Corley v. Montgomery

46 S.W.2d 283, 226 Mo. App. 795, 1932 Mo. App. LEXIS 31
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 1, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 46 S.W.2d 283 (Corley v. Montgomery) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Corley v. Montgomery, 46 S.W.2d 283, 226 Mo. App. 795, 1932 Mo. App. LEXIS 31 (Mo. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

*797 TRIMBLE, P. J.

This is a suit brought July 29, 1980, against, the members of the School Board of Sedalia by resident tax-paying citizens of one of the subdivisions of the Sedalia School District, being a ward school and known as the “Arlington School,” which has heretofore, for twenty-four years, been maintained as a primary ward school, but which the board is about to abandon and no longer maintain, thereby requiring the children of that ward school to attend school at other schoolhouses in other parts of the city. The object of the suit is to compel the board to continue the maintenance of said primary ward school and to furnish teachers for said school and reasonable facilities for carrying* on said primary school in said ward.

Upon the appearance of the board, a demurrer was filed, which, after hearing, the trial court sustained, and, plaintiffs refusing to plead further, judgment was rendered for defendants. Thereupon, plaintiffs appealed.

The Sedalia School District includes Sedalia, a city of the third class, and, under the provisions of section 9194, Revised Statutes 1929, is a “City School District.”

Years prior to the institution of this suit the board of education, under provisions similar to those in what is now section 9330, Revised Statutes T929, divided the school district into school wards, and established an adequate number of primary or ward schools, and erected and furnished a suitable school building in each, of which the ward school involved herein is one. And ever since that time, said Arlington school has been recognized as such and a school has been maintained therein for the accommodation of the children residing in the territory assigned to said ward and ward school.

The petition, after alleging the character and qualification of the plaintiffs, the names of the defendants as members of said Sedalia School District and their duties, the creation, establishment twenty-four years ago, and the subsequent maintenance, of said Arlington Ward School, and the other facts stated in the opening paragraph of this opinion, goes on to allege in substance that—

The boundaries of said Arlington ward school, located in the easterly part of the city of Sedalia, comprised all that part of the city lying east of New York Avenue and Porter Street, and south of the Missouri Pacific right-of-way; that said school building contains four rooms and is capable of accommodating 125 pupils; that during the school year of 1929-30, approximately ninety-eight pupils Avere in attendance at said school, and that more than 100 resident pupils of said ward will, if permitted, attend said school during the school year of 1930-31.

*798 That the assessed valuation of the property in said ward school district is $500,670, and the resident tax-paying citizens of said ward will be taxed, during the year 1930, for the support of the public schools in Sedalia, in the sum of $7,009, and will be forced to continue to pay taxes from year to year on property in Sedalia School District and especially located in Arlington Ward School District.

tThe petition further alleges that — “the defendants, the board of directors of the said Sedalia School District, are threatening and are about to abandon said ward school and to discontinue the school within said ward and unless enjoined from so doing they will consummate their purpose in closing said school in said ward to the pupils within said ward district and that the children of said Arlington School Ward, will be required to travel long distances in order to reach other school houses in other wards in said city; that no vote ims taken at the last annual meeting authorizing the board of directors of Sedalia School District to remove said school house site or authorizing said board of directors of said Sedalia School District to abolish said school or ivard district and to remove therefrom the established school therein or to remove the site of said school house to some other place within the city of Sedalia other than the place heretofore established, maintained and know as the Arlington school house.

“that if the defendants are permitted to carry into execution their threat to abolish said school and to remove the same to some other site it will cause great hardship and inconvenience on the pupils of said district and cause them to travel long distances in order to reach a primary school; that the children who will attend Arlington school are those only who are in the primary grades and are physically incapable of going long distances to school; that by causing said children to traA^el long distances to reach a primary school it AArould subject them to the rigors of the Avinter season and endanger their lives from traffic upon the streets and be injurious to their health and Avill greatly militate against their school progress and the obtaining of the benefits of a primary education, and many therein Would be unable to attend school on account of the removal of said school house to some other part of the district.
“that the said Arlington school house has already been constructed, that it is ample and commodious for the purpose of carrying on primary schools therein, and that there is ample funds in the treasury of said district Avith Avhich to employ teachers therein.
“that many of the homes in that section of the city of Sedalia have been purchased, located and built and investments made upon the *799 faith of the continuance of said school, and that a discontinuance of said primary school within said ward district would greatly depreciate their property, and especially the property of these plaintiffs, for which they will have no adequate remedy at law.
“that the action of said board in undertaking to discontinue said school and to remove the same to other parts of the city outside of the boundaries of said ward as heretofore laid out and prescribed is arbitrary, unreasonable, unjust and oppressive upon the part of said board of education, and for which arbitrary, unjust, unwarranted and illegal acts of said board which they are now about to consummate, these plaintiffs have no adequate remedy at law'.”

The petition closed with a prayer that defendants be required to show cause why they should not be compelled by mandatory order to continue to employ teachers in said Arlington ward school, and to maintain the usual and ordinary teachers and facilities for said school, and, on final hearing, be required to continue the same.

The vital question in this case is, not whether the board of education should discontinue the ward school in question, but whether it has the power to do so, without a vote of the people? If it has such power then mandamus will not lie, for mandamus cannot control discretionary action. [State ex rel. v. Dickey, 280 Mo. 536, 548-9.]

We do not think the case can be disposed of on the ground that the petition, in alleging that the attempted discontinuance of the school “is arbitrary, unreasonable, unjust and oppressive” or is “unjust, unwarranted and illegal,” pleads only legal conclusions. Of course, if there were no facts alleged

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Bluebook (online)
46 S.W.2d 283, 226 Mo. App. 795, 1932 Mo. App. LEXIS 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/corley-v-montgomery-moctapp-1932.