Keime v. Community High School District No. 296

180 N.E. 858, 348 Ill. 228
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 23, 1932
DocketNo. 21061. Decree affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 180 N.E. 858 (Keime v. Community High School District No. 296) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Keime v. Community High School District No. 296, 180 N.E. 858, 348 Ill. 228 (Ill. 1932).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Jones

delivered the opinion of the court:

Grant Keime, a property owner, tax-payer and elector in Community High School District No. 296 in Fulton county, Illinois, filed a bill in the circuit court of that county on May 26, 1930, against said district and its board of education seeking to restrain them from carrying out the provisions of a certain agreement alleged to have been entered into by them with Common School District No. 96 in Fulton county, and also from selecting and purchasing an undivided one-half interest in ten lots located in Cuba, Fulton county, upon which was a school building owned and used at the time by district No. 96. The bill also sought to enjoin defendants from constructing a school gymnasium building upon the school site and from issuing bonds to the amount of $30,000 in payment thereof. The bill was amended, a demurrer was filed, and upon a hearing the demurrer was sustained. Complainant having elected to stand by his bill as amended, a decree was entered dismissing it. From that decree complainant, to whom we shall hereafter refer as appellant, has perfected an appeal to this court.

The important facts as disclosed by the bill are substantially as follows: Common School District No. 96 lies within the boundary lines of Community High School District No. 296 in Fulton county, and appellant was not an elector or tax-payer in district No. 96. The latter district owned and used for school purposes ten lots, with a commodious school building located thereon, in Cuba. Some time “within a few months last past,” as stated in the original bill, the boards of education of the two school districts entered into an alleged agreement whereby district No. 96 agreed to sell, and district No. 296 agreed to buy, an undivided one-half interest in the Cuba school site and building, and after such sale the site and building were to be used and maintained jointly by the two school districts. The consideration to be paid by district No. 296 for such site was the erection by it thereon of a school gymnasium building to cost not more than $30,000, and this building was also to be used and maintained jointly by the two school districts. A petition was presented by the electors of district No. 296 to its board of education, and pursuant thereto a special election was called, notice thereof given and the election held in the district on March 29, 1930. At this election the following propositions were presented by ballot to the voters: (1) To select a school house site in and for district No. 296; (2) to authorize the board of education of district No. 296 to purchase a school house site for said district; (3) to authorize the board of education of district No. 296 to build a school building in and for that district to be used as a school gymnasium; and (4) to authorize the board of education of district No. 296 to issue bonds of the district to the amount of $30,000, specifying the date of the bonds, their maturity dates and the rate of interest the bonds should bear. Each of the four propositions received an affirmative majority vote and the votes were thereafter properly canvassed.

It is stated in the bill that the special election was called in Community High School District No. 296 for the purpose of carrying out the supposed agreement between the boards of education of the two school districts, but that no election was ever held in Common School District No. 96 authorizing the sale of its school property or authorizing the execution of any agreement by its board of education for the transfer of any interest in or sale of its school site and building. The bill also states that district No. 296 in entering into the alleged agreement with district No. 96 claims to be acting under and by virtue of the authority of an act of the General Assembly of the State of Illinois entitled, “An act to authorize school districts to acquire a site from other school districts^ to authorize school districts to jointly use the same school site, to authorize school districts to jointly construct and use the same school building, to authorize one school district to purchase an equal or any other interest in any site and buildings thereon, within the boundaries of both, when used under an agreement by both, but owned by but one, and to take title to same, under an agreement between the two, and under the terms of said agreement, or of a new agreement, to add to and enlarge, if deemed necessary to the uses of the purchasing district, the part or parts of said building used or to be used by said purchasing district, the expense to be borne by said purchasing district or by the two districts as may be provided by the terms of said agreement, and to legalize such actions heretofore taken,” approved 1923 and amended 1927. (Smith’s Stat. 1929, p. 2677.) Sections 1 and 2a of the act are as follows:

“Sec. 1. Whenever the board of directors or board of education of any two school districts shall have agreed upon the joint use of any school site and compensation to be paid therefor, and any such site shall have been selected in the manner required by law, it shall be lawful for such school districts to use the same school site and after payment of such compensation, the trustees of schools of the township by proper instrument in writing, shall declare that title to such school site is held for the joint use of such school districts according to the terms of such agreement, and such districts shall be further authorized to construct, maintain and use a building jointly for the benefit of the inhabitants of such districts.”

“Sec. 2a. Whenever two school districts comprising the same territory identically, or comprising partly the same territory, the one with the other, have within the boundaries of both, a certain school site with buildings thereon, owned by one of said districts, but used, under agreement, by both, the said district owning said site and buildings may sell to the other, and said other district shall have the right to purchase, an equal, or any other, interest in said site and buildings, under an agreement between the two; and thereupon, upon the execution of said agreement, and the acquiring the title to said interest by said purchasing district, said two districts shall be deemed to hold title to said premises as tenants in common; and thereafter, and after the acquiring of said title, the said school districts, or either of same, may, under appropriate terms in the first agreement, or under a new agreement entered into by and between the said two districts, add to and enlarge any part or parts of said buildings, if deemed necessary for the uses of said districts, or either of them, in any way and by such sole, or mutual, expenditure of funds as may be nominated in and by the terms of said agreement between said districts, and neither shall said expenditures in any way change the individual interests of said districts in said premises unless otherwise expressly so provided in and by the terms of said contract or agreement.”

It is first contended by counsel for appellant that the act in question is unconstitutional, as it violates section 2 of article 2 and sections 9 and 10 of article 9 of our constitution. It is urged that by the alleged arrangement between the two school districts it is proposed to use taxes collected from property of appellant by Community High School District No. 296 to assist in maintaining and supporting a part of the buildings for the use of the grade and common schools of Common School District No.

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81 N.E.2d 581 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1948)
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Bluebook (online)
180 N.E. 858, 348 Ill. 228, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keime-v-community-high-school-district-no-296-ill-1932.