People ex rel. Hepfer v. Price

141 N.E. 409, 310 Ill. 66
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 20, 1923
DocketNo. 15022
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 141 N.E. 409 (People ex rel. Hepfer v. Price) 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
People ex rel. Hepfer v. Price, 141 N.E. 409, 310 Ill. 66 (Ill. 1923).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Farmer

delivered the opinion of the court:

This appeal is prosecuted from a judgment of ouster of the board of education of Community High School District No. 218, in Ogle county. The district was declared organized by virtue of an election held March 22, 1921, and a board of education was chosen at an election held in April following. The People, at the relation of several voters and tax-payers in the district, petitioned the circuit court for leave to file an information in the nature of quo warranto against the individuals who were acting as members of the board of education. The petition charged that the elections were void because they were not conducted according to the provisions of the Australian Ballot law; that the district was not compact and contiguous within the meaning of the statute, because on account of the large size of the district, the distances many pupils would be obliged to travel to attend the school and the roads in the district being at times almost' impassable, the school would practically be of no benefit to such pupils. Leave was granted relators and the information was filed. Defendants filed a plea of justification, and it was stipulated that the cause be tried on the affidavits of persons residing in the district, except that five witnesses on each side should testify in open court, and either party might introduce any map admissible under the rules of evidence. A jury was waived, case' heard and judgment of ouster rendered, from which judgment this appeal is prosecuted.

The chief reliance of appellees in support of their contention that appellants were not a legal board of education was, that the election to organize the district was illegal and void because not held under the Australian Ballot law; that the territory embraced in the district did not constitute or comprise a community within the meaning of the statute ; and that the district was not compact and contiguous within the meaning of the law.

Appellees submitted propositions of law and fact, from which it appears the court refused to hold the boundaries of the district did not conform to the boundaries of the Oregon community, — the city in which the school was conducted. Appellees have not assigned cross-errors on that ruling.

The court held the election to organize the district was illegal and void because not held under the Australian Ballot law; that the district was illegal and void because not sufficiently compact to enable all the children of high school age to attend the school with a reasonable degree of comfort; and the district was not an efficient school district within the meaning of the constitution.

The high school is conducted in the city of Oregon, which has a population of 2500, and as appears from the map introduced in evidence is located at the center of Ogle county east and west and within two miles of the center north and south. The greatest width of the district east and west is thirteen miles and its greatest width north and south is ten and one-half miles. It embraces approximately ninety-three sections of land.

Appellants insist that if the district was one which the legislature might have created it was validated by the validating act of May 10, 1921. Appellees contend that the validating act is unconstitutional, but that if that is not so, the district is one which the legislature could not have established because it is in violation of the constitutional mandate that the General Assembly shall provide a thorough and efficient system of free schools, whereby all the children in the State may receive a good common school education. We have held that the validating act is constitutional as applied to districts which the legislature had the power to create. People v. Opie, 301 Ill. 11; People v. Young, id. 67; People v. Benton, id. 32; People v. Graham, id. 446; People v. Woodruff, 280 id. 472; People v. Stitt, id. 553; People v. Madison, id. 96.

The real contention in this case is whether the district, on account of its size and the character of the roads over which the pupils must travel to attend the school, is such that pupils cannot go from their homes to the school and return to their homes in a reasonable time and with a reasonable degree of comfort. Pupils living in the northeast, southeast and southwest parts of the district will have to travel from seven to ten miles to get to the school in Oregon. There are about forty-five miles of roads in the district leading into Oregon which are called in the record hard roads. They are roads which have been improved with macadam, gravel, cement, brick, asphalt, tarvia or other road-surfacing material. The board of supervisors of Ogle county has adopted the patrol system for State aid roads, and such roads in the district are looked after and kept in repair by patrolmen, except during the months of December, January, February and March. The highway commissioner of the town of Oregon, who was a witness for appellants, testified that more than five-sixths of the roads in the community high school district were not patrolled. In the southwest, southeast and northeast parts of the district the roads are dirt roads, and people living in these sections, which are from seven to ten miles from Oregon, have to travel from one to five miles over dirt roads to reach any hard or improved road leading into Oregon. The oral testimony offered by appellees and the affidavits read by agreement on their behalf were all to the effect that children who lived in the sections of the district referred to would for considerable periods of time every year be prevented from attending the school on account of the distance and the impassable condition of the roads. The testimony of appellees’ witnesses to this effect was voluminous and substantially unanimous. The witnesses were in the habit of using the roads they testified about, and gave their reasons for testifying that the condition of the roads in their neighborhood over which persons going to Oregon would be compelled to travel, made it impossible, for weeks at a time every year, for children to go to school in Oregon. We shall not attempt to set out the substance of all their testimony. Some of the instances they related as showing the condition of the roads were the miring down of automobiles and trucks. One witness testified he had seen twenty-four automobiles stuck in the mud on the roads and had pulled one or more of them out with a team. Another witness saw fifteen automobiles stuck in the mud last spring on the road about a mile from his house. A great many witnesses testified they had seen automobiles mired in roads, that had to be pulled out by teams or a tractor. One witness testified a milk wagon was mired in the mud and that five horses could not pull it out. The conditions the witnesses describe, which they testified made the roads impassable for weeks at a time every year, were caused by rains and mud and by heavy and drifting snow-falls. Many of appellees’ witnesses testified that there were times every year when the roads were so bad that rural mail carriers could not complete their routes, and some residents on mail routes were compelled to go as- far as two miles to get their mail. Many of the witnesses were fathers of children who lived at home, some of whom were of high school age and some were not. If their testimony is believed, on account of the distance to the school and the impassable condition of the roads every year for weeks at a time it would be practically impossible for their children to attend the school in Oregon during several weeks every year.

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Bluebook (online)
141 N.E. 409, 310 Ill. 66, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-hepfer-v-price-ill-1923.