Moss v. Board of Education

58 Ohio St. (N.S.) 354
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedApril 19, 1898
StatusPublished

This text of 58 Ohio St. (N.S.) 354 (Moss v. Board of Education) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moss v. Board of Education, 58 Ohio St. (N.S.) 354 (Ohio 1898).

Opinion

Bradbury, J.

The plaintiff in error on behalf-of himself and others began an action in the court of common pleas of Geauga county, against the Board of Education of Special School District No. 1 of Huntsburg township of that county, to prevent the board of education from erecting a schoolhouse on a site thereon, which he contends had not been lawfully selected. The petition set forth the following facts bearing upon the manner in which the special school district was established and the schoolhouse site selected: That about

June 14, 1895, such proceedings were had that the probate court of said county appointed three commissioners under section 3938, Revised Statutes, to consider and determine whether a special school district should be created in said township of Huntsburg according to the prayer of a petition then pending before said judge; that said commissioners duly qualified and entered upon their duties, and found in favor of creating a special school district, and also selected a site whereon to erect a schoolhouse, and made a written report to the probate judge of the county establishing the special school district in question and designating a site thereon describing the same, upon which a schoolhouse should be erected, which report was confirmed by the probate judge; that thereafter said board of education was duly elected, organized-and entered upon its duties ; that on July 20, 1895, the board caused an election tobe held to determine whether six thousand dollars should be raised by taxation on the property within the district to purchase a site and build a schoolhouse thereon, which proposition the board afterwards declared to have been carried, authorizing a tax not exceeding six hundred dollars per [356]*356year for the purposes of buying such site and erecting said schoolhouse; that after said proposition had been declared carried, the board of education .purchased a schoolhouse site other than the one designated by the commissioners appointed by the probate court, and began the erection of a schoolhouse thereon. Afterwards by a supplemental petition the plaintiff brought in the following parties : R. N. Ford, and George H. Ford, partners as Boughton, Ford & Co., Boughton, Ford & Co., Charles J. Scott, Harley Barnes, and the Realty Title and Investment Co., a corporation, alleging them to' have been connected with the sale of the bonds and the custody of their proceeds that the special school district issued to provide funds for purchasing the schoolhouse site and erecting the schoolhouse, also J. F. Rose and Theodore Curtiss who had contracted to erect the building. The prayer of the petition and supplemental petition is to the effect that the board of education be enjoined from purchasing any other site than the one designated by the commissioners appointed by the probate court, from erecting a schoolhouse on any other site, from levying a tax selling bonds or paying out the funds of the special district therefor; that the contract for erecting the schoolhouse be rescinded and for general relief.

The board of education by its answer admits “that it is causing to be erected a schoolhouse upon a site other and different from that designated by said commission,” but that in doing so it was acting in good faith believing the substituted site would better accommodate the pupils of the district, and that the new site was selected at the request of a majority of the citizens, taxpayers and electors of the district.

[357]*357The action was tried in the court of common pleas and judgment rendered for the defendants ; the plaintiff appealed the cause to the circuit court where also the defendants prevailed. The circuit court found as a matter of fact: “1st, that the commission sent out by the probate court to establish said special school district, located a site for said schoolhouse within said district. 2nd, that the defendant board did not build a schoolhouse upon said site nor procure nor take any steps to procure the title thereto. 3d, that the defendant board did purchase a site for a schoolhouse different from that selected by said commission and began the erection of a school building thereon before the commencement of this suit, and completed the same about the 1st day of December, 1895. And thereupon the court find the issues joined between the parties in favor of the defendant, and that the plaintiff is not entitled to the relief prayed for in the petition and amended petition, and it is ordered that said petition and, amended petition and that the defendant recover their costs of the plaintiff.”

The first question that arises concerns the power of the board of education to abandon the site selected by the commissioners appointed by the probate court and then proceed to select a new site, purchase the same and erect a schoolhouse thereon. An examination of the statutes discloses no such authority.

Counsel for defendant sug’gestthat the provision for- filing a petition with the probate judge applies only where it is sought to unite in a special school district territory lying indifferent townships or counties. And as the territory that comprises the school district involved here, all lay in one town[358]*358ship those provisions did not apply. If that were so, it would not help the cause of the defendants. If, because the territory all lay in one township, the probate judge had no jurisdiction of the matter, the entire procedure was void, and there would be neither a school district, nor a board of education, created thereby, and therefore the action of the board of education would be a mere nullity imposing no obligation on any inhabitant or taxpayer within the territory, and the plaintiff’s right to relief against their imposition of a tax on his property would be clear. Section 3934, Revised Statutes, which, in certain cases, authorizes a petition to be filed with the probate judge for creating a special school district doubtless is primarily applicable where it is proposed to erect into a special district territory that is situated in different townships. Section 3948, Revised Statues, however, authorizes a petition to be filed with the probate judge in certain cases, where the object is to create a special district composed of territory all of which lies within the same township ; and when the petition is filed with the probate judge, “ thereafter such proceedings may be had therein, and they shall have the same effect as is herein provided for the formation of joint subdistricts.” Therefore, when the circumstances authorized the filing with the probate judge of a petition to create a subdistrict, these words of the statute expressly declare that whether the district to be created is a joint subdistrict, that is composed of territory situate in different townships or simply a special subdistrict composed of territory, all of which is located in the same township, the proceedings and the effect thereof shall be the same. The proceedings that the statute [359]*359thus refers to are found in sections 3934 to 3945, inclusive, Revised Statutes.

Upon the filing of the petition praying for the creation of a special subdistrict, section 3938 makes it the duty of the probate judge to appoint £ £ three judicious, disinterested men of the county, ” etc., to act in the premises. Section 3939 requires them to take an oath binding them to a faithful dischargeof theirduties, and to meet at a timeand place to be named in a notice published for that purpose, and authorizes them to examine witnesses under oath.

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Bluebook (online)
58 Ohio St. (N.S.) 354, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moss-v-board-of-education-ohio-1898.