J. N. Street v. School District

120 S.W. 1159, 221 Mo. 663, 1909 Mo. LEXIS 167
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 29, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 120 S.W. 1159 (J. N. Street v. 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
J. N. Street v. School District, 120 S.W. 1159, 221 Mo. 663, 1909 Mo. LEXIS 167 (Mo. 1909).

Opinion

GANTT, P. J.

The above four cases have been submitted under one brief. Each of the said plaintiffs sought to recover in the circuit court of Buchanan county from the defendant, School District of St. Joseph, damages for failure to perform certain contracts alleged to have been made by the plaintiffs severally with School District Number Seven, township 57, range 35 of Buchanan county. Each of the petitions alleges the corporate capacity of the two districts as school districts and that on the 9th day of September, 1904, the voters of Number Seven voted in favor of becoming incorporated with the defendant, and on Septem[666]*666ber 15,1904, tbe directors of tbe St: Joseph School District voted to accept District Number Seven and receive all of its property, real and personal, and assumed its debts. The petitions then alleged that before the above vote said School District Number Seven entered into separate contracts with plaintiffs for performance by them of work for it during the next ensuing year. Two of the plaintiffs, Street and Abler, claim to have been employed as janitors, and the other two, Drowns and Miss McCarthy, as teachers — the janitors that they had entered upon their duties under their contracts and worked a few days prior to September 19, 1904, but except as to these few days of service they were not permitted by the defendant to carry out their contracts, although willing to do so, and each severally claim damages accordingly. Miss McCarthy and Drowns did not teach under their contracts, but claim damages for being denied the right to teach, although they were willing and offered their services.

The answers of defendants in the Street and Abler cases admitted the corporate capacity of the two school districts, the merger of District Number Seven with the defendant district on the date specified, and denied the other allegations of the petition. These answers also set forth that the only property the St. Joseph District received from District Number Seven was the McKinley School and the sum of $2,072, which had been collected by tax levies for interest and sinking fund on bonds theretofore issued by District Number Seven. The defendant further alleges that the pretended contracts relied upon by the plaintiffs were void because District Number Seven had not provided any income and revenue for the fiscal year commencing July 1, 1904, and had failed to make any levy of any taxes upon the property Within its limits for the expenses of the fiscal year and had failed to make any estimate of the amount needed for sustaining the [667]*667schools and the rate required to raise such amount needed, and had failed to make any enumeration of children of school age within the limits of the district, so that it was not entitled to any portion of the public school funds required to be apportioned by the clerk of the county court of Buchanan county, including the moneys received by the county of Buchanan in the treasury of the State of Missouri, and including moneys arising from the interest on funds derived from the sale of school lands, and moneys arising from the county school fund and moneys arising from the railroad and bridge corporations of the taxes levied on their property. It was also alleged that District Number Seven had no other funds or sources of income whatever at the time of making the alleged contracts.

The answers in the McCarthy and Drowns cases tendered the identical defenses above set forth, but alleged in addition that the plaintiff had not at the time of making the alleged contract any license to teach in the schools of Buchanan county.

In each of the four cases the defendant alleges that the plaintiffs might have earned during the term of exclusion all that said District Number Seven had agreed to pay them.

The plaintiff filed replies in the nature of general denials of these answers.

By agreement all four cases were treated at the same time and were submitted to the court without the intervention of a jury. Nearly all the evidence was applicable to all four of the eases, but a part was applicable only to each case. By the record of District Number Seven, it was shown that at a meeting of the directors of said district held on September 2, 1904, the plaintiffs had been selected as janitors and teachers respectively at the salaries claimed in their respective petitions. The plaintiffs Street and Abler, the janitors, and the plaintiff Miss McCarthy, a teacher, introduced without any objection their contracts [668]*668as such, and no question is raised as to their formal sufficiency. They all bore date September 6, 1904. Miss McCarthy also introduced in evidence a certificate in due form issued to her by the superintendent of schools of Buchanan county, Missouri. The plaintiff Drowns introduced in evidence over the objection of the defendant, his certificate, allowing him to teach for a term which would expire before his alleged contract time would expire and also his contract. All four of the plaintiffs showed that the defendant, St. Joseph School District, refused to permit them, after September 19;, 1904, to carry out their contracts. The plaintiffs also testified as to their earnings after their exclusion, and it was conceded that proper rulings were made by the court as to this defense.

The defendant introduced, as applicable to all the cases, the record of School District Number Seven against St. Joseph School District and the opinion therein reported in 184 Mo. 139. In brief it appeared from that case that in 1901, owing to a mutual mistake as to the effect of the extension of the limits of the city of St. Joseph over a portion of the territory of District Number Seven, the directors of Number Seven had surrendered to the defendant school district jurisdiction over all that portion of the district which had been taken into the city limits. At the same time it turned over a small amount of money in the general fund, which, with some additional money collected from the delinquent tax list, the defendant district had used in paying the debts of district Number Seven and repairing the McKinley school house, which was in the surrendered part of the district. The defendant district had also used some of its own money for these purposes, in addition to the above fund belonging to Number Seven. District Number Seven had turned over to the defendant district at this time its balance in the interest and sinking fund. Between the time of receiving these moneys and the institution of the suit by [669]*669Number Seven, tbe defendant district bad paid interest on tbe bonds issued by Number Seven. Tbe Supreme Court allowed tbe defendant its disbursements, so that when tbe case was decided tbe defendant district was found not to owe Number Seven anything on general account, but to owe it exactly the amount tendered for the interest and sinking fund. After the merger of the two districts, the money deposited by the defendant district was returned to it and this was the only fund received by the defendant district from Number Seven, and it was placed in the interest and sinking fund.

In all the cases it was admitted that in 1904 and in 1905 there was no money whatever to the credit of District Number S.even upon the books of the county treasurer.

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Bluebook (online)
120 S.W. 1159, 221 Mo. 663, 1909 Mo. LEXIS 167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/j-n-street-v-school-district-mo-1909.