Camp Crook Independent School District No. 1 v. Shevling

270 N.W. 518, 65 S.D. 14, 1936 S.D. LEXIS 119
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 17, 1936
DocketFile No. 7904.
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 270 N.W. 518 (Camp Crook Independent School District No. 1 v. Shevling) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Camp Crook Independent School District No. 1 v. Shevling, 270 N.W. 518, 65 S.D. 14, 1936 S.D. LEXIS 119 (S.D. 1936).

Opinion

CAMPBELL, J.

Section 173 of the Public School Law of 1931 (chapter 138, Laws 1931) reads as follows:

"Inclusion and Exclusion of Territory. Territory adjacent to any independent school district may be included therein, and territory within any independent school district may be taken therefrom and included in any adjacent district in the following manner:

“1. The application for such change shall be in writing and signed by thé petitioners. The application must be signed by a majority of the combined number of resident electors, and owners of real property, located within the territory sought to be included or excluded from any independent district. Said application shall *17 also describe the real property with reasonable certainty sought to be included or excluded from said independent school district.

“2. Upon receipt of such petition the County Superintendent of Schools shall call a committee to decide upon granting or refusing the petition. Such committee shall consist of County Superintendent of Schools, the President of the Board of Education of such Independent School District, and the Chairman of the other School District Board to be affected by such proceeding. Provided, however, that the County 'Superintendent shall send by registered mail 'written notice to all property owners of the territory to be attached or detached at their last known address at least ten days prior to the date of said: meeting and all such persons so- notified, shall, if they desire, appear and be heard by said committee.

“3. The committee shall consider the interests of the corporations concerned, the convenience and equities of the petitioner, and the permanent school interests, and if they deem it proper, shall grant the petition and issue an order authorizing the attachment or exclusion of such territory to or from the independent school district or school district to which it is adjacent. The committee shall also have power to adjust all property interests involved in the change which concerns the corporations interested. Before the issuance of any order authorizing the change, it shall make an equitable adjustment of any question of indebtedness involved.

“4. Record of the decision of the committee shall be transmitted to the Clerks of the School Board, and Board of Education interested for record and a copy forwarded to the County Auditor by the County Superintendent of Schools and a copy thereof if the decision be adverse -to the petitioners, be served upon the petitioners by the -County Superintendent of Schools.

“5. Such territory shall if no appeal be taken therefrom, take effect sixty days from the date of the order authorizing such change. Such order, however, shall not be issued until after the action and decision of the committee is duly recorded by the Board of Education and the District School Board: Provided that territory more than two miles from the limits of the city or town within the independent district shall not be considered ‘adjacent territory’ within the provisions of this section, unless the electors of such *18 territory shall unanimously petition that it be so considered: Provided further that when the inclusion of the adjacent territory within two miles of the city or town limits will leave territory in any district or districts, that it is impracticable or inconvenient for school purposes and can not be equitably attached to any other district, then upon a petition by a majority of the combined number of resident electors and real property owners in such territory, the same may be included in the independent district.”

Section 8i of the same statute provides:

“Appeal to Circmt Court. From a decision made by a County Superintendent, by any School Board, or by a special committee created under any provision of the school law relative to a school or school district matter or in respect to any act or proceeding in which such officer, board, or committee purports or assumes to act, an appeal may be taken to the Circuit Court by any person aggrieved within thirty days after the rendering of such decision. Such appeal shall be taken by serving a notice of appeal upon the 'County 'Superintendent or on a School Board or special committee or any member thereof, and by filing such notice' of appeal in the office of the Clerk of the Circuit Court in the county'in which such appeal is taken, together with a bond in the sum of one hundred dollars with two or more sureties to be approved by the Clerk of said 'Court, conditioned that appellant will pay all costs therein that may be adjudged against hirm Such notice must clearly and concisely state the decision or that part of the decision appealed from. Upon such appeal so taken, said! County Superintendent of Schools or the Clerk of the School Board or the acting clerk of such special committee, shall within five days thereáfter transmit to said Clerk of Courts a certified copy of the record of the decision appealed from and of the record of all proceedings had in respect to said matter and all original papers filed in his office, and upon the failure of such person so to transmit said record he may be compelled by the circuit court so to do and! may be fined for neglect or refusal to transmit the same. Such officer or clerk shall receive the usual copying fees to be taxed as part of the costs of suit. The Clerk of Courts shall receive and file such notice of appeal and bond and such record so transmitted to him and docket the same in the same manner and receive the same fees *19 therefor as in appeals from justice courts. Any matter so appealed shall be entitled in the name of the aggrieved party as appellant, against the Superintendent of Schools, school board, or special committee, as the case may be, as respondent. Such proceedings shall be placed upon the trial calendar or note of issue and shall come on for trial at the first regular or special term of the Circuit Court following the taking of such appeal. The trial in the Circuit Court shall be de novo according to the rules relating to special proceedings of a civil nature so far as such rules are applicable and not in conflict with the provisions of this section and the court shall enter such final judgment or order as the circumstances and every right of the case may require and such judgment or order may be enforced by writ of execution, mandamus, or prohibition, or by attachment as for contempt. An appeal from any such final judgment or order may be taken to the Supreme Court within sixty days after written notice thereof shall have been given to the party desiring to appeal, which appeal shall be perfected, heard, and determined as other appeals in civil cases. Provided, however, that nothing in this section shall be so construed as to authorize any court to reverse the decision or order of any school board or officer involving the exercise of discretion and within the jurisdiction of such board or officer in the absence of manifest abuse of such discretion; provided further that an appeal as heretofore provided shall be the exclusive remedy of any person aggrieved by any such decision, unless otherwise specifically provided.”

Camp Crook Independent School District No. I and Dryfield School District No. 13 are adjoining districts in Harding county.

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Bluebook (online)
270 N.W. 518, 65 S.D. 14, 1936 S.D. LEXIS 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/camp-crook-independent-school-district-no-1-v-shevling-sd-1936.