Laswell v. Seaton

191 P. 266, 107 Kan. 439, 1920 Kan. LEXIS 92
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJuly 19, 1920
DocketNo. 23,059
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 191 P. 266 (Laswell v. Seaton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Laswell v. Seaton, 191 P. 266, 107 Kan. 439, 1920 Kan. LEXIS 92 (kan 1920).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Porter, J.:

The appeal is from an order granting a temporary injunction restraining the defendants as officers of joint rural high-school district No. 3, in Pottawatomie county, from erecting a school building.

Joint rural high-school district No. 3, which comprises four school districts in Pottawatomie county and three in Jackson county, was established at an election held in 1919. At the same election an issue of $25,000 of bonds was authorized for the purpose of contructing a high-school building in the town of Emmett in Pottawatomie county, and the bonds were issued and sold. The plaintiffs are residents, landowners and taxpayers of the district, and in their petition allege that, aside from the proceeds of the bonds, the defendant officers have no other funds; that $50,000 was the lowest bid for the erection of the building which could be obtained by the defendants ; and that in November, 1919, defendants called a special election for authority to issue $19,000 additional bonds, which proposition was defeated at the election; that thereafter defendants, without any legal authority, were proceeding to erect a building “which, according to the plans and specifications,” will cost not less than $75,000, and had hired labor, employed mechanics and purchased materials for the building; and that this unwarranted action of the defendants will occasion the levy of an illegal tax against the property of plaintiffs and other taxpayers. A temporary injunction was prayed for, restraining defendants from entering into any contract for the erection of the building, hiring any labor, purchasing any material, or collecting any taxes for that purpose until the final trial, and that the injunction be made permanent. The petition was verified by one of the plaintiffs. On the 25th of March, 1920, the judge of the district court granted a temporary injunction, which became effective upon the giving of a bond by plaintiffs in the sum of $1,000.

[441]*441The answer alleged that defendants were proceeding to construct a building that would cost, fully equipped, not to exceed $50,000, and that the district was already indebted in a large sum for materials purchased, ordered and supplied, and that it would be impossible to erect a building suitable and fit for the needs of the school district at a less cost.

At the outset we are met with an objection to a hearing of the appeal, and plaintiffs ask that it be dismissed on the ground that defendants are attempting to appeal from an order granting a temporary injunction allowed without notice. While it is conceded that the civil code of 1909 dispenses with the necessity of taking or saving exceptions (Kelley v. Schreiber, 82 Kan. 403, 404, 108 Pac. 816; Kroenert v. Sawyer, 87 Kan. 374, 124 Pac. 418), it is insisted it is still necessary to make objections to a ruling before an appeal will lie, and that the code does not contemplate an appeal from an order granting a temporary injunction without notice, for the reason that the defendant, under section 262 of the code (Gen. Stat. 1915, § 7160), at any time before trial may, upon notice, apply to the "court or judge to vacate or modify the injunction. In this connection it is urged that defendants gave notice and filed a motion to set aside the injunction, that the motion was set for hearing, but was afterwards continued. Since it has been neither presented to the court nor decided, it is urged that the granting of the temporary injunction is not a final order. We are unable to see any merit in these contentions. The injunction was granted before the defendants had answered, and in such a case the statute allow's a temporary injunction to be granted without notice. The code, section 565 (Gen. Stat. 1915, § 7469), authorizes an appeal from an order granting an injunction, and the fact that a motion filed by defendants to set it aside has not yet been considered or passed upon by the trial court does not destroy defendants’ right to appeal from the granting of the injunction.

Although the plaintiffs speak in their brief of the order as a “temporary injunction,” there is a suggestion that because the order enjoined the defendants “until the further order of the court,” it was not, in fact, a temporary injunction, but a mere restraining order, and therefore not a final order. The plaintiffs asked and obtained a temporary injunction, which [442]*442has been in force since some time in March. It has apparently been treated by all the parties and the court as a temporary injunction; and up to this time has effectually restrained the defendants from proceeding further with the erection of the school building. “ ‘Temporary injunction’ and ‘restraining order’ are often used synonymously. . . . The restraint which the order purports to impose, and not the name given to it, determines its true name and character.” (The State v. Johnston, 78 Kan. 615, 97 Pac. 790. See, also, City of Emporia v. Telephone Co., 90 Kan. 118, 133 Pac. 858.) We regard the order in this case as a temporary injunction and, for the reasons stated, the motion to dismiss is overruled.

In their brief, plaintiffs cite several cases involving the powers of the board of directors of a school district, which we do not regard as in point. In the ordinary school district the resident taxpayers determine at the annual school meeting what levy shall be made for school purposes. But at the annual meeting of a rural high-school district the patrons of the school have no power except to elect a board. Section 4 of chapter 284 of the Laws of 1917 fixes the time'for the an- ■ nual school meeting for the election of officers of rural high-school districts on the day preceding the annual meeting of school districts. In the same section it is provided that the annual meeting of the high-school board shall be held on the following Monday, at which time the board is required to make the necessary levy for taxes, not to exceed four mills on the dollar on the valuation of all property in the high-school district, to pay teachers, to create a fund to retire any indebtedness and interest on the same, to purchase a site, to build, hire, or purchase a schoolhouse, and to pay incidental expenses of the high school. It is at the annual meeting of the high-school board on the third Monday of April that the board determines how the school shall be conducted and makes the tax levy. Rural high-school district No. 3 was not organized until July, 1919, and the annual meeting for that year was not held.

In section 5 the board is given authority to issue the bonds of the district for the purchase of a site and for the construction of a building or buildings for school purposes; provided, that no bonds shall be issued unless authorized by an election.

The petition in this case alleged that the board had no funds [443]*443in its hands, except the proceeds of the bonds issued, which were insufficient to meet the cost of the building contemplated by the board; but the suit was filed and the temporary injunction was granted on March 25, 1920, only a few days prior to the time fixed for the annual meeting of the board to make a levy of taxes for the purposes determined to be necessary.

One theory upon which the petition is drawn appears to be that in the erection of a school building the rural high-school board is limited to the proceeds of the bonds voted by the district, but this is a mistaken view. In Wright v. Board of Education, 106 Kan. 469, 188 Pac.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
191 P. 266, 107 Kan. 439, 1920 Kan. LEXIS 92, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/laswell-v-seaton-kan-1920.