Greenbanks v. Boutwell

43 Vt. 207
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedNovember 15, 1870
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 43 Vt. 207 (Greenbanks v. Boutwell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Greenbanks v. Boutwell, 43 Vt. 207 (Vt. 1870).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Barrett, J.

In this case the question is as to the legality of a tax assessed by School District No. 4 in Stockbridge. It is claimed in behalf of the plaintiff to be illegal on several distinct grounds ; and as it has been fully and learnedly argued upon all of them, it seems proper, with reference to the particular interests of the parties, and it may be of service to others similarly conditioned, that this court should consider and decide the leading questions that have been made upon the several grounds of objection to the tax.

I. Had District No. 4 a legal existence at the time the tax was voted ? Prior to April 14, 1863, there had existed two contiguous school districts, numbered 4 and 5. On that day, at a town meeting duly warned for that purpose, it was voted to annex said district No. 5 to District No. 4. This was done conformably to ch. 22, § 20, Gen. Sts. The transaction was an altering of said districts as was found expedient, within the terms and intent of the statute; and it was done by uniting District No. 5 to District No. 4. The effect was the abolishing of District No. 5, and annexing the territory of which it had been composed to District No. 4. This left District No. 4 in continued and effectual existence as fully, to all intents and purposes, as before that transaction. This action on the part of the town was definitive and effectual without any act or ceremony on the part of either of the districts as they had theretofore existed. Upon the passage of that vote there was no [213]*213longer in existence as a distinct and independent district what had, prior to that vote, been District No. 5. Only No. 4 existed, enlarged by the addition to it of what had been No. 5.

This is not a case of the formation of a union district, as contemplated by sec. 66, ch. 22. It is not a case of a district losing its organization, and requiring a re-organization, in the manner prescribed by the statute, in order to give it legal existence. District No. 4 was the same identical corporation after that vote that it was before,—embracing, it is true, some more corporators, but with no interruption of its corporate vitality or its corporate functions. We regard that action of the town as of the same character and effect as the voting of territory from one district and setting it to another, and the same as if, instead of designating the addition as they did, viz., as District No. 5, they had designated it by metes and bounds circumscribing the territory of No. 5', without mentioning the district by its former number. As District No. 5 it embraced certain defined territory; and designating it in the vote by its number was but a short and convenient way of designating the addition thus made to District No. 4 by that vote.

Holding thus upon this point, we think it follows of course that the courteous diplomacy between the inhabitants of the territory of the two former districts was not requisite in order to render the vote of the town effective. That vote had wrought its effect and had annexed No. 5 to No. 4 before those civilities were exchanged. Nevertheless it seems to us wise and well that such /course was taken, as indicating that the blending of the two was in pursuance of a harmony of views, and presaging a harmonious spirit for the future in the new relation created between those theretofore constituting two distinct corporate organizations.

Again, it follows from what has been said, that the warning posted up by the clerk of District No. 4, the 1st day of April, 1863, had as full efBcacy after District No. 5 had been united to No. 4, as it would have had if no such annexation had been made by the town, and that the meetings held under that warning by adjournment from time to time, and the action of said meetings, were of the same validity after that vote of the town as they would [214]*214have been if that vote had not been passed. Of course, then, District No. 4, as enlarged by the vote of the town, could take action on the subjects embraced in that warning, to the same effect as if that warning had been duly posted after that enlargement had been made.

II. This brings us to the question made upon the omission, in the votes of adjournment, of any' hour of the day for the meetings of the 24th of April, the 9th, 16th, and 30th of May, and the 9th of June, all of which were, by adjournments, under said warning of April 1st. It was decided in Sherwin v. Bugbee, 16 Vt., 439, and 17 Vt., 337, that the omission, in the warning of the school meeting, to specify any hour for such meeting, would render invalid the proceedings of a meeting that assumed to act under such -warning. -In the case before us, the hour for the adjourned meeting on the 15th of April was specified. At that meeting it was voted to adjourn to the 24th of April, but no hour for the meeting was named in the vote. There is some plausibility in such case in the suggestion, that it is matter of fair implication and understanding that the adjournment was to the same hour of the future day as that fixed for the meeting at which the vote of adjournment was passed. Practically this might operate fairly enough as to all those who were at the meeting when the adjournment was voted, and participated in, or were cognizant of, that vote. Theoretically, it mighj be well enough to establish it as a rule of law, that when a meeting called at, or adjourned to, a particular hour, votes an adjournment, without naming any hour, it shall be taken to be to the same hour as that fixed in the warning, or in the last vote for adjournment in which the hour is named. We are inclined, on the whole, however, to think that the reasons arising from a consideration of the practical consequences likely,to flow from the one rule and the other weigh most strongly in favor of putting the vote of adjournment upon the same ground, and under the same rule, as has already been established in the cases referred to above, as to the omission in the warning to name any hour for the meeting.

III. We come then to the question, whether the invalidity wrought by such omission in the proceedings of the meetings for [215]*215which the hour was not .named, disenables the district to vote a lawful tax to pay for the building of the school-house in question; provided it shall turn out that said school-house is such as. was within the prerogative of the district to build. In considering this question we do not take into account the question whether said school-house, as it was built, was outside of the lawful prerogative of the district, by reason of the hall as a part of it.

The fact is proved, and it is assumed by counsel on both sides, that the house, such as it is, has. been constructed and is now owned by the district, and that on account of it the district has become indebted. It is not questioned that this has come to pass in pursuance of the action of those meetings that were held upon defective adjournments, and in reliance upon that action as being by meetings lawfully held. The site for the school-house was determined upon, the value of it was appraised, and it was purchased, and was paid for by money raised by a district tax. So the district has become the owner of the land by purchase and payment. This was clearly within the province of the district. It was as clearly within its province to construct a school-house upon it. This has been done, and there the house stands, the property of the district.

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Bluebook (online)
43 Vt. 207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greenbanks-v-boutwell-vt-1870.