Joint School District No. 5 of City of Mayville v. Joint County School Committee

127 N.W.2d 258, 23 Wis. 2d 219, 1964 Wisc. LEXIS 395
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 31, 1964
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 127 N.W.2d 258 (Joint School District No. 5 of City of Mayville v. Joint County School Committee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Joint School District No. 5 of City of Mayville v. Joint County School Committee, 127 N.W.2d 258, 23 Wis. 2d 219, 1964 Wisc. LEXIS 395 (Wis. 1964).

Opinion

Beilfuss, J.

The principal issue is whether the Joint County School Committee lost jurisdiction to act upon the petition of December 7, 1962.

*223 “40.02 County school committee. . . . (S) Joint Committee. If the territory to be affected by a proposed order of a county school committee lies in 2 or more counties the county school committees of said counties shall act as a joint committee. The secretaries shall agree which county superintendent shall act as secretary of the joint committee and on the time and place and give notice of a public hearing as provided in s. 40.025 (2). . . .”
“40.025 General provisions relating to reorganization. (1) Jurisdiction; acquisition, continuance and loss thereof, (a) Jurisdiction of a reorganization authority, other than the state superintendent, to make orders of school district reorganization under s. 40.03, 40.06, 40.07, 40.12, 40.14, 40.15 or 40.807 is acquired upon the filing of a petition or the giving of notice of a public hearing when a reorganization authority acts upon a resolution adopted upon its own motion.
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“(d) Jurisdiction acquired pursuant to par. (a) is lost:
“1. Upon failure of the reorganization authority to substantially comply with the procedural steps required by law to be taken by it prior to the issuance and filing of an order of school district reorganization; . .
“40.03 School district reorganization. (1) Petition, hearing, order. Upon the filing of a petition of an elector residing in the area of a proposed reorganized district or upon a resolution adopted upon its own motion, the county school committee may order the reorganization of school districts within the county, subject to the referendum provisions of sub. (6). The secretary of the committee shall set a date for a public hearing on the proposed reorganization which shall be held not more than 30 days after the filing of the petition or the date on which the committee ordered such a hearing when the committee initiated the proceedings, at a place within the district proposed to be reorganized or within a reasonable distance of such district. If a proposed order is subject to joint committee action, the secretaries of the several committees shall agree which county superintendent shall act as secretary of the joint committee and on *224 the time and place for a public hearing, which shall be held simultaneously with the meeting of the joint committee to adopt an order therefor. Notice in writing of the time and place of the hearing shall be given as provided in s. 40.025 (2). Within 30 days after the hearing on any proposed plan of reorganization and before the making of any order thereon, the committee shall hold a conference on the proposed order of reorganization with the school boards of the districts involved. The committee action taken shall represent the decision reached at this conference and an order conforming therewith shall be made within 10 days and filed with the county superintendent as provided in s. 40.025 (5).
“(a) If the county school committee determines that a petition filed under this subsection is identical with or essentially similar to a petition on which it has acted during the past year, it may set the date for a hearing approximately one year from the date on which it held its last hearing on the matter. The petitioners may require that the hearing be held as provided in the introductory paragraph to this subsection if they agree to pay all costs involved, and post bond to cover the cost of the hearing.”

The Mayville district, in support of its contention that the Joint County School Committee lost jurisdiction to act upon the petition of December 7, 1962, asserts: (1) That the petition was not “identical with or essentially similar to a previous petition on which it has acted during the past year;” (2) that the county school committees did not make a de= termination that the petitions filed were identical; (3) that the committees lost jurisdiction by not holding a hearing within thirty days from filing of petition; and (4) that even if the petitions were identical or essentially similar the committees did not act within one year from the date of the previous hearing.

The trial court held that while the petition of December 7, 1962, was not identical with the petition acted upon by *225 the Dodge County School Committee on March 8, 1962, that it was essentially similar.

The petition acted upon on March 8th covered 11,830 acres. The petition of December 7th covered exactly the same area less 240 acres. The petition acted upon March 8th attached the area to Mayville. The petition of December 7th asks that the area be detached from Mayville and attached to Lomira. Upon the face of the petition the area was essentially similar and the relief asked for was essentially similar to issues considered by the committee in its order of March 8th.

If Mayville had changed its position by virtue of the order of March 8th it could make that fact known at the hearing, noticed and held on March 14, 1963.

The interest of Mayville was to reject or deny the petition. It is difficult to see that a determination that the petition of December 7, 1962, was essentially similar and a delay of a hearing upon the petition could be detrimental to its interests. The statute 1 recognizes that a delay might be detrimental to the petitioners by providing that the petitioners may require a hearing within thirty days by posting a bond to cover the cost of the hearing.

The determination that the petition of December 7, 1962, was essentially similar to petition acted upon March 8, 1962, is amply supported by the facts in the record.

The remaining contentions as to loss of jurisdiction will be considered together. As noted above, sec. 40.025, Stats., provides that the committee loses jurisdiction if it fails to substantially comply with the procedural steps required by law.

In the recent case of School Board v. State Superintendent (1963), 20 Wis. (2d) 160, 178, 121 N. W. (2d) 900, the *226 appellant contended that jurisdiction was lost by failure to serve notices as provided by statute. We held in that case:

“We deplore these statutory notice defects. They should not occur; however, only substantial and not strict compliance with the statutory requirements was necessary in order for the municipal boards to retain jurisdiction. Sec. 40.025 (1) (d) 1, Stats. The failure to comply with the statute in giving notice to the superintendent of Manitowoc county was unintentional, as were the other notice defects. These failures probably caused the absence of two officials from the hearing but their absence was not prejudicial to the cause of the appellants for they prevailed at the hearing by obtaining a rejection of the petition. In view of these circumstances to hold that jurisdiction was lost would be to sacrifice substance for form.

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Bluebook (online)
127 N.W.2d 258, 23 Wis. 2d 219, 1964 Wisc. LEXIS 395, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joint-school-district-no-5-of-city-of-mayville-v-joint-county-school-wis-1964.