Hudgins v. Mooresville Consolidated School District

278 S.W. 769, 312 Mo. 1, 1925 Mo. LEXIS 810
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 22, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by46 cases

This text of 278 S.W. 769 (Hudgins v. Mooresville Consolidated School District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hudgins v. Mooresville Consolidated School District, 278 S.W. 769, 312 Mo. 1, 1925 Mo. LEXIS 810 (Mo. 1925).

Opinion

*7 WALKER, P. J.

This is a suit brought by certain taxpayers of a consolidated school district, in Livingston County against the board of directors of said district and the other officials of same, and a bank named and the County Clerk of Livingston County. The purpose of this action is to have declared invalid the proceedings had to authorize the issue of certain bonds of said district and to restrain the defendants from the issuance and delivery of same. Upon a hearing before the Circuit Court of Livingston County at its September term, October 20, 1924, there was a finding and judgment for the defendants and the petition was dismissed. Prom this decree the plaintiffs have appealed.

The respondent school district was organized in the year 1916, and is designated in the record of the proceeding as “Consolidated School District No. 3, of Livingston County,” or in local nomenclature as the “Mooresville District.” A special election was called in the district for January 12, 1924, to submit a proposition for the issuance of bonds in the sum of $35,000 for the purpose of purchasing a site and erecting a school building thereon and furnishing and equipping the same. At the time the order was made by the board of directors for *8 the publishing of the notices of the election to authorize this bond issue, the regularly elected clerk of the 'board was ill and unable to discharge his duties as such: Apprised of his condition the board made and entered of record an order declaratory of the inability of the clerk to act, and elected one H. S; Fahey to discharge the duties of such office until the regular clerk became able to perform the same. The notices of the election were posted and signed by H. S. Fahey, as clerk pro tem. No question is raised as to the sufficiency of the notices, either as to the time of their posting or the information they contained, other than the fact that they were made and signed by another than the regular clerk. The result of the election showed that more than two-thirds of the qualified voters of the district voted in favor of the proposed issuance of the bonds, and the proposition was, under the law, declared by the board to have been carried. On the 25th day of January, 1924, the board ordered the issuance of the bonds in the sum of $35,000, to consist of forty bonds, numbered from one to forty, in sums of five hundred dollars and one thousand dollars each, to be dated August 1, 1924, maturing semiannually and annually thereafter in twenty years and to bear interest at the rate of five and. one-half per cent per annum, payable semiannually on the first days of February and August in each year. The interest was evidenced by coupons attached to each, and said bonds were sold to the defendant, the Fidelity National .Bank Trust Company, of Kansas City, Missouri. The principal and interest on said' bonds will in twenty years amount in the aggregate to the sum of fifty-nine thousand, two hundred and eighty-two dollars. To provide for the payment of the principal and interest a sinking fund was created by the board and a direct annual tax was levied upon the property of the district, and this action was certified to the County Clerk of Livingston County, one of the defendants, and a levy and extension on the taxable property of said district was made by said clerk as required by law. The assessed valuation of the taxable *9 property of the district was in excess of one million dollars and it had no indebtedness.

The assignments of error are:

1. That the notices of the election were not signed and posted by the clerk as required by Section 11127, Eevised Statutes 1919;

2. That thé $35,000 bond issue was in excess of the limit allowed by Sections 11 and 12 of Articles 10 of the Constitution of this State;

3. That the furnishing of the building could not be included in the proposition to isfeue the bonds and violated Section 11 of Article 10 of the State Constitution.

These in their order.

I. Under a general classification, statutes are either mandatory or directory; a determination of their character in this respect is of first importance in their interpretation. If mandatory, in addition to requiring the doing of the things specified, they prescribe the result that will follow if they are not done; if directory, their terms are limited to what is required to be done. [State ex rel. McAllister v. Bird, 295 Mo. 344.] The statutes (Sec. 11240, R. S. 1919) authorizing the board of directors of a consolidated school district to elect a clerk or, as therein designated, a secretary, does no more in the creation of that position than to confer the power upon the board to elect; the only limitations contained in the section being in regard to the time of payment of the compensations of the secretary and treasurer. Nor does the law defining the duty and power of a board of directors of a common school in the election and control of a clerk or secretary, made applicable by reference (See. 11240) to consolidated schools, do more than to prescribe the duties of such clerk (Sec. 11215), and to confer power upon the board to remove him for dereliction of duty (Sec. 11217). It appears, therefore, that these statutes, in so far as concerns the clerk or secretary of a board are clearly directory. The reasons for the absence from the statute of any provision which would authorize the classification *10 of the sections referred to as mandatory becomes even more evident when we consider the character of -the duties required to be performed by the clerk or secretary. They are purely clerical (Sec. 11215). While the authority of the board to remove him (Sec. 11217) is unqualified, it is solely a power of the board and bears no such relation to the statutes defining his powers and duties as to change their character. Furthermore, while the duty devolving upon the board, under Section 11127, Bevised Statutes 1919, to publish notices of an election to authorize the issuance'of bonds, is a prerequisite to the validity of the proceeding, the consequent duty of the clerk, as .the instrumentality through which the board acts in the performance of this duty, is directory. This is shown by the fact that while the duty is enjoined upon him to sign and post the notices, there is no provision invalidating the election if the duty is performed by some one else, nor is any penalty prescribed if the duty is performed by another than the clerk. The designation, therefore, of the clerk to perform this duty was intended to promote the convenience of the board in the performance of its obligatory duty. The essence or purpose of the statute requiring the publication of notices is to inform the taxpayers of the district of the proposed action of the board. That the notices posted conformed to the requirements of the statute, so far as concerns the informmation contained therein, is not disputed. That the voters of the district obtained this information is evident from the large vote cast at the election, there being only sixty-five qualified voters in the district who did not vote at the election; and more than two-thirds of those who voted favored the proposed action of the board. There is no claim nor could any substantial claim be made that any one was misled or did not cast his vote with a full knowledge of the purpose of the election.

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Bluebook (online)
278 S.W. 769, 312 Mo. 1, 1925 Mo. LEXIS 810, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hudgins-v-mooresville-consolidated-school-district-mo-1925.