Rural Independent School District of Eagle v. Daly

207 N.W. 124, 201 Iowa 286
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 9, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 207 N.W. 124 (Rural Independent School District of Eagle v. Daly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rural Independent School District of Eagle v. Daly, 207 N.W. 124, 201 Iowa 286 (iowa 1926).

Opinion

De Graff, C. J.

The defendants W. A. Daly, J. R. McMahon, and Peter Wolf were president, secretary, and treasurer, respectively, of the Consolidated Independent School Dis-triet of Bankston, in Dubuque County, Iowa. The plaintiff-appellants are school districts which, with the defendant Rural Independent School District of Bankston, originally formed the said consolidated independent district, and which were recreated upon the dissolution of the consolidated district.

The statute provides the method and manner of the apportionment of all assets and liabilities of a dissolved consolidated school district, and it is by virtue of rights thus created that the plaintiffs claim the benefit of the moneys in suit, alleged to have been expended without authority of law by the consoli *288 dated district prior to its dissolution. Chapter 175, -Acts of the Thirty-ninth General Assembly.

This action was commenced to recover personal judgment against the individual defendants in the sum of $513.98. This sum was paid ■ by said defendants, as school officers, under authority of the board of directors, from the school funds of said consolidated independent district, and represented fees for services rendered by the law firm of Kenline, Boedell & Hoffmann, of Dubuque, under a contract of employment with said board.

• The gist, of the action is to recover judgment against school officers who have disbursed money from school funds for an alleged unauthorized purpose, resulting in misappropriation.

The facts disclose that, during the years 1919 to 1922, inclusive, there existed' in Dubuque County, Iowa, a corporation known as -the Consolidated Independent School District of Bankston; that the defendant W. A. Daly was its duly elected and acting president and a member of the board of directors in said district; that the defendants J. B. McMahon and Peter Wolf were the duly elected and acting secretary-and treasurer, respectively, of said board; that, in July, 1921, proceedings were instituted and prosecuted for the dissolution of said school corporation; that said corporation, acting through its board of directors, and in good faith, employed attorneys to represent and protect the interest of said corporation in such dissolution proceedings; that, as a result of a hearing and trial, the petition for dissolution was dismissed for a jurisdictional cause; that throughout this proceeding the board was represented by attor neys expressly employed by the board, and for such services a claim for $180 was filed, which was subsequently audited and allowed by said school corporation, acting through its board of directors; that- thereáfter, in September, 1921, another proceeding was instituted and prosecuted for the dissolution of said school corporation; that thereupon said corporation,' acting-through its board of directors, and in good faith, employed the same attorneys to represent and protect the interest of said corporation in such proceedings; that, as a result of a hearing and trial, the petition was again dismissed,, and thereupon the petitioners appealed from said decision to the county board of *289 education; that, upon said appeal and hearing upon the merits, the petition was allowed; that for legal services rendered in the second proceeding there was a bill allowed and audited by the board of directors in favor of the attorneys in the sum of $333.98; that in the employment of said attorneys and the payment of said fees the board acted upon the advice of the county attorney and the county superintendent of schools for Dubuque County; that the defendant McMahon, in the performance of his duty as secretary, drew and countersigned two orders upon the school treasurer, Peter Wolf, for the payment of said bills, in conformity to the direction of authority of the board of directors ; that the defendant Daly, as president of said board, signed the two orders, in conformity to the authority of said board; that said orders or warrants were paid in good faith by the school treasurer from the moneys of the said school corporation, upon presentation by the payee thereof. The foregoing constitute the material facts disclosed by the record in this ease.

The plaintiffs question the right and authority of the board of directors to employ counsel to defend the school corporation in the dissolution proceedings, and to pay the attorneys so employed from the school funds of said corporation. Conceding, without determining, that the plaintiff school districts are the proper parties in interest to maintain this action, we inquire whether the defendant-officers are personally liable in the premises.

A school district is a corporation. It is a legal entity, with power to sue and be sued, to hold property, and to exercise all powers in all school matters pertaining to said corporation within its territory. Section 4123, Code of 1924. It elects its president, who must be a member of the board of directors. It elects from outside the board a secretary and a treasurer. Sections 4220 and 4222, Code of 1924. The affairs of each school corporation are conducted by a board of directors.

It is further provided that the president of the board of directors shall appear on behalf of his corporation in all actions brought by or against it, unless individually a party, in which ease the duty, devolves upon the secretary. Section 4304, Code of 1924.

“In all cases where actions may be instituted by or against *290 any school officer * * * the board may employ counsel, for which the school corporation shall be liable.” Section 4245, Code of 1924.

It is apparent that the purpose of the statute supra is to enumerate one of the duties of the president, and to provide that a school board, may employ counsel at the expense of the corporation, even in. an action brought against a school officer individually.

One of the duties of a county attorney prescribed by statute is to furnish, free of charge, legal advice to all school board and township officers when requested so to do by such board or officer. Chapter 232, Section 2, Acts of tlie Thirty-eighth General Assembly; Sec-^on 5180, Paragraph 7, Code of 1924. This provision simply defines one of the duties of a county attorney, but the law does not make it mandatory upon a school board or officer to employ the county attorney.

Counsel for appellant rely on Templin & Son v. District Township of Fremont, 36 Iowa 411; but in that ease there was no official action of the board in reference to employing counsel.

It is the general rule that a municipal corporation which is authorized to contract and to sue or be sued may employ legal counsel, unless the statute expressly or by fair implication denies that right. In Taylor County v. Standley, 79 Iowa . 666, it is said:

“We are of the opinion that the board of supervisors was authorized to employ counsel on behalf of the county by virtue of the general powers given' them by statute to manage the affairs of the county, and that their right to do so, and to cause proceedings to be instituted in the name of the county, in cases of this kind, does not depend "upon the consent of the county attorney, nor upon his willingness or ability to appear for the county. ’ ’

See, also, Jordan & McCallum v. Osceola County,

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207 N.W. 124, 201 Iowa 286, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rural-independent-school-district-of-eagle-v-daly-iowa-1926.