People ex rel. Leighty v. Young

133 N.E. 693, 301 Ill. 67
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 22, 1921
DocketNo. 13565
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 133 N.E. 693 (People ex rel. Leighty v. Young) 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. Leighty v. Young, 133 N.E. 693, 301 Ill. 67 (Ill. 1921).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Thompson

delivered the opinion of the court:

This appeal is prosecuted to review a judgment of the circuit court of Fulton county denying leave to file an information in the nature of quo zvarranto to test the validity of the organization of Community High School District No. 281, comprising territory in the counties of Fulton, Schuyler and McDonough. The high school district comprises territory contained in fourteen common school districts. It includes fifty-eight sections of land, twenty-six of which are located in Fulton county and sixteen in each of the counties of Schuyler and McDonough. The district is ten miles long and ten miles wide, but is very irregular in shápe. The village of Vermont is located in Fulton county, about a mile and a half from the point where the three counties corner. The village is located at a point equidistant from the eastern and western boundaries of the district but is within two miles of the north boundary of the district. The north portion of the district is a compact rectangular block ten miles east and west and four miles north and south, except that two sections on the north edge immediately north of the village are omitted. Lying immediately south of the west six-tenths of this block is another rectangular block six miles east and west and two miles north and south. Extending south from the middle of this block is another block four miles north and south and two miles east and west. Traveling by section lines it is ten miles from the southwest corner of this part of the district to the village of Vermont.

It appears from the petition for leave to file the information that the petition of the requisite number of legal voters in the territory proposed to be organized into a community high school district was filed with the county superintendent of schools of Fulton county, the intention of the petitioners being to comply with the requirements of section 89a of the School law. Pursuant to the petition the county superintendent of Fulton county called an election and designated one polling place for the holding of the election. He also designated three persons to act as judges and clerk at the election without specifying which of said persons were to act as judges and which as clerk. The election was held January 24, 1920, and women were permitted to vote at the election. There were 443 votes for establishing the district and 142 votes against it.

The grounds upon which the legality of the organization of the district is challenged are: (1) The county superintendent of schools of Fulton county had no authority to call the election, because less than half of the territory described in the petition was in Fulton county; (2) the election was void because the county superintendent did not specify which of the three men appointed to conduct the election should act as judges and which should act as clerk ; (3), the election was void because women, who were not legal voters, were permitted to vote at the election; and (4) the territory described in the petition arid included within the boundaries of the district is not compact.

May 10, 1921, there became effective in this State an act to legalize the organization of certain high school districts. (Laws of 19-21, p. 797.) That act declares all contiguous territory wherein a majority of the inhabitants of said territory voting on the proposition have voted, at an election called for the purpose by the county superintendent of schools, in favor of the organization of such territory into a community high school district, and where they have at a subsequent election, similarly called and held, chosen a board of education, to be legally and validly organized and established as a high school district. This act purports to cure all the defects in the organization of the district under consideration. The act clearly disposes of the first three grounds urged against the legality of this district. The legislature had the right to declare this territory to be a school district without the formalities of a petition or an election, and the validating act is broad enough to include within its terms the district in question. What we have said in People v. Opie, (ante, p. 11,) and the cases there cited, fully covers this holding.

There is, however, a new question presented by the application of the act of May 10 to the district in question. Section 89a of the School law, under which it was attempted to organize this district, required that the territory to be organized into a community high school district must be “contiguous and compact.” The validating act omits the requirement that the territory be compact and provides that all contiguous territory coming within the terms of the act shall be a valid and existing high school district. In its broadest sense “contiguous” meaijs that which touches or joins' at the edge or boundary. It might be said, therefore, that a district 100 miles long and two miles wide would be composed of contiguous territory, but when applied to a 'school district we cannot hold that the word “contiguous” can be given this broad meaning. The constitution commands the legislature to “provide a thorough and efficient system of free schools whereby all children of this State may receive a good common school education.” It cannot be said that a system which places the school house at a point so remote that the children of school age cannot reach it conveniently is either thorough or efficient. In order to make a school system thorough and efficient the territory of the State must be divided into districts sufficiently compact to enable the children to travel from their respective homes to the school building in a reasonable length of time, and with a reasonable degree of comfort. It is known to everyone who knows anything about Illinois roads and Illinois weather, that children cannot travel nine or ten miles to school over ordinary country roads in bad winter weather. The term “contiguous,” as used in the validating act under consideration, must be construed in the light of the command of the constitution, and must be construed to mean territory so compact and so closely united and so nearly adjacent to the school building that all the children residing in the district may conveniently travel from their homes to the school building in the time allotted them for travel before school opens in the morning. The school under consideration is a high school, and the children to be considered are children between thirteen and nineteen years of age. Territory embraced within a high school district might, therefore, be less compact than territory embraced within a graded school district. We must assume that the school building is to be located in the village of Vermont, and, as we have said, the territory in the southwest corner of this district is ten miles from this village.

Appellees argue that the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad Company has a line running southwesterly through the village of Vermont and leaving the district at the southwest corner. They also argue that there is a railroad station at Ray, located in the southwest corner of this district, and that the children can travel by railroad from Ray to Vermont and return. There is nothing in the record, however, to show that there is any train service that would accommodate school children.

In considering this question we must also take into consideration that this district was organized as a community high school district.

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Bluebook (online)
133 N.E. 693, 301 Ill. 67, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-leighty-v-young-ill-1921.