Hufford v. Herrold

189 Iowa 853
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 2, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 189 Iowa 853 (Hufford v. Herrold) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hufford v. Herrold, 189 Iowa 853 (iowa 1920).

Opinion

Stevens, J.

Plaintiffs are residents and taxpayers within the consolidated independent district of Jefferson, Jefferson Township, Polk County, Iowa,, and defendants comprise its board of directors, and the auditor and treasurer of said county. The petition assails the validity of the organization of said district upon the grounds of indeffniteness, irregularity, inaccuracy, and conflict in the description of the proposed boundary and territory thereof, as set forth in the petition and notices of election therefor,[855]*855that the requirement of the statute, that separate ballot boxes be provided for the residents within towns and villages within said proposed district and the territory outside thereof, was not complied with; that the promoters of the proposition to organize said district acted in bad faith, and procured sufficient nonresidents to cast illegal votes at the election to obtain a majority in favor thereof, without which the proposition would have been defeated.

The petition also charges that, if the incorporation of the district was valid, it had, at the times complained of, ceased to have a legal existence, for the reasons that, since its organization,, the United States government has acquired, for military purposes, more than two sections of the territory situated therein, same constituting a part of the cantonment known as Camp Dodge; that 120 acres originally included therein have been ceded by the board of directors to the neighboring district of Crimes; that no effort to carry out the purpose of said incorporation has been made since its organization, in 1917; and that said', district has been abandoned, and ceased to function as such;; and that, by reason of the action of the United States government and the board of. directors, as above set forth, the territory within said district has been reduced to less than 16 sections.

It is also alleged in said petition that the defendant board of directors has determined that no school shall be conducted in said district, except in a building located within the limits of the territory acquired by the United States government for military purposes, and is threatening and proposing to remove a schoolhouse, situated in said consolidated district, to a site located outside of the territorial limits of the said district, which site is unsanitary and unsuitable for school purposes, for the reasons that same is located near an interurban railway and station, and in the vicinity of picnic grounds, and of a place frequented by, and forming a common meeting ground for, immoral characters of both sexes,, and used for immoral purposes; that soldiers in charge of trucks and automobiles [856]*856in great numbers pass and drill near said site, and that the attention of the pupils will. be distracted from their studies; that no suitable playground can be provided for the use and benefit of pupils attending said school; that same is remote from the center of the school population, and is opposed by the patrons of said school.

It is further alleged in said petition that, on or about June 30, 1917, at an election held for that purpose, the electors within said district voted to issue bonds in the sum of $20,000, for the purpose of creating a fund to be used in the erection of a schoolhouse; and that, subsequent thereto, the defendant board of directors made and certified a tax levy for school purposes to the county auditor of Polk County upon a part only of the real estate originally comprised in said district; that the taxes so levied, if payment thereof-be enforced and the bonds issued and sold, would impose an unlawful and oppressive burden upon the property and taxpayers within said district, and a burden not contemplated by the parties at the time of the organization of said district. Plaintiffs pray that the defendants be enjoined from removing said school building, and from issuing and selling bonds, and that the taxes levied and certified to the county auditor be canceled, and their collection enjoined. Possibly,, the foregoing summary of the allegations of plaintiff’s petition does not include all of the essential matters therein set forth, but the omission, if any, will be supplied in the discussion to follow.

1. Schools and School Districts : quo warranto. I. In so far as the petition charges irregularities and defects in the organization of the consolidated district, it does not state ground for injunctive relief. We have repeatedly held that the validity and legality of the incorporation of a consolidated school district can be tested only by quo warranto. Haines v. Board of Directors, 184 Iowa 401; State v. Rowe, 187 Iowa 1116; Harvey v. Kirton, 182 Iowa 973; Nelson v. Consolidated Ind. Sch. Dist., 181 Iowa 424.

This is practically conceded by counsel for ■ appellant; [857]*857but they seek to make a distinction between a direct assault upon the validity of the incorporation of the district, and a situation wherein such questions arise as a mere incident to the main grounds upon which equitable relief is demanded. The allegations of the petition, however, specifically challenge the legality of the organization of the district, and relief is asked upon this ground.

Schools and School Disteicts: consolidation : _ acquisition of* land by Federal government. II. Appellants also maintain that,, even if it were conceded that the original incorporation of the district was, in all respects, valid, yet, because of the matters set forth in the petition and admitted by the demurrer, it has ceased to have a valid existence. The acquisition by the United States government of a portion of the territory included within said district for military purposes, it is true, deprived the district of the right to levy and collect taxes therefrom, but our attention is called to no statutory provision or other authority to the effect that such action changed the boundaries of said district, or took the land thus acquired by the government out of the territorial limits of the district, within the meaning of the statute providing that consolidated school districts shall not be organized with an area of less than 16 sections. If the United States government shall, in the future, restore the land taken to private ownership, it would doubtless be subject to the payment of taxes, the same as though the 'government had not acquired it for military purposes.

Schools and School Districts: attempt to cede lands: delay in selling bonds. So far as the board of directors have attempted to cede to a neighboring district any portion of land within said district, such action Avas clearly unauthorized and illegal. No such authority is conferred upon it. Surely, the statute Avhich requires that no district containing less than 16 sections may be organized, did not confer implied, authority upon the board of directors to cede enough of the territory therein to another district to thereby reduce the area thereof to less than [858]*85816 sections.

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189 Iowa 853, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hufford-v-herrold-iowa-1920.