Hopkins v. Lee

64 So. 2d 759, 217 Miss. 624, 32 Adv. S. 23, 1953 Miss. LEXIS 471
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMay 18, 1953
DocketNo. 38897
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 64 So. 2d 759 (Hopkins v. Lee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hopkins v. Lee, 64 So. 2d 759, 217 Miss. 624, 32 Adv. S. 23, 1953 Miss. LEXIS 471 (Mich. 1953).

Opinion

Robeeds, P. J.

The question for decision herein is the legality of the merger into Pinola Consolidated School District of the territory embraced within the Shivers Consolidated School District, both districts being located in Simpson County, Mississippi. The chancellor held there was not a legal merger, or annexation, from which decree the members of the County School Board of said County appeal.

The problems involved will be revealed by a recital of the proceedings and essential facts.

Both districts had been created and in existence and operation for many years before this contest arose.

On August 19, 1951, the Trustees of the Shivers District entered into a written agreement with' the Trustees of Newhebron Consolidated Line School District, located in Lawrence County, under which the school children in the Shivers District had the privilege of attending the Newhebron School for the school year 1951-52. This agreement was also approved and signed by the superintendents of education of said counties. The agreement obligated the Shivers District to pay the Newhebron tuition for the foregoing privilege to be raised by ad valorem tax to be levied upon the land in the Shivers District, and also a percentage of rentals and bonuses to be realized under oil and gas leases on 16th section school lands located in the Shivers District. The contract also provided that any of the Shivers children who desired to do so might go to Pinola, their tuition to be [630]*630paid in the same manner, although the agreement was not signed by the Trustees of the Pinola District.

Shortly before September 3, 1951, (the exact date not being shown), sixty-one percent of the qualified electors of the Shivers District filed with the County Board of Education of Simpson County a petition asking the Board “* * * to annex said District to Pinola Consolidated School District, should Shivers School fail to function as a school in 1951-52. We agree for any. territory to be released from this petition by persons wishing to be annexed to another school.”

The Board considered that petition at its September 3, 1951, meeting. Its order of that date refers to the petition as one “* * * to consolidate said District with Pinola Consolidated School District,” and then continues further consideration of the petition “* * * in order to allow time for a petition of acceptance to be filed by the qualified electors of the Pinola Consolidated School District.” At a recessed meeting, held September 5, 1951, the order recites that there came on for hearing by the Board a petition of “a majority of the qualified electors of the Pinola Consolidated School District asking that the territory embraced within the Shivers District * * * ” be consolidated with the Pinola District, and also came on for consideration a petition of sixty-one percent of the qualified electors of the Shivers District asking that the territory of that District “be added to” the Pinola District. The orcler then finds “ * * * that the best interest of the children will be served by the consolidation and that said consolidation will not inconvenience any.” It then orders “ * * * that the land comprising the Shivers Consolidated School District be, and the same is hereby annexed to the Pinola Consolidated School District but that this order shall in nowise interfere with the provisions for the 1951-52 session made by the trustees of the Shivers School.”

On February 1, 1952, certain school patrons and electors of the Shivers District, for themselves and such [631]*631others as desired to join with them, filed a petition with the Board of Supervisors of Simpson County, alleging that, for stated reasons, the action of the Board of Education of Simpson County in attempting to annex to Pinola the Shivers territory was void, and asking the Supervisors to permit and authorize proper suit to test the legality of such action. The supervisors declined to act upon that petition until July 7, 1952, when it refused to institute such action or give its consent for that to he done; whereupon, on the same day, petitioners filed the hill herein. A total of one hundred and nine persons finally joined therein.

The bill alleged that the action of the Board of Education was illegal and void for these reasons. First, because the Shivers petition was conditional in that it prayed the Board to annex the Shivers territory to Pinola “should Shivers School fail to function as a school in 1951-1952,”. and it is alleged that Shivers did function as a school during that time; second, because the Shivers petition was uncertain, vague and indefinite in that it contained this statement: “We agree for any territory to be released from this petition by persons wishing to he annexed to another school”; third, that the order of the Board was not responsive to the Pinola or the Shivers petitions; fourth, that neither petition described the territory ordered to he annexed to Pinola, nor did the order of the Board describe the total area after such attempted annexation.

The answer took issue with these legal conclusions, and further asserted that if any or all of them are well taken they are cured by Chapter 278, Miss. Laws 1952, which purports to validate school districts created prior to January 1, 1952.

We think the first two contentions are well taken and, therefore, do not pass upon the other two invoked by complainants.

And as to the Shivers petition being conditional: It asked that Shivers territory be annexed to Pinola if the [632]*632Shivers school failed to function in 1951-52. Under this record Shivers did function as a legal entity during that time. It had sixty children who attended school. Some fifty-seven of these went to Newhebron; two or three went to Pinola. The trustees of Shivers signed the New-hebron contract in their official capacity. It was approved by the county superintendents of education. The trustees paid Newhebron and also Pinola tuition for the respective number of children who went to each of those schools. That was paid out of funds belonging to Shivers school. The trustees of Shivers transported the children to Newhebron by busses belonging to the Shivers district.

But, aside from the testimony, the question is foreclosed by the pleadings and agreement of counsel. The bill was filed July 7, 1952. That was after the 1951-1952 school session. It alleges that the Shivers District'was created August 7, 1925, “and is now a legally created school district of said county and has been since its creation; that it has been legally functioning as a consolidated school district since its creation, carrying on all the functions of a school,” detailing them, and-has enjoyed the rights and benefits of a legally constituted and functioning school district. Again, that said school is “still a legally existing and functioning school district with all the rights, powers and privileges of a school district and is still a legal entity under the laws of the State of Mississippi.” The answer says “Defendants admit that said Shivers Consolidated School District did function from the time of its organization by the County School Board until the close of 1951-52 session thereof as a legally existing consolidated school district entitled to perform all of the functions of a consolidated school district under the laws of the State of Mississippi, and that it did so.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
64 So. 2d 759, 217 Miss. 624, 32 Adv. S. 23, 1953 Miss. LEXIS 471, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hopkins-v-lee-miss-1953.