In Re Dissolution of Independent School District No. 27

60 N.W.2d 617, 240 Minn. 257, 1953 Minn. LEXIS 696
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedOctober 23, 1953
Docket36,132, 36,133
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 60 N.W.2d 617 (In Re Dissolution of Independent School District No. 27) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Dissolution of Independent School District No. 27, 60 N.W.2d 617, 240 Minn. 257, 1953 Minn. LEXIS 696 (Mich. 1953).

Opinion

Knutson, Justice.

This is a consolidated appeal from judgments of the trial court which affirmed orders of the board of county commissioners of Hennepin county dissolving Independent School District No. 27 of Hennepin county, referred to hereinafter as the Lincoln district, and attaching it in part to Independent School District No. 24, referred to hereinafter as the Robbinsdale school district, and in part to Independent School District No. 43, referred to hereinafter as Osseo school district.

For the purposes of this appeal the material facts may be briefly stated as follows: The Lincoln district comprises an area of about 7.5 square miles. It has one elementary school building; its junior high students are sent to Jordan High School and its senior high students are sent to North High School, both in the city of Minneapolis. Two classes of fifth-grade students are housed in neighboring school districts. The assessed value of the Lincoln district for 1951 was $621,124. It has a bonded indebtedness of $310,000, composed of three bond issues the last of which, amounting to $160,000, was obtained on April 1, 1952, and is still on hand. It is estimated that about $120,000 and the school building belonging to this district will go to the Robbinsdale district if this annexation is permitted to stand.

The Lincoln district area includes portions of the village of Crystal and the towns of Plymouth, Brooklyn, and New Hope. The district is inhabited to a large extent by young people, and the *259 population is growing rapidly. The school’s census survey showed that the total number of children 0 to 20 years old in 1950 was 683; in 1951,1,194; and in 1952, 1,705. It is conceded that, in view of the assessed valuation of the district and its present bonded indebtedness, it is not now possible to raise enough money to provide junior or senior high school facilities in the district and that in all probability it will not be possible to do so within the foreseeable future.

The Eobbinsdale school district is also in a rapidly growing community. In 1930 it contained 5.5 square miles and had 1,300 pupils in its school from kindergarten through the ninth grade and 200 in its high school. It now comprises 25.66 square miles and has a pupil enrollment of 5,650. Its classrooms are crowded, and many so-called substandard classrooms are being used.

On April 21, 1952, the electors of Lincoln district, by majority vote, adopted a resolution requesting the county board to dissolve the district pursuant to M. S. A. 122.28. The county board, on July 16, 1952, adopted a resolution dissolving the district and on August 19, 1952, attached approximately the southerly two-thirds of the district to the Eobbinsdale school district and the northerly one-third to the Osseo school district. Appeals were taken by Ira W. Metcalf from the order of the county board dissolving the Lincoln district and by Eichard J. Parish from the order of annexation to the Eobbinsdale school district. After a trial by the court, the orders of the county board were affirmed and appeals from the judgments entered pursuant thereto followed. The appeals here have been consolidated and heard together.

It is the contention of appellants: (1) That the legislative discretion of the county board was improperly exercised and was arbitrary and capricious; (2) that the legislative discretion of the county board was unreasonable and against the best interests of the territory affected; (3) that the county board exceeded its jurisdiction in dissolving the Lincoln district; and (4) that the court erred in refusing to receive certain evidence offered at the trial.

*260 The scope of our review on an appeal of this kind is governed by our statute and our decisions construing it. That the action of a county board in dissolving a school district, as well as in attaching it to another district, is legislative in character is now so well established that it needs no citation of authority. A review of such action by the court is limited by statute to a much narrower scope than review in an ordinary civil action. This court, as well as the trial court, must limit its inquiry to a consideration of whether the action of the county board was arbitrary, oppressive, unreasonable, or fraudulent or based upon an erroneous theory of law. Brazil v. County of Sibley, 139 Minn. 458, 166 N. W. 1077; In re Enlargement of Independent School Dist. of Granite Falls, 140 Minn. 133, 167 N. W. 358; In re Enlargement of Independent School Dist. No. 43, 148 Minn. 321, 181 N. W. 919. We will not reverse merely because we disagree with the honest exercise of judgment by the county board.

The wisdom of the statute involved is not a matter for judicial determination. In Common School Dist. No. 85 v. County of Renville, 141 Minn. 300, 304, 170 N. W. 216, 218, we said with respect to a similar statute:

* * The wisdom or propriety of the statute is not a judicial question, but one solely for the legislature. A statute may seem unwise, it may seem unjust, it may seem unreasonable in its operation upon the rights of the citizen, but that view of the law, in the absence of some conflict with the Constitution, cannot be made the basis of a refusal by the courts to enforce it. If it be deemed thus obnoxious the complaint should be addressed to the legislature. And though this statute is a distinct departure from the earlier policy of the state to extend to the voters of school districts a voice in all the affairs thereof, the departure was in furtherance of the educational interests of the state, a legitimate legislative policy, and clearly within and not opposed to nor in conflict with the constitutional rights of the citizen.”

We have recently had occasion to pass upon the authority of a county board to dissolve a functioning school district and to *261 attach it to another district under § 122.28. In In re Dissolution of School Dist. No. 33, 239 Minn. 439, 60 N. W. (2d) 60, after an exhaustive and thorough examination of this statutory provision, we held that, upon a proper petition, a county hoard may dissolve any school district, whether it is a functioning school district or a nominal or so-called withered school district, and also that, once the school district is dissolved, it is mandatory that the county hoard attach the territory to some other district. The same must he true when the matter is presented to the county hoard by a resolution adopted by the electors in the manner provided by law rather than by petition. In spite of our recent decision, appellants still contend that the authority of the county hoard under § 122.28 extends only to withered school districts. This question is fully determined in the cited case, and it would serve no useful purpose to restate what we determined there.

It may well be that the case before us is a good illustration of the type of situation which the legislature intended to take care of by enlarging the scope of the statute to enable county boards to dissolve a functioning school district as well as a withered one. The responsibility of providing suitable and equal educational opportunities to all children of school age is placed upon all the people of our state.

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Bluebook (online)
60 N.W.2d 617, 240 Minn. 257, 1953 Minn. LEXIS 696, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-dissolution-of-independent-school-district-no-27-minn-1953.