Grady v. Marshall

1955 OK 285, 288 P.2d 1101, 1955 Okla. LEXIS 539
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 18, 1955
Docket36780
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 1955 OK 285 (Grady v. Marshall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grady v. Marshall, 1955 OK 285, 288 P.2d 1101, 1955 Okla. LEXIS 539 (Okla. 1955).

Opinion

HALLEY, Justice.

O. R. Marshall, for himself and the other qualified electors in Dependent School District No. 46, in Oklahoma County, filed this action in the District Court of Oklahoma County seeking a Writ of Mandamus against C. E. Grady, County Superintendent of Schools, requiring him to call an election for the purpose of annexing all of Dependent School District No. 46 to three adjoining Districts, being Dependent School District No. 35, Consolidated School District No. 4 and Independent School District No. 52, all in Oklahoma County. The parties will be referred to as they appeared in the trial court.

It was alleged that on September 18, 1954, the plaintiffs filed with the County Superintendent of Schools a petition containing the signatures of a majority of the School District electors in District No. 46, as verified by those who circulated the petitions. They further alleged that the petition praying for an election was duly signed by a majority of the qualified electors of District No. 46, and in full compliance with the provisions of the School Code of Oklahoma, and especially Title 70 O.S.Supp.1953 § 7-1.

Plaintiffs alleged that upon the filing of such petition it became the mandatory duty of the defendant to call an election to be held in such District and give notice thereof as provided by law, but that the defendant failed and refused and still fails and refuses to call such an election.

Plaintiffs prayed for a Writ of Mandamus requiring and compelling the County Superintendent of Schools to comply with his statutory duty by calling an election as requested in plaintiffs’ petition for the purpose of annexing all of the territory of School District No. 46 in three portions to the three Districts above named.

On December 2, 1954, the court issued an alternative Writ of Mandamus, commanding the defendant to call an election within School District No. 46 to determine whether the territory of that District be annexed to the three Districts above named, as requested in the petition above described, or that he appear before the court on December 22, 1954, and show cause for his failure so to do.

On December 22, 1954, the defendant appeared and filed an answer consisting of a general denial, and alleging that on October 1, 1954, and prior to the filing of this action, an election was held annexing all of District No. 35 to District No. 46, and that the territory set forth in plaintiffs’ petition does not contain the entire territory of District No. 46 as it now exists and that as a result of the election of October 1, 1954, the matters alleged by plaintiffs and sought by Mandamus were now moot, in that said matters sought by Mandamus cannot be accomplished under present existing facts.

Defendant admitted the filing of the petition by plaintiffs on September 18, 1954, and that it contained 1,046 names and that by Section 7-1, 70 O.S.Supp.1953, the defendant had five days to determine whether the petition of plaintiffs contained the required number of signatures of qualified electors in District No. 46 as required by statute, and that defendant found that the petition of plaintiffs did not contain the required number of signatures of qualified electors in the area affected in that the petition should have contained 1,262 signatures.

Defendant denied that he had been arbitrary or capricious in the matters mentioned but that he had acted carefully and found that plaintiffs’ petition did not contain the required number of qualified electors, thus rendering the petition insufficient on its face to justify him in calling an election thereon.

The court heard testimony on December 22, 1954. The plaintiffs called the defendant as a witness and a large number of those who circulated the lists for the signatures of the electors. The court admitted the testimony of an expert on handwriting to show that many signatures appeared to *1103 have been signed by the same person, especially the signatures of man and wife. Numerous exhibits were introduced.- The defendant testified that about the time the petition involved here was filed with him that there was also presented to him a valid petition requesting that he call an election for the annexation for District No. 35 to District No. 46, and that he called such an election which resulted in the annexation of District No. 35 to District No. 46 on October 1, 1954.

There was no appeal from the decision of the County Superintendent that the petition for the election to annex District 46 to three other 'Districts was not sufficient because not signed by a majority óf the qualified electors of the area affected, and no appeal was taken from the decision of the County Superintendent that the petition for the annexation of District 35 to District No. 46, was sufficient, nor from the order holding that such proposed annexation had been approved by a majority of the qualified electors of District No. 35. This occurred October 1, 1954, and no appeal from these proceedings was pending on December 2, 1954, when the petition for Mandamus was filed.

At the close of the evidence, the court issued a peremptory Writ of Mandamus requiring the defendant to call the proposed election for the division of District 46 among the three other Districts mentioned. The defendant has appealed and presents four propositions. It is first contended as follows :

“Prior to the commencement of this Mandamus action, Dependent School District No. 35 was abolished by a lawful election and was annexed to Dependent School District No. 46, and performance of the things required of defendants in the Writ of Mandamus is now impossible, since there is no Dependent School District No. 35, to which a part of Dependent School District No. 46 can be annexed. The issues of the Mandamus action as presented by the Petition for Annexation had become moot at the time of the trial in the instant case.”

It should be kept in mind that prior to the institution of the present action on December 2, 1954, for a Writ of Mandamus requiring the County Superintendent to call an election on a petition proposing that District No. 46-be annexed to three other Districts, one being District 35, that District No. 35, had been annexed to District No. 46. District No. 35 had been abolished as of October 1, 1954, and no longer existed as a school district.

. The fact that District 35 no longer existed was proven by the testimony of the County Superintendent who had held valid the petition for an election on the proposal to annex all of District No. 35 to District No. 46. The election had been held and its results 'declared. The Superintendent had declared the result of the election as being in the affirmative and declared District No. 35 annexed to District No. 46. It necessarily follows that District No. 35 was no longer in existence.

The above facts were not disputed and it was not disputed’ that plaintiffs were notified on September 21, 1954, that the County Superintendent rejected their petition as insufficient because in his judgment it did not contain a majority of the qualified electors in the territory affected. Plaintiffs had 10 days within which to appeal to the District Court from the actions of the County Superintendent. They did not appeal and apparently slept on their rights from September 21 to December 2, 1954.

The case of Consolidated School Dist. No. 41 v. Dacus, 189 Okl. 400, 117 P.2d 508, is cited by the plaintiffs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1955 OK 285, 288 P.2d 1101, 1955 Okla. LEXIS 539, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grady-v-marshall-okla-1955.