People ex rel. David v. Pearson

234 Ill. App. 313, 1924 Ill. App. LEXIS 277
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJuly 26, 1924
DocketGen. No. 7,329
StatusPublished

This text of 234 Ill. App. 313 (People ex rel. David v. Pearson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People ex rel. David v. Pearson, 234 Ill. App. 313, 1924 Ill. App. LEXIS 277 (Ill. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Jett

delivered the opinion of the court.

This proceeding was instituted in the circuit court of Mercer county by the filing of a petition for mandamus in the name of The People of the State of Illinois, on the relation of Thomas David and others, representing themselves to be taxpayers and legal voters residing in the Community High School District No. 128, Mercer County, Illinois, against Marion L. Pearson and others, Board of Education of said Community High School District No. 128, for the purpose of compelling said Board of Education to operate and maintain a high school in said Community High School District.

The petition states that Community High School District No. 128 comprises approximately thirty-one sections of land, nineteen of which are in Preemption township and in Mercer County, twelve of which are in Bowling township, Rock Island county; that said district was duly organized and established and the Board of Education duly elected and qualified; that the attendance at said school was to wit, eight pupils during the school year 1920-1921, eighteen pupils during the school year 1921-1922, twenty-five pupils during the school year 1922-1923, and that at the time of the filing of the said petition there were, to wit, fifty pupils qualified to be in attendance at the said high school.

The petitioners further charge that the sum of $3,000 was levied during the school year of 1922-1923 for éducational purposes and on the 7th day of August, 1923, a certificate of levy was filed with the county clerk of Mercer county, certifying that $2,000 was levied for educational purposes and that the treasurer of said school district had, to wit, $1,875.64, in his hands at the time the said petition was filed.

The petitioners aver that a resolution by a majority of the members of the school board was adopted on June 13, 1923, which resolution provided for the discontinuance of the school and the sending of the pupils to other schools where the tuition would not be over $75, and aver that the said resolution is contrary to the duties of the said Board of Education of said Community High School District, as provided by the statutes of the State of Illinois; that the said Board of Education, although required to conduct a community high school in said district, refused and neglected to comply with their duties and such request, and have refused and still refuse to take any action for the maintenance of a school for the benefit of the pupils in said district, qualified to attend high school, which said petition prays that a writ of mandamus may be issued against the members of the Board of Education of said Community High School District commanding them to proceed forthwith to conduct a high school in said district, and for such further orders as may seem proper to the court.

The petition was duly verified by the affidavit of Thomas David, one of the relators, and after service of summons on the members of the Board of Education, Marion L. Pearson, Charles L. Peterson and John McManus, a majority of the Board of Education of Community High School District No. 128, put in their answer to said petition.

J. C. Pitman and Ned Armstrong, two of the relators in said petition, are also members of the Board of Education, but they did not join in the answer. The answer of the Board of Education joined in by Marion L. Pearson, Charles L. Peterson and John McManus admits the extent of the boundaries of the said Community High School District and admits the organization of the said district. There is a denial that the number of pupils in attendance upon the said school during the various years subsequent to its organization was the same as set up in the petition filed herein and as to the funds in the hands of the treasurer of said district that fact was neither admitted nor denied by the answer. The answer also admits the resolution adopted on the 13th day of June, 1923, which was as follows: “Motion made and seconded to discontinue the school for the year, 1923-1924, and let the scholars go to any school they might choose, the board to pay the tuition to the amount of $75 or thereabout,” and the defendants deny in their answer that this resolution was and is contrary to the duties imposed upon them as members of the Board of Education of said Community High School District.

It appears from the answer that two elections have been held for the purpose of voting on the proposition of erecting a high school building, and that this has been defeated in both instances; that the Board of Education during the time school has been conducted in the said district has had under lease the second story of a two-story brick building in the Village of Preemption in said district and that the reason for the discontinuance of said school was on account of the fact that the second .floor of said building was not a proper and safe place wherein to conduct a high school in said district.

It is further set up in the answer that the second floor of the building referred to was and is the only available building in the district in which to conduct a high school; that the Board of Education would be required to expend not less than, to wit, $294, as a per capita cost of maintaining said school for the year 1924; that because of the facts mentioned in the said answer the said Board of Education deemed it advisable to send the children of said district to some other school and to that end adopted the resolution above set forth and made arrangements with the boards of education of the high schools located in the Villages of Sherrard and Reynolds, the location of the former being approximately 5% or 6 miles from the center of the said District No. 128, and the latter place being about 3 miles from the center of said district and that the arrangements so made with the respective boards of education provided that any student or students from said Community High School District No. 128 should be taught at a cost per pupil not greater than the per capita cost of maintaining the high school attended by them.

The answer was demurred to, generally and specially, and the demurrer was sustained. Appellants elected to stand by their answer, whereupon a peremptory writ of mandamus was ordered issued as prayed for in the petition. From the order directing the issuing of the writ of mandamus, appellants prosecute this appeal, and assign as their reasons for a reversal the following: (1) The court erred in sustaining the demurrer of the relators to the answer of the Board of Education of Community High School District No. 128, Mercer County, Hlinois, defendant herein. (2) The court erred in entering an order herein finding that a peremptory decree of mandamus should be awarded herein as prayed for in the said petition of the relators.

The question to be determined in this proceeding arises upon the pleadings and is whether or not the answer was sufficient to justify the appellants in refusing to maintain a school. The demurrer to the answer admits all of the facts that are well pleaded.

The failure on the part of the legal voters of the district to authorize the construction of a school building does not excuse the Board of Education from the duty of establishing a school in the district.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
234 Ill. App. 313, 1924 Ill. App. LEXIS 277, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-david-v-pearson-illappct-1924.