Davies v. Monona County Board of Education

135 N.W.2d 663, 257 Iowa 985, 1965 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 650
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 8, 1965
Docket51701
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 135 N.W.2d 663 (Davies v. Monona County Board of Education) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davies v. Monona County Board of Education, 135 N.W.2d 663, 257 Iowa 985, 1965 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 650 (iowa 1965).

Opinion

Thompson, J.

— On February 2, 1964, a written agreement was signed by the Castaña Community School District, hereinafter known as Castaña, by which it made over to. the West Monona Community School District, ■ hereinafter known as Monona, 12.4 sections of land which up to that time had been a part of Castaña. The two districts adjoin at the west line of Castaña and the east line of Monona; and the land involved is a part of that immediately adjacent. Monona signed the agreement on April 17, 1964. This agreement is attacked by the plaintiff and the intervenors in this action, which was brought in equity, asking that it be declared void and that an injunction issue restraining the defendants from putting it into effect.

The agreement was approved by the Joint Boards of Education of Monona and Harrison Counties on May 12, 1964. It was made under the provisions of Code section 274.37, Code, 1962, and amended by chapter 10, Acts of Sixtieth Extra General Assembly, which we quote: .

“The boundary lines of contiguous school corporations may *988 be- changed by the concurrent action of the respective boards of directors at their regular meetings in July, or at special meetings called for the purpose. Such concurrent action shall be subject to the approval of the county board or boards of education involved but such concurrent action shall stand approved if the county board or boards of education do not disapprove such concurrent action within thirty days following receipt of notice thereof. The corporation from which territory is detached shall, after the change, contain not less than four government sections of land.
“The boards in the respective districts, the boundaries of which have been changed under this section, complete in all respects, except for the passage of time prior to the effective date of the change and when all right of appeal of the change has expired, may enter into joint contracts for the construction of buildings for the benefit of the corporations whose boundaries have been changed, using funds accumulated under section 278.1, subsection seven (7), of the Code. The district in which the building is to be located may use any funds authorized in accordance with chapter 75 of the Code. Nothing in this section shall be construed to permit the changed districts to expend any funds jointly which they are not entitled to expend acting individually.”

We shall for brevity refer hereinafter to the appealing plaintiff and intervenors as the plaintiff. The propositions relied upon for reversal may be summarized thus: first, it is said there was another and prior proposal for reorganization pending, which deprived the districts of jurisdiction to make the agreed boundary change; second, that chapter 275 of the Code provides the exclusive means of making boundary changes such as the one proposed here; third, that section 274.87 is unconstitutional because it makes an illegal delegation of legislative power in violation of Article III, section 1, of the Iowa Constitution ; fourth, that a boundary change resulting in an increased tax burden on a property owner in a school district affected violates due process clauses of the Federal and State Constitutions; and fifth, that even if section 274.37 is constitutional the action *989 of the boards was arbitrary, discriminatory and an abuse of discretion.

I. We consider first the claim that a prior and pending plan of reorganization prevented the Castaña and Monona boards from having jurisdiction to take any action affecting the land involved in the boundary change. On November 15, 1963, a petition had been filed with the Monona County superintendent of schools providing for a merger of the two districts into one. This petition had been approved by the boards of directors of both districts. It was, however, disapproved by the Monona County Board of Education on December 16, 1963. Castaña appealed to the state department of public instruction, which dismissed the appeal and upheld the decision of the Monona County Board of Education. No appeal was taken to the district court.

It was in this situation that the agreement under attack here was made by Castaña and Monona. But on March 30, 1964, a petition in certiorari was filed in the Monona district court by Evan Davies, the named plaintiff in this appeal, alleging that the decision of Monona County Board of Education was illegal- and erroneous and that he, as a resident and taxpayer of the Castaña district and a signer of the petition for merger, had a right to bring the action to protect his interests. At least at the time of trial below no writ had issued and no further action had been taken.

It is on the basis of this pending certiorari action that the plaintiff asserts the Castaña and Monona boards had no jurisdiction to make the boundary line change they did. He relies upon the rule laid down in State ex rel. Harberts v. Klemme Community School District, 247 Iowa 48, 72 N.W.2d 512, and in other cases. The argument is that the reorganization proposed by the merger petition and approved by the boards was still pending when the boundary change agreement was executed by Castaña and Monona in 1964. It is thought that the certiorari action kept the first proceeding alive. The rule is that “subsequent-acting school authorities can acquire no jurisdiction of an area included in a prior-pending reorganization.” This quotation is from the Klemme case, loc. cit. 247 Iowa 53, 72 N.W.2d *990 515. Undoubtedly the principle is sound, and we have no intention of departing from it. But it has no application here.

We do not have a case of two contesting districts attempting to gain control over the same territory. At all times Castaña and Monona have been in agreement. Both boards approved the merger petition, and adhered to it until it had been disapproved by the Monona County board and that action affirmed by the state department of public- instruction. Neither saw fit to take an appeal to the courts; in effect, they acquiesced in the disapproval of the merger petition. Théy then took a different route, and agreed upon a change in the boundary lines of the districts by which some 12.4 sections of the westerly part of Castaña were transferred to Monona. At no time has there been any dispute between the two districts as to the action to be taken or the territory involved.

In Klemme we find significant language quoted with approval from Independent District of Sheldon v. Board of Supervisors, 51 Iowa 658, 660, 2 N.W. 590, 591: “By the proceedings taken by the plaintiff it had obtained jurisdiction over the disputed territory before any steps were taken to organize Grant. The right to complete its organization, as provided by law, followed. It could not be ousted of its jurisdiction over the disputed territory by anything done subsequent to the commencement of the proceedings to organize the plaintiff, unless the attempted organization was abandoned, or was not completed within the time required by law.” Loc. cit. 247 Iowa 52, 72 N.W.2d 515.

This established a qualifying rule, that if an attempted reorganization is abandoned a new proceeding may be commenced,' and is not invalid for want of jurisdiction.

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Bluebook (online)
135 N.W.2d 663, 257 Iowa 985, 1965 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 650, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davies-v-monona-county-board-of-education-iowa-1965.