In Re School District No. 62

1937 OK 393, 69 P.2d 367, 180 Okla. 297, 1937 Okla. LEXIS 654
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 15, 1937
DocketNo. 26972.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1937 OK 393 (In Re School District No. 62) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re School District No. 62, 1937 OK 393, 69 P.2d 367, 180 Okla. 297, 1937 Okla. LEXIS 654 (Okla. 1937).

Opinions

WELCH, J.

This is an appeal from an order of the county court of Carter county dismissing plaintiff in error's appeal from an order of the county superintendent of said county. The facts necessary for a determination of this appeal are as follows: The county superintendent of Carter county changed the boundary line of school district No. 62 of said county, by detaching from said district three quarter sections of land, which he attached to adjoining consolidated school district No. 74. More than one-fourth of the taxpayers residing in district No. 62 signed and filed notice of 'appeal, and such appeal was lodged in the county court. Both parties to the appeal to this court admit the only question here *298 involved is a proper construction of section 6779, O. S. 1931, which provides:

“If the appeal be from any order pertaining to the boundary of any school district, the appeal may be taken by one-fourth of the taxpayers residing in the territory affected by filing the notice of appeal hereinafter provided for. * * *” (The quotation is from section 2, of chapter 34, article 1, S. L. 1931.)

In taking the appeal from the county superintendent of public instruction the notice of appeal was signed by more than one-fourth of the taxpayers residing in district No. 62, but only one of them whs a taxpayer in the acreage sought to be detached from school district No. 62 and attached to school district No. 74. None of the persons signing the notice of appeal were residents or taxpayers in school district No. 74.

The appellees in the county court contended that the appeal to the county court should be dismissed because the notice of appeal to that court was not signed by one-fourth of the resident taxpayers in the acreage or territory sought to be detached from school district No. 62 and attached to district No. 74, and that contention appears to have been followed by the county court in sustaining the motion to dismiss the ap-pe'al. The appellant in the county court, and plaintiff in error here, contends that school district No. 62 was “territory affected” and that within the legislative meaning and intent the notice of appeal to the county court signed by more than one-fourth of the taxpayers residing in school district No. 62 whs sufficient.

Thus, it is apparent that we must determine the legislative intent in the use of the term “territory affected” in the act above referred to. It is apparent, of course, that the acreage sought to be transferred from one school district to the other is itself “affected” by the transfer, 'and we are' cited to decisions from other states which would indicate that both school districts are “affected” when acreage or territory is to be taken from one school district and attached to the other. We are not cited to any decisions of this court or 'any other court which holds that the school district from which territory is detached is affected or is not affected by such detachment or transfer ; the exact question seems not to have been passed upon. But to state the matter would seem to also determine it. Undoubtedly school district No. 62 was “affected” by the order of the county superintendent detaching certain specific acreage from that school district, and if the district was affected, then the territory of the district would be “territory affected” by such action of the county superintendent.

Section 6771, O. S. 1931, while it was fully in force, provided that in case of a change of boundary line between school districts the appeal could be taken by one-fourth of the qualified electors in the district affected by such change, to the board of county commissioners. It appears to us that in adopting chapter 34, article 1, S. L! 1931, the primary legislative intent was to change the forum to which the appeal should be taken under section 6771, and that, change was accordingly made to provide that the appeal should be taken to the county court instead of to the board of county commissioners, thus providing for a trial of the contest in court. The latter 'act indicates no intent to further restrict the right of appeal, but, on the contrary, if any change in that respect is indicated, then there is indicated a legislative intent to broaden the right of the people to appeal, since chapter 34, article 1, S. L. 1931, opens with these words:

“Any person or persons feeling 'aggrieved at any order or decision of the county superintendent * * * pertaining to or affecting the boundary of any * * * district * * * may appeal. * * *”

The second section then continues in effect the provision as to the percentage of taxpayers necessary to sign the notice of 'appeal, and makes the one-fourth per cent, to apply to “territory affected” instead of applying to “any district affected by such change,” as in the prior provision, section 6771.

To adopt the contention presented by the appellees in the county court and sought to be upheld here would be to hold that the sole right of appeal was lodged in the taxpayers residing in the tract of 480 acres of land sought to be transferred from one school district to another. We cannot find in the legislative enactment any intention to make such a radical change from the rights theretofore existing to appeal, nor 'any legislative intent to so radically restrict the right of appeal as to take that right away from other taxpayers who might in some instances be themselves seriously affected by such a transfer. It m'ay be that school district No. 74 was “territory affected” by this transfer of acreage, and it may be that all of the territory included in both districts 62 and 74 was affected by this transfer of 'acreage, or change in boundary line. But the exact question before us is whether or not school *299 district No. 62 was affected, or whether the territory of that district was “territory affected” by this action of the county superintendent.

Although there is no exact precedent cited, we find no .difficulty in determining, and we hold that 'an order of the county superintendent detaching any amount of acreage or territory from a school district affects that school district, and that the territory of that district is “territory affected” by such an order.

An examination of all of the legislative acts referred to convinces us that in this case an appeal to the county court could he taken upon notice signed by one-fourth of the taxpayers residing in school district No. 62, and that such right of appeal in such manner is well within the legislative intent evidenced by the 1931 'act referred to. If the 1931 act required that the notice of appeal be signed by one-fourth of the taxpayers residing in all of the “territory affected,” then the act might indicate an intention that, as applied to the facts in this c'ase, the appeal could only be taken upon notice signed by a full one-fourth of all the resident taxpayers in both districts 62 and 74. While it is true the act does not specifically authorize the appeal upon notice signed by one-fourth of the resident taxpayers in part of the territory affected, yet we conclude that school district No. 62 itself is territory affected within the meaning of the act, and that it was clearly the legislative intent to authorize the appeal on notice signed by one-fourth of the resident taxpayers therein.

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Related

Forston v. Heisler
1959 OK 122 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1959)
In Re School District No. 60
1937 OK 392 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1937)

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Bluebook (online)
1937 OK 393, 69 P.2d 367, 180 Okla. 297, 1937 Okla. LEXIS 654, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-school-district-no-62-okla-1937.