Board of Education v. Trustees of Schools

74 Ill. App. 401, 1897 Ill. App. LEXIS 243
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 3, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 74 Ill. App. 401 (Board of Education v. Trustees of Schools) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Board of Education v. Trustees of Schools, 74 Ill. App. 401, 1897 Ill. App. LEXIS 243 (Ill. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Adams

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the Circuit Court rendered on final hearing of a petition of appellant for a writ of certiorari directed to appellees, and a return to said writ. The court dismissed the petition, quashed the writ, and rendered judgment against appellant for costs.

The petition was filed March 24, 1897, and alleges, in substance, that by an act of the legislature, approved March 29, 1869, to incorporate the village of Glencoe, it was provided that the territory within the limits of the village and all additions thereto, should be a school district; that the district never had any specific name, but it appeared on the official records of Cook county as “ District Ho. 1,” and was sometimes called District Ho. 1, and sometimes School District Glencoe; that, by election, the district was brought under the general school law, and that the petitioner was the duly elected Board of Education of the district; that in the official record of a meeting of the Trustees of Schools of Township Ho. 42, Eange Ho. 13, Cook county, Illinois, appellees, held April 6, 1896, the following appears: “ The petition signed by O. E. Poole and others to detach the territory, viz. (describing it), from said District Ho. 1, and add it to District Ho. 2 in Township Ho. 42, Eange 13 in said county. Motion of J. J. Flanders that the petition of O. E. Poole and others be granted.” That it nowhere appears from any official record of said trustees, that said petition was signed as required by statute, nor that Poole and others had been duly served, nor that any legal voters of School District Ho. 1 were present at.said meeting, nor that ever said motion was put to a vote or carried; that at a meeting held April 13,1896, the record of the proceedings of the meeting of April 6, 1896, was read and approved; that May 18, 1896, the township treasurer of Township Ho. 2, filed with the county clerk a map showing the territory in question a part of District ¡No. 2, and that petitioner, appellant, caused a bill in equity to be filed in the Superior Court of Cook County, against the county clerk and said trustees, for an injunction restraining him and them from recognizing said territory as a part of District ¡No. 2, and from spreading a tax thereon, and for other relief, which is still pending. The petition then proceeds to aver that the trustees, at a pretended special meeting held July 25,1896, by a certain preamble and resolution directed the clerk to correct the record of the proceedings of the meeting of April 6,1896, in a manner which will be hereinafter mentioned, and that the clerk amended the said record so as to show that the said motion of J. J. Flanders was put and carried. The petition also alleges that William Meier, one of the trustees who voted at the meeting of July 25, 1896, was not a trustee April 6, 1896, having subsequently been elected to succeed one Lauerman, whose term of office had in the meantime expired, etc. The petition, after averring the absence from the record of jurisdictional facts, etc., prays for a writ of certiorari, and that the proceedings of the trustees in the premises be quashed and set aside.

April 2, 1897, appellees entered a special appearance, and moved to quash the writ, which motion was overruled by the court April 19, 1897, and appellees were ordered to file, within ten days, a transcript of their record. May 4,1897, a motion of appellant to quash appellees’ return to. the writ .was sustained, and a rule was entered requiring appellees to file record within ten days. The return, which was quashed by this order, does not appear in the record, although the clerk certifies that the transcript is full and complete. May 8,1897, appellees filed what purports to be an amended return to the writ, which shows that at a meeting of the trustees held April 6, 1896, trustees John Ling, J. J. Flanders and J. P. Lauerman being present, the following, among other proceedings, were had :

“ The petition signed by O. E. Poole and others to detach this territory, namely, ‘ the north £ of ¡N". W. ¿ of section .17 and that part of Frac. S. W. \ of Frac. Sec. eight (8) lying south of a line extending from, the middle south line (sic) of the last named quarter section to a point in the east line of said quarter section eight and four one-hundredths (8.04) chains north of the southeast corner of said quarter section’ from said District No. 1, and add it to District number two (2), in township 42, range 13, in said county.
“ Motion of J. J. Flanders, the petition of O. E. Poole and others be granted, that the president put said motion to vote, and that on said vote said motion was unanimously carried.”
Also, that at a meeting held April 13, 1896, John Ling, J. J. Flanders and William Meier being present, the following, among other, proceedings were had :
“Minutes of last meeting read and approved.” The minutes of this meeting of April 13, 1896, concluded with a motion to adjourn, which seems to have been carried, and then follow the signatures:
“ John Ling, President.
“ Baptist Mhelleb, Clerk.”

Following the signatures of the president and clerk, and not being any part of the minutes of any meeting of appellees, is inserted what purports to be a decision or opinion of Orville T. Wright, county superintendent of schools, in the matter of an appeal of Benjamin Newhall and others from the action of the trustees of township 42, range 13, detaching certain territory from District 1 and adding same to District 2, in said township. The superintendent appears to have dismissed the appeal for want of jurisdiction, on the ground that it appeared from the statement of the appellants that they were not present at the meeting of the trustees, April 6, 1896.

The return then sets out what purports to be the minutes or record of the proceedings of the trustees at a special meeting held July 25, 1896, in pursuance of notice by the president, Trustees Ling, Flanders and Meier being present. The minutes, after reciting that the clerk of the board delivered to the county clerk an incomplete record of the proceedings of the meeting of April 6, 1896, which record was incomplete in failing to show that the president of the board put the motion of J. J. Flanders, trustee, and that the same was unanimously carried, it was resolved that the clerk be directed to insert in the record, immediately after the statement of motion of J. J. Flanders, that the petition of Poole and others be granted; the further statement that the president put said motion to vote, and that on said vote the said motion was unanimously carried; and that the clerk be further directed to correct the copy delivered to the county clerk by inserting therein the same matter. Trustees Meier and Ling voted aye, and Trustee Flanders, no, on the resolution. Then follows what purports to be a petition, signed by O. E. Poole and seven others, to the trustees to detach the territory in question from District 1, and add it to District 2; a certificate, signed by Poole, that the names signed to the petition “ are the names of all the legal voters living in said territory;” what purports to be a notice to the directors in District No.

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Bluebook (online)
74 Ill. App. 401, 1897 Ill. App. LEXIS 243, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-education-v-trustees-of-schools-illappct-1898.