Eckstein v. Board of Education

4 Ohio Cir. Dec. 149
CourtHuron Circuit Court
DecidedApril 15, 1894
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Ohio Cir. Dec. 149 (Eckstein v. Board of Education) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Huron Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eckstein v. Board of Education, 4 Ohio Cir. Dec. 149 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1894).

Opinion

Scribner, J.

This is an appeal from the judgment rendered therein by the court of common pleas. The action is brought to test the legality and validity of certain proceedings had in the probate court of Huron county, whereby it was sought to detach certain territory from the townships of Richmond and New Haven and to attach the same to thee village school district of Chicago Junction.

Section 3893, Rev. Stat., contains this language,

Section 3893: “ A part or the whole of any district may be transferred to an adjoining district, by the mutual consent of the board of education having control of such districts; but no such transfer shall take effect until a statement or map, showing the boundaries of the territory transferred, is entered upon the records of such boards, nor, except when the transfer is for the purpose of forming a joint sub-district, until a copy of such statement ■or map, certified by the clerks of the board making the transfer, is filed with the auditor of the county in which the transferred territory is situated; and any person living in the territory so transferred may appeal to the county commissioners, as provided in sec. 3967, Rev. Stat., and the commissioners, at their first regular meeting thereafter, shall approve or vacate such transfer.”

On February 27, 1893, as it appears from certain papers that are included in the evidence submitted here, there was filed with the board of education of Chicago union school district, Huron county, Ohio, an application brought under the section of the statute which I have just read, and which application reads:

“Gentlemen: We, the undersigned electors residing'in the territory hereinafter described, do hereby respectfully pray your honorable body to so change the boundary lines of your school district to include the following described property, to-wit: '
In section 3, of New Haven township, that part of lot 48 not already in the district; lots 27 and 28; lots 46 and 47.
In section 2, of Richmond township, that part of lots 25 and 30 not already included in said district; all of lots 24, 26, 29, 31 and 32. All of said described property being in Huron ■county, Ohio. All of which we ask to have included in Chicago Junction school district, believing it to be greatly to our educational interests, as well as that of others. And thus -we shall ever pray. ” Signed by five persons.

There also appears among the papers, a statement certified by J. A. Pittsford, clerk of the joint meeting, as it is subscribed, and dated Chicago, March 27, 1892, that certain proceedings were had, under the application which I have just read, at which the several boards of education refused to grant the prayer of the petitioners, so that the application, as it appears in these papers and elsewhere in the case, was disallowed.

Sections 3928 to 3945, inclusive, relate to the formation of sub-districts, and the provisions are of such a character as to lead us to the conclusion that they have no application to the proceedings of the character such as was subsequently had here.

Sections 3946 to 3948, inclusive, relate to another proceeding having in view the accomplishment of the same purpose.

Section 3946 reads:

[151]*151“A petition may, in like manner, be filed with the clerk of the board of education of any township praying for the creation of an additional. sub-district, or for changing the lines of sub-districts, or for the creation of a special school district, or for changing the lines of special or village districts, and adjoining sub-districts; but when a special or village district is interested in such proposed change, the petition may be filed either with the clerk of the township board, or the clerk of the board of education of such special or village district; and when any such lines have been so changed, they shall not be altered by any board or boards of education until after the expiration of three years, except upon the written consent of two-thirds of the electors residing within the territory affected by the change.”

Section 3947 reads:

“Such petition may be filed with the clerk of the board of education of such special or village district, with the clerk of the board of education of the township, or, if the changer sought by the petition affect the territory in more than one township, with the clerk of the board of education of either township; and upon the filing thereof, the members of the board or boards interested shall be notified, as provided in sec. 3933.”

Section 3948 reads:

“It shall be the duty of such board or boards to meet and cónsirder the petition within thirty days from the time the same is filed, but on failure to do so within sixty days of such time, or if the board or boards meet and grant, or refuse to grant, the prayer of the petition, a petition or remonstrance may be filed with the probate judge of the county by either party, as provided in sec. 3934; and, thereafter, such proceedings may be had thereon, and they shall have the same effect as is therein provided for the formation of joint sub-districts.”

These boards of education of the three districts had their last meeting March 27, 1892, at which time a failure to agree upon the proposition submitted, took place.

On April 28th, a petition was filed — at least it bears that date — with the probate judge of Huron county, and reads:

“Hon. G. T. Thomas, probate judge of Huron county, state of Ohio. Whereas, the boards of education of Richmond township, New Haven and Chicago Junction village school district, in said county and state, having refused, at a meeting held in Chicago Junction on Friday, March 25, 1892, to grant our petition, or any part thereof, praying to have the boundary lines of Chicago Junction school district changed. Said petition having been filed with J. A. Pittsford, clerk of Chicago Junction school district, February 27, 1892, as prescribed by law.
“Therefore, we, the undersigned petitioners and also electors not petitioners, residents in the territory hereinafter described, do hereby most respectfully pray and petition you to appoint three judicious, disinterested men of said county, and not residents of either townships or districts to be affected by this petition, to consider the propriety of changing the boundary lines of Chicago Junction school district, so as to include the following property, to-wit, more or less as the commission may decide. In sec. 3, of New Haven township, that part of lot 48, not already in the district; all of lots 27, 28, 46 and 47. In sec. 2, of Richmond township, that part of lots 25 and 30, not already included in said district; all of lots 24, 26, 29, 31 and 32. And thus we shall pray.” This is subscribed by six petitioners.

It appears that on May 25th, by the record of the proceedings had in the probate court, a bond was filed as required by the statute, securing the payment of the costs of the proceeding in the case. Then, afterwards, on May 7-, 1892, the probate court made an order of this tenor:

“This day this cause came on for hearing upon the petition hereinbefore filed by M. O. Rettig et al., and the same being found in all respects according to law, and the petitioners having filed an undertaking for costs as required by law; it is ordered that T. K. Strimple, D. D. Benedict and John C.

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Bluebook (online)
4 Ohio Cir. Dec. 149, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eckstein-v-board-of-education-ohcircthuron-1894.