Board of Ed'n v. Board of Ed'n

4 S.E. 640, 30 W. Va. 424, 1887 W. Va. LEXIS 85
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 19, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 4 S.E. 640 (Board of Ed'n v. Board of Ed'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Board of Ed'n v. Board of Ed'n, 4 S.E. 640, 30 W. Va. 424, 1887 W. Va. LEXIS 85 (W. Va. 1887).

Opinion

Joi-iNSON, President :

On the twenty seventh day of June, 1881, the County Court of Barbour county in proper form, and with proper parties before it, entered the following order : “That a new district be, and the same is hereby, established out of Barker district, including and composed of the territory of said Barker district lying on the west side of the Tygart’s Yalley river and bounded as follows. [Here the boundaiy is inserted.] Said district shall be known as and called ‘Valley District’” etc.

Before (he division, the Board of Education of the old or Barker district, had built a number of school-houses, and in payment of balance therefor had executed two promissory notes, one for $625.00, dated the eleventh day of December, 1869, payable five years after date, to Loronzo Denton and Daniel C. Wilmoth, with interest from date; the other for $475.00, bearing the same date, payable five years after date, to Daniel C. Wilmoth, with interest from date. The plaintiff Board of Education of Barker district filed its bill at January rules, 1884, in the Circuit Court of Barbour county, in which it set out the above facts, and exhibited a copy of the order of the County Court dividing said district, and also copies of said two notes. The bill further alleges that fifteen school-houses had been built in the said district,' — six in what is now the new district, and nine in the old; that the six cost $3,313.65, and the nine, $4,661.16; that the cost [427]*427of building all said school-houses had long since been paid by the plaintiff, before the division, except the sum of $1,150.00, and that this debt would also have been paid before said division, but it was involved in a tedious chancery suit between other parties, and the said Barker district did not know to whom to make payment,-and therefore chose to wait the termination of said suit; that at the time of the division, in 1881, the taxable property in what is now Barker district amounted to the sum of $156,910.29, and the taxable property in what is now Yalley district to the sum of $100,-790.13, and that the aggregate of all the taxable property in the old territory of Barker district was, at that time, $257,-700.42; and that the said debt of $1,150.00, (it should be $1,100.00,) with the interest thereon, constitutes a charge on all the property in both of said districts. The plaintiff represents that it “has paid nearly the whole of the said debt of $1,150.00, together with the interest thereon accrued, which amounts to a large sum of money, to wit, to the sum of $-, and for the balance it has levied a sufficient sum upon the tax-payers of its district to liquidate the whole debtthat it has by all the means in its power sought an amicable settlement of said debt with the defendant, but it, acting on the mistaken idea that the plaintiff' is responsible for the whole debt, has refused to settle. The debt was incurred in 1869, long before the new district was created. The plaintiff is advised that it has a right to come into this court and ask that the said defendant be compelled to pay the plaintiff its just, proportion of said debt, and interest thereon; “and that the portion of said debt which the said defendant should be required to pay should bear such a proportion to the whole debt as its taxable property bore to the aggregate amount of all the taxable property in both of said districts in the year 1881, which will be about $450, with interest thereon from the eleventh day of December, 1869.” The prayer of the bill is that the cause be referred to a commissioner, with instructions to state and settle the accounts between the plaintiff and defendant, and that plaintiff should have a decree for the amount so ascertained, and for general relief. On the twelfth day of March, 1884, the defendant demurred to the bill, which was overruled.

[428]*428On the nineteenth day of July, 1884, an order was made referring the cause to Commissioner J. L. Holt, who was directed to ascertain and report what proportion of the debt of $1,150.00, mentioned in the bill, the defendant ought to pay, and, in making said settlement, be should have reference to the taxable values in said district of Barker before the same was divided, and also the taxable values in both said districts since the division.

On the seventeenth day of October the defendant answered, insisting on its demurrer, and resting its defence on the ground that the better and more costly school-houses had been built in what is now Barker district, and that the house for which the debt was incurred is in the old territory, and that the district had collected debts due to it at the time of the division, and appropriated this money to its own use, etc.

Commissioner Hall made his report, to which there were exceptions, which were overruled; but at the October term, 1885, the court, after overruling the exceptions, referred the cause to Commissioner Peck, with the same instructions as to the former commissioner, and further to ascertain and report “what proportion of credit said defendant is entitled to receive, if any, on account of any payments that may have been made to the plaintiff of debts due to the district of Barker” before the division. Commissioner Peck reported the amount due to Barker district on the eleventh day of May, 1886, $698.47.

To this report three exceptions were filed — First, because the basis adopted by the commissioner is not the true basis upon which the settlement should be made; second, because said commissioner has failed to report, as requested, the settlement upon a basis of population, enumeration, and area; third, because no notice is taken of, and credit given for, the largely disproportionate amount of repairs done in Barker over Valley district when the two were one district.

On the fourteenth day of July, 1886, the cause was heard, on papers formerly read, etc., and on the report of Commissioner Peck, and the exceptions thereto; which exceptions were overruled, and the report confirmed, and a personal decree rendered against the defendant for $698.47, with interest from the eleventh day of May, 1886, and costs.

[429]*429From this decree the defendant appealed. The first error assigned is the overruling the demurrer, because it is insisted that the plaintiff had a complete and adequate remedy at law. In answer to this it is said, by counsel for appellee, that “the auxiliary, concurrent, and exclusive jurisdiction of courts of equity is so extensive that it is almost impossible to mention the numerous subjects of which they take cognizance. The subjects of partnership and contribution are peculiarly within such jurisdiction, and it is believed that the winding up of the affairs of corporations, whether private or municipal, is a proper subject for the exercise of equitable jurisdiction. Therefore equity had jurisdiction of this suit, and it is insisted that it was the proper forum in which to settle the proper question involved in it.” It is insisted by counsel for appellant that, if equity had jurisdiction at all, it was to take and settle an account, and it is claimed by him. under the authorities, that it does not fall within that branch of equity jurisdiction, as the accounts are not complicated, and no discovery is sought.

Counsel on both sides have entirely misconceived the true question involved in this controversy, and no authority has been cited on that question.

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Bluebook (online)
4 S.E. 640, 30 W. Va. 424, 1887 W. Va. LEXIS 85, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-edn-v-board-of-edn-wva-1887.