COMMON SCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 2386 v. County of Wabasha

121 N.W.2d 767, 265 Minn. 398, 1963 Minn. LEXIS 679
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedMay 17, 1963
Docket38,812 to 38,826
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 121 N.W.2d 767 (COMMON SCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 2386 v. County of Wabasha) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
COMMON SCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 2386 v. County of Wabasha, 121 N.W.2d 767, 265 Minn. 398, 1963 Minn. LEXIS 679 (Mich. 1963).

Opinion

Frank T. Gallagher, Commissioner.

This matter involves appeals from 15 separate judgments of the district court. Pursuant to a stipulation by and between the attorneys for the respective parties, this court ordered that said appeals be consolidated for hearing upon one set of records and briefs.

During 1959, 15 petitions were filed with the Wabasha county auditor requesting the Board of County Commissioners of that county to have land set off from Common School District No. 2386 and annexed to Common School District No. 2387 in some of the petitions and to Independent School District No. 810 in others.

The petitions filed by Edwin J. and Mrs. Edwin Schmit; John and Marie Wolf; John and Theresa Schierts; and Caroline K. Baab and Anthony and Melkina Schouweiler 1 alleged among other things that *400 their lands are separated from Common School District No. 2387, to which annexation was sought, but would adjoin it if other pending petitions were granted by the board. For example, the Schmit petition stated: “That the above described land is separated from Common School District No. 2387 in the County of Wabasha, State of Minnesota, but will adjoin said Common School District No. 2387, if that petition for attachment and annexation of land herewith filed by John Schierts and Theresa Schierts is granted by this Board.” Each of the other 11 petitions affirmatively asserted that the petitioner’s land adjoined “the district to which it sought to be attached.”

Because of different filing dates of the petitions and the publications necessary prior to the hearings, the county board ordered hearings on certain petitions for July 13, 1959, and for others on July 27, 1959. After the hearings held on July 13, 1959, resolutions, effective July 13, 1959, were passed by the board granting the petitions. In each case the pertinent language of the resolution passed was as follows:

“Now Therefore Be It Resolved, That the petition of [the named person or persons] be granted effective July 13, 1959 and that the County Board issue its order granting the same.”

The same procedure was followed in disposing of the petitions heard on July 27, 1959. In those cases the resolution read:

“Now Therefore Be It Resolved, That the petition of [the named person or persons] be granted effective July 27, 1959 and that the County Board issue its order granting the same.”

In each case the order granting the petition was dated the day following the hearing but made effective the day of the hearing. The orders were signed by the chairman of the county board and were attested to by the county auditor.

In each case, School District No. 2386, Wabasha County, appealed to the district court from the order of the county board setting off land from District No. 2386 to another district in the county. The cases were submitted to the district court by stipulation. The appeals to the district court were brought pursuant to Minn. St. 127.25 on grounds: (1) That the county board was without jurisdiction to act; (2) that it *401 exceeded its jurisdiction in granting petitions retroactive from the date of the order; and (3) that the order appealed from was based upon an erroneous theory of the law. 2 Appellant in each case moved for summary judgment on the above grounds, which motions were denied by the district court. The court also determined that the intervenors, who were the original petitioners, were entitled to judgments that the orders of the county board be affirmed.

School District No. 2386 appeals to this court from the judgments entered and asserts that the trial court erred in denying its motions for summary judgment and in entering conclusions of law and orders for judgment for the intervenor-respondents.

Some of the petitions were filed under Minn. St. 1957, § 122.016, which was repealed in 1959, while others, filed after July 1, 1959, were under Minn. St. 122.21, which replaces the former section and is the same except for subd. 6, which is not involved on this appeal.

The legal questions which we consider pertinent to these appeals are:

(1) Whether certain petitions for setting land off from one school district and annexing it to another meet the requirements of Minn. St. 122.21 so as to give the county board jurisdiction to act.

(2) Whether the county board exceeded its jurisdiction by, according to appellant, attempting to make retroactive orders setting off land from one school district and annexing it to another under § 122.21.

(3) Whether appellant’s motions for summary judgment reversing the orders of the county board were properly denied.

Appellant argues that the county board had no jurisdiction to act and, if it did have, it exceeded its jurisdiction. With respect to the four above-named petitions, appellant contends that they fail to state that the lands involved “adjoin” or how they “will adjoin” the school districts to which attachment is sought. It also contends that failure to affirmatively assert in a petition that the lands “adjoin” a school district, or “will adjoin” if a companion petition is granted, and failure to *402 state that the land described on the companion petition adjoins such school district, is a fatal defect. '

A petition in a matter of this kind is not a pleading. Its purpose is fulfilled if it puts before the county board the question which it is to determine so as to enable the board to make a proper inquiry, and if it enables the parties interested to urge their claims. Sorknes v. Board of Co. Commrs. 131 Minn. 79, 154 N. W. 669. This court said in In re Dissolution of School Dist. No. 33, 239 Minn. 439, 450, 60 N. W. (2d) 60, 67, that in proceedings of this kind a county board is not acting as a court of law but is “exercising a legislative function which is not governed by judicial standards.”

Minn. St. 122.21, subd. 1, provides that, for the purpose of that section, land is adjoining a school district if:

“(a) The boundary of the area proposed for detachment and annexation is the same as the district boundary to which attachment is sought at any point, including corners, or
*****
“(c) The area proposed by a land owner for detachment and annexation is adjoining (as defined in subparagraphs (a) and (b) above) any land proposed for detachment from and annexation to the same district in another pending petition.”

In so far as these appeals are concerned, § 122.21, subd. 2, provides:

“The petition shall contain:
“(a) A correct description of the area proposed for detachment and annexation, together with such supporting data with regard to location and title to land as will establish facts conformable to subdivision 1 hereof.

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In Re Petition of Minneapolis Area Development Corp.
131 N.W.2d 29 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1964)

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Bluebook (online)
121 N.W.2d 767, 265 Minn. 398, 1963 Minn. LEXIS 679, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/common-school-district-no-2386-v-county-of-wabasha-minn-1963.