and dying of starvation. Such coup de grace as death, if it come at all, should be. «eemly and at the hands of the law; and a prior state of suspended animation or paralysis ought not to be allowed to come about through drawn-out torture.

The pleadings are long, covering 61 pages of print, and need not he reproduced. A summary thereof will be sufficient upon which to predicate and announce our views of their legal intendment, and decide the case.

Counsel are not in accord on the scope and meaning of the charging part of the .petition. In its warp and woof there are interwoven, with allegations of ultimate and substantive fact, narrations of coloring matter, recitals of extraneous facts, matter of evidence, matter of inducement, matter of - argument and conclusions of law — thereby making its analysis and a differentiation of the elements constituting the grounds upon which relief is sought to be predicated, a nice, a baffling and anxious task. Ordinarily it would be wide of the mark to go to the evidence of a lay witness to get at the gist of a pleading. But, in the wilderness of litigation, a case may arise where light may be hailed as welcome through any window; and in this case, we may borrow with profit from the testimony of Mr. Delaney, one of the plaintiffs and a man wielding a hammer of common sense and able to hit the nail on the head. On cross-examination, he testified: “They attempted to organize under the Village Act.” He was [289]*289then asked: “What do you mean by ‘attempting to organize under the Village Act?’ ” He answered: “I mean that we attempted — some of the folks attempted —to organize under the Village Act, and now it is in litigati'on to see whether they have or not. That is my ■idea of it.” His “idea” of the issue tendered by the petition is ours. For, doing the best that in us lies, and liberally construing the pleading, it may be justly said that the gravamen of plaintiffs’ complaint is that the School District of the Town of Hurdland was illegally organized in 1902 out of a former common school district; that there was a common school district, known as School District No. 2, Township 15, Range 13, Knox county, in existence prior to 1902 for twenty years, and it is charged it was abortively attempted to change this district, by a mere colorable following of the statutory path of evolution blazed out in the Village Act (Art. 2, chap. 154, R. S. 1899', entitled City, Town and Village Schools) into a village school district in said year. The bundle of things which, in detail and as a whole, go to make up the vice of alleged illegality in the organization of the new district is charged with a wealth of detail — the pleader (passim) laying stress upon the issuing of $5,700 in bonds by the village district to build a brick schoolhouse, and the taxation incident to that bond issue.

It is plain that the taxation arising from the issuing of these bonds is where the shoe pinches. It is plain, too, that the pleader desired the court to understand that the controlling reason for declaring the taxes of 1905 and 1906 to be illegal is because of the pleaded infirmities in the corporate birth and life of the School District of the Town of Hurdland, and not otherwise.

To these general charges of illegality (split into sundry specifications) there is added an allegation that the levying and spreading of the taxes of 1905 were [290]*290“without any estimate made or certified' by the secretary of the board of directors of the School District of the Town of Hurdland and without any estimate, pretended or claimed to be made in the name or to represent the School District No. 2, Township 15, Range 13, being then on file in the office of the clerk of the county court of Knox county.” The tax levy struck at for 1905 was for ninety cents on the $100 of valuation.

As to the year 1906, it is alleged that the “pretended board of the District of the,Town of Hurdland caused to be made an estimate of taxes to sustain the public school of said pretended District of the Town of Hnrdland for the next school year and have caused one 0. Ij. Cockrum, as district clerk, to certify an estimate, and caused the same to be filed in the office of the clerk of the county court of Knox county.” This estimate was ninety cents on the $100 of valuation, and it is alleged that a levy is about to be made and spread on the tax books for that amount.

It is not charged in the petition or shown in the proof that plaintiffs or either of them actually offered to pay and tendered payment of any part of the ninety cents levy, which levy covered the whole school tax, including twenty-five cents on the $100 for a sinking fund to pay said bonds, and twenty-five cents on the $100 to pay the interests thereon.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
106 S.W. 1014, 208 Mo. 281, 1907 Mo. LEXIS 252, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/black-v-early-mo-1907.