Hooten v. Alt

191 N.E.2d 13, 244 Ind. 93, 1963 Ind. LEXIS 164
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedJune 13, 1963
Docket30,265
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 191 N.E.2d 13 (Hooten v. Alt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hooten v. Alt, 191 N.E.2d 13, 244 Ind. 93, 1963 Ind. LEXIS 164 (Ind. 1963).

Opinion

Landis, J. 1

This was an action for a restraining order and injunction against certain persons constituting the School Reorganization Committees of LaPorte and St. Joseph Counties and sought to restrain and enjoin the St. Joseph County Committee from excluding Hudson Township of LaPorte County in their respective plans for school reorganization.

The LaPorte Circuit Court issued a restraining order without notice and set the case for hearing on the temporary injunction. After two changes of venue the case reached the court below, which, after hearing, granted the temporary injunction, from which interlocutory order, appeal has been taken to this Court.

Appellants’ first contention on this appeal concerns the question of the right of petitioners under the School Corporation Reorganization Act of 1959, as amended, to withdraw from their petition for inclusion in a plan for reorganization filed under the Act, Burns’ §28-6106 (1962 Supp,).

The pertinent provisions of the statute are as follows:

“ . . . Provided further, That before a plan is voted in and when sixty percent [60 %] or more of the registered voters of any township, city or town adjacent to another county, petition their county committee requesting that all or part of their ■ particular township, city or town be included in the reorganization plan of an adjacent county, the county committee so petitioned shall release that part of the township, city or town so *96 designated to the county committee named in the petition, which county committee shall in turn include said released territory in the reorganization plan for their particular county. Such petition and request must be filed with the county committee prior to the time a final plan is submitted to the state commission or before a second or subsequent plan is submitted following rejection of the initial plan.
“Within five [5] days after the receipt of such petition, the county committee shall file such petition with the clerk of the circuit court. After receipt of the petition, the clerk shall make a certification under his hand and seal of his office as to (i) whether or not each signer thereon is a registered voter residing within the boundaries of the particular township, city or town, as disclosed by the voter registration records in the office of the clerk or the board of registration of the county, or wherever such registration records may be kept, (ii) the number of such registered voters signing the petition, and (iii) the number of registered voters residing within the boundaries of the particular township, city or town, as disclosed in the records mentioned in subdivision (i) hereof.
“Such certification shall be made by the clerk within thirty [30] days after the filing of the petition, excluding from the calculation of such period any time during which the registration records are unavailable to the clerk, or within such additional time as is reasonably necessary to permit the clerk to make such certification. The clerk shall establish a record of this certification in his office and shall return the petition together with his certification to the county committee. If the certification or certifications received from the clerk disclose that sixty per cent [60 %] or more of the registered voters residing within the boundaries of the township, city or town, have signed the petition, the county committee shall so inform the neighboring county committee involved.” Acts 1961, ch. 231, §1(3) p. 544.

*97 In the case before us a petition was filed on April 6, 1961, with the LaPorte County School Reorganization Committee requesting that Hudson Township be released to the St. Joseph County School Reorganization Committee for inclusion in the reorganization plan of that adjacent county.

On April 11, 1961, the LaPorte County School Reorganization Committee filed the petition with the clerk of the LaPorte Circuit Court and on April 13, 1961, said clerk made his certification that the petition as filed with him contained the names of 521 out of 774 (this was more than the requisite 60%) registered voters of Hudson Township.

However, on the same day, to-wit: April 13, 1961, at about 1:30 o’clock in the afternoon, plaintiifs-appellees in this action filed a second petition with the secretary of the LaPorte County School Reorganization Committee asking to withdraw their names from the original petition. Later in the afternoon of the same date, the clerk of the LaPorte Circuit Court returned the original petition with his certificate attached to the secretary of the LaPorte County School Reorganization Committee.

On April 20, 1961, the LaPorte County School Reorganization Committee considered both petitions and the second petition was ordered referred to the clerk for certification as to the total number of names on said petition who were registered voters of Hudson Township. That sometime between April 21 and May 24 the clerk returned the second petition to the secretary of the LaPorte County School Reorganization Committee certifying that 140 names contained thereon were registered voters of said Hudson Township.

*98 On May 4, 1961, the LaPorte County School Reorganization Committee considered both the original and the withdrawal petitions, rejected each of the petitions and refused to grant the prayer of either of such petitions.

On June 13, 1961, a director of the State Commission for the Reorganization of School Corporations by letter directed the LaPorte County Committee to release jurisdiction of Hudson Township to St. Joseph County and on June 16 the secretary of the LaPorte County Committee pursuant to said county committee’s authorization wrote a letter to the St. Joseph County Committee releasing Hudson Township to that committee. The St. Joseph County Committee thereupon notified the LaPorte County Committee of its acceptance of the jurisdiction of Hudson Township and on June 23 the State Commission for the Reorganization of School Corporations recognized the authority of St. Joseph County to exercise jurisdiction over Hudson Township. Since June 15 the LaPorte County School Committee refused to exercise further jurisdiction over Hudson Township.

Appellants’ first contention is that the trial court erred in its first four conclusions of law which were as follows:

“Conclusion No. 1
That the law is with the Plaintiffs.
“Conclusion No. 2
That at the time the plaintiffs filed their petition with the LaPorte School Reorganization Committed, said committee had taken no final action on the petition filed before it on the 6th day of April, 1961; had made no determination that more than 60% of the registered voters residing within the boundaries of Hudson Township had signed said petition; and had not released jurisdiction of Hudson Township to St. Joseph County.
*99 “Conclusion No. 3

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Bluebook (online)
191 N.E.2d 13, 244 Ind. 93, 1963 Ind. LEXIS 164, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hooten-v-alt-ind-1963.