Hazelton-Moffit Special School District No. 6 v. Ward

107 N.W.2d 636, 1961 N.D. LEXIS 62
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 6, 1961
Docket7906, 7907
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 107 N.W.2d 636 (Hazelton-Moffit Special School District No. 6 v. Ward) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hazelton-Moffit Special School District No. 6 v. Ward, 107 N.W.2d 636, 1961 N.D. LEXIS 62 (N.D. 1961).

Opinion

TEIGEN, Judge.

Hazelton-Moffit Special School District No. 6 is the petitioner. It filed two petitions against the board members and officers of two former school districts praying for a writ of mandamus to compel the respondents individually and as such board members and officers of the former school districts to pay over and release to the petitioner all properties and assets in their hands belonging to the former districts. The petitions in brief alleged that the petitioner is a corporation organized and existing under and by virtue of the laws of the State of North Dakota; that the respondents were officers or board members of the former school districts but that such school districts had ceased to exist; that in a reorganization of school districts conducted pursuant to the provisions of Chapter 15-53 of the 1957 Supplement to NDRC 1943, all of the area formerly included in the said former school districts named was incorporated into the petitioner district as an integral part thereof; that the said former school districts thereupon terminated as legal entities; and that the time for appeal had expired. Pursuant to the statutes and the adjustment of property, assets, debts and liabilities, all of the property and assets of said former school districts became the property and assets of the petitioner. Demand had been made upon the respondents for delivery thereof but they have refused and still refuse to pay over or release the same. Petitioner prayed for a peremptory writ of mandamus to compel respondents in each of said cases to turn over to it the property and assets of their respective former school districts.

The respondents in each of said cases filed similar answers. In one of the cases, however, three of the respondents filed with the court an offer of judgment which was accepted by the petitioner and the court. The record does not disclose what offices these three respondents held, but we assume they did not constitute a majority of the school board or those who had actual possession of the property in question as the proceeding continued to be resisted. Thus the two respondents in the one case, and all of the respondents in the other case, filed answers in each of the proceedings. The answers are identical. In these answers the respondents deny that the petitioner is now or at any time has been a corporation; deny that the former school districts had ceased to exist as corporations, and deny that the reorganization of *640 the school districts was duly conducted under the provisions of Chapter 15-53, supra. They further deny that the former school districts were incorporated into the petitioner district or that the former school districts terminated as legal entities. They deny that the time for appeal from the proceedings had expired, and deny that the assets and property in the hands of the respondents is the property of the petitioner district. The respondents admit that a demand had been made, but allege that they believe the same to be invalid and of no effect.

The respondent's affirmatively plead that the reorganized district had not been'properly formed. In designating the matters which they claim rendered the district invalid, they aver that the county committee, purporting to perform pursuant to statute, was not a duly constituted county committee and was therefore illegal. They averred that the polling places were not in proper places; that certain petitions had been filed with the county committee which had been disregarded; that the second election held for the formation of the new school district was invalid because it was not preceded by another public hearing, and that in the notice of election there was an omission in the boundary description. The respondents allege that the county superintendent of schools did not have the statutory educational requirements for the office; that the proposed boundary was gerrymandered to include a certain schoolhouse, thus depriving another district of it; that the votes of one district included within the proposed reorganized district were misclassified as rural. They further contend that the petitioner in performing acts as a school district was doing so in an illegal manner in that it was obtaining money in the form of loans without calling for bids; that if the said former districts no longer exist, respondents, as board members and officers, had no authority to transfer property; that Section 15-5316 1957 Supplement to NDRC 1943, one of the statutes in the reorganization act, is unconstitutional in that it denies the respondents the right of appeal provided by Section 15-5325 of said supplement.

The facts were stipulated and the matter submitted to the district court for decision without a jury on the basis of the described pleadings and the agreed facts. The stipulation also provided that the two cases be consolidated for the purpose of the trial.

The district court found in favor of the petitioner in each case, and ordered judgment entered for a peremptory writ of mandamus. The respondents have appealed to this court from such judgments. The cases are before us for trial de novo, as provided by Sections 32-3206 and 28-2732 NDRC 1943 providing that the chapters relative to new trials and appeals in the title Judicial Procedure, Civil, except insofar as they are inconsistent with the provisions of the chapter on mandamus, shall apply.' We find no inconsistency between Chapter 32-34 NDRC 1943, providing for the special proceeding of mandamus, and Section 28-2732 NDRC 1943, pertaining to appeals of actions tried to the court without a jury.

The defenses interposed by the answer may be divided into four main categories: (1) Denial; (2) An attack upon the legality of the county committee and the county superintendent of schools, who were officers instrumental in the formation of the reorganized district; (3) An attack upon the legality of the formation of the petitioner district; and (4) An attack upon the constitutionality of one statute of the reorganization act.

The facts were stipulated mainly in the form of exhibits admitted in evidence, which exhibits consist of all of the minutes of the county committee, the entire record of both the first and second reorganization plan, including the action of the county committee, action of the state committees, and action of the county superintendents. They contain all the records of public hearings, notices of election, election ballot, the canvass of the votes, the record on can *641 vass of the votes, the certification of the formation and establishment of the district, notice and call by county superintendent of special election to elect a new board of education, certification of the election of the school board members, the orders of the county committee directed to the officers of the former school districts incorporated within the petitioner district pertaining to the division and adjustment of property, debts and liabilities and ordering the transfer thereof to the petitioner district, and demand for authorization authorizing the county treasurer to transfer to the petitioner district its share of the remaining funds of the former districts in possession of the county treasurer, copies of the notification by county superintendent of establishment and organization of petitioner district to the president and clerk of all former districts within the area of the petitioner district, and other papers. It was stipulated that these orders and notices were received.

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Bluebook (online)
107 N.W.2d 636, 1961 N.D. LEXIS 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hazelton-moffit-special-school-district-no-6-v-ward-nd-1961.