Reuland v. Ind. Dist. of White Lake

269 N.W. 484, 64 S.D. 621, 1936 S.D. LEXIS 106
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 9, 1936
DocketFile No. 8011.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 269 N.W. 484 (Reuland v. Ind. Dist. of White Lake) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reuland v. Ind. Dist. of White Lake, 269 N.W. 484, 64 S.D. 621, 1936 S.D. LEXIS 106 (S.D. 1936).

Opinion

CAMPBELL, J.

Defendant-respondent White Lake School District is organized under the laws of this state as an independent school district and has within its boundaries a municipal corporation of the second class. On October 9, 1935, there was presented to the board of education of the school district and filed with the clerk thereof a duly verified petition, signed by more than 20 per cent, of the electors of such school district who were named as owners of real property therein in the tax lists for the year 193.4, which petition asked that the board of education of the ■district “issue bonds in the principal amount of $30,000 for the purpose of providing public school building.” On the next day the board of education adopted a resolution calling a special election to submit to the voters the question of -issuing bonds in the *623 sum of $30,000 “to provide an adequate building and equipment and furniture for school purposes.” The election was thereafter held, and the question in the form stated in the resolution of the board of education was submitted to the electors and a canvass of the vote on November 11 determined a total of 395 votes cast, 242 of which were in favor of the issuance of the bonds. It thus appearing that five more than the necessary three-fifths (section 100, c. 138, Laws 1931) of all ballots cast upon the question were in favor of issuing bonds, the board adopted- a resolution authorizing the issuance thereof, accepting an offer of the United States government to purchase the same, and levying a tax upon the property of the district to establish- an interest and a sinking fund for payment. Before the bonds were in fact issued, however, plaintiffs herein, who are residents, electors, and taxpayers of the school district, instituted the present action in the circuit court to enjoin such issuance. Plaintiffs by their complaint allege that the proceedings looking toward the issuance of the bonds were illegal and defective in many particulars, including the point that the petition of the property-owning electors filed with the board of education, as hereinbefore recited, was not sufficient in form or substance to justify the calling of the special election- or the submission to the voters of the question which in fact was submitted. Issue being duly joined, the matter came on for trial ‘before the court. All facts were fully found- and are without substantial dispute. Upon those facts the learned trial judge concluded1, as a matter of law, that all the proceedings looking toward the issuance of the bonds were legal and valid save only that the petition of the elector property owners was insufficient. He further concluded as a matter of law, however, that, although the filing of a proper petition was a condition precedent to the issuance of the bonds, it was not a condition precedent to the calling of the election and might be filed, even after the election, at any time before the actual issuance. Upon this view, and -in consideration of the fact that the bonds had not yet been issued and that no proper petition had yet been filed1, the court made the following -conclusion of law: “That the plaintiffs are entitled to an injunction against said Independent District of White Lake, and the officers thereof, enjoining them from issuing said bonds or any part thereof, unless and until a new verified petition signed by not less than twenty per *624 cent, of the electors in said district who are named as owners of real property in the tax list or lists of the last preceding year asking for the issuing of said bonds for the purpose of providing an adequate building and equipment and furniture for school purposes for said district, has been presented to the Board of Education of said district and filed with the Clerk of said Board” Pursuant to this conclusion a sort of conditional judgment was entered' awarding to plaintiffs a permanent injunction against the issuance of the bonds “unless and until a verified petition signed by not less than 20 per cent, of all the electors of such school district who are named as owners of real property in the tax list or lists of the last preceding year, asking for the issuance of said bonds for the purpose of providing an adequate building and equipment and furniture for school purposes for said district, has been filed with the Clerk of the Board of Education of said' Independent School District within 30 days from and after the elate of the entry of this judgment.” It is conceded by all parties that a petition for the issuance of said bonds, sufficient in all respects in form and substance, was filed with the clerk of the board of education of the school district within thirty days after the entry of this judgment. From so much of the judgment as is unfavorable to their contentions plaintiffs have appealed upon the judgment roll, and the question is whether the facts as found support the conclusions and judgment.

The form of the judgment is novel, and under our practice we doubt if it is permissible, although the object which the court was seeking to accomplish is quite apparent. The judgment is really interlocutoiy in nature rather than final. Our procedure contemplates a final judgment determining the rights of the parties according to existent facts before the court at the time of the adjudication. Cf. Western Building Co. v. J. C. Penney Co. (1932) 60 S. D. 630, 245 N. W. 909. We believe, however, that further discussion or consideration of this point is unnecessary for the disposition of this appeal.

We think the first question that should be determined is whether or not the court below was correct in holding, as a matter of law, that the filing of a sufficient and adequate petition of property-owning electors, while a condition precedent to the *625 issuance of 'bonds, was not a condition precedent to a valid election on the question of bond issuance. Respondents argue that the petition of October 9 was in fact and law a valid and1 sufficient petition whether it was a condition precedent to calling the election or merely a condition precedent to the issuance of the bonds, or both. The trial judge has ruled otherwise, and we think he was correct. If it is the law, either .that an election cannot be called to vote upon a bond issue or that bonds cannot be issued until there has been filed a proper “petition to issue such bonds,” it seems very clear that a petition to issue bonds “for the purpose of providing public school -building” cannot support or justify the issuance of bonds for the broader and more comprehensive purposes of providing “an adequate building and equipment and furniture for school purposes.” In any event, plaintiff-appellants do not challenge the ruling of the trial court on this particular point, it being favorable to them, and defendants-respondents, having perfected no appeal on their part, are not in position to raise the question. Cf. Wood v. McCain (1919) 41 S. D. 418, 171 N.W. 82. We revert then to the question of whether the filing of a sufficient and legal petition is a condition precedent to the calling of a valid bond election as appellants maintain, or whether it is a condition precedent only to the issuance of the -bond's as respondents maintain and as the trial -court held. For the solution of this question some consideration of relevant statutes is essential.

After the adoption of the Revised Code of 1919 bonds could be issued by either common or independent school districts for certain specified purposes upon majority vote of the electors. Sections 7593, 7606, R. 'C. 1919.

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Bluebook (online)
269 N.W. 484, 64 S.D. 621, 1936 S.D. LEXIS 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reuland-v-ind-dist-of-white-lake-sd-1936.