School District No. 17 v. Swayze

29 Kan. 211
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 15, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 29 Kan. 211 (School District No. 17 v. Swayze) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
School District No. 17 v. Swayze, 29 Kan. 211 (kan 1883).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Valentine, J.:

This was an action brought by N. J. Swayze against School District No. 17, Chase county, Kansas, to recover on the following instrument in writing, to wit:

“No. 74. Elk, Kansas, May 31, 1879.
Treasurer of School District No. 17, County of Chase, Kansas: Pay to N. J. Swayze the sum of forty-seven dollars, for school apparatus, out of any funds in your possession, raised or appropriated for such purpose.
(Signed) W. G. Hunnewell, District Clerk.
(Countersigned) J. G. Johnson, Director.”

And the following is a copy of the indorsement upon the foregoing order:

“N. J. Swayze. ¡Sept. 26th, 1879, presented for payment by J. S. Doolittle, [to] treasurer of Chase county. I hereby refuse to pay within order.— D. May, Treasurer Dis. No. 17.”

A'judgment was rendered in the court below in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant for the amount claimed, and the defendant, as plaintiff in error, now complains of such [213]*213judgment. The alleged errors are principally with reference to instructions given by the court to the jury, and instructions refused. The court below instructed the jury, among other things, that the instrument sued on was prima facie valid and binding upon the school district, and that it alone made out a prima facie case in favor of the plaintiff and against the school district. The court also gave .the following instructions, among others, to wit:

“7. Where an order given by and signed by the director and clerk of a school district shows upon its face that it was given for school apparatus, the law presumes that it was given for a good consideration and was lawfully issued, and the burden would be on the district in such a case to show any facts overcoming such presumption, and it would not be sufficient in such a ease to merely show that the district did not get and not receive such apparatus, as they may have contracted to pay in advance, or the property may have been tendered and left for them.”
“9. If, after the order sued on was issued and delivered to the plaintiff, the school district at a meeting learned that the old order had been surrendered and a new one given, and such meeting with such knowledge took no steps in the way of disapproving such action and in the way of tendering back the old warrant to the plaintiff, then and in such case the jury may find, if the evidence warrants it, that there was a ratification by the meeting of the action of the board which would place the order in the same situation as though previously authorized.”

The court refused to give the following instructions, to wit:

“1. If you find that a warrant had been given in the first' place to some person other than the plaintiff, for a mathematical chart for said school district, and that that other person assigned it to the plaintiff, that warrant was void and without consideration, for the district had no legal authority to buy and pay for such chart out of the district money.
“ 2. And in such case, if the order sued on was given in lieu' of the first-named one, it was equally void and without consideration.”

It appears from the evidence that about the fore part of the year 1878, the school board of the present school district issued an order on their treasurer to some person, for the sum of [214]*214forty-seven dollars. This “some person” assigned the order to the present plaintiff, N. J. Swayze. The school district failed to pay this order, and afterward the director and clerk in lieu thereof issued the order now sued on, each signing the same at a separate time and place. One witness, S. N. Wood, testified on the trial that “ at a regular meeting of the voters of the school district, held after this new order was given, the action of the clerk and director in giving such order was ratified and approved.” The original order was probably given for a mathematical chart, though whether such was the consideration for the original order is not quite clear. There was some evidence introduced tending to show that the chart was never delivered to the district, and the only evidence introduced tending to show that it was delivered was the action of the officers of the district in issuing said orders and the action of the voters of the district in ratifying and approving the same. There was no evidence introduced tending to show that the chart was not tendered to the district, and there was no evidence introduced tending to show when the chart was to be delivered. Upon the evidence in the case and the instructions of the court below, the plaintiff in error, defendant below, raises the following questions: First, was the order sued on prima facie valid and binding upon the district? Second, included in the foregoing question is this other question: Had the school district power in 1878 to purchase in any manner school apparatus of any kind for the district? Third, and included in the first question is this further question : If the school district had power, under any circumstances and in any mode, to purchase school apparatus of any kind, then does the order signed by the school-district director and the school-district clerk prove prima facie that the apparatus purchased was of that kind of apparatus which the school district had power to purchase, and that it was purchased in the mode authorized by statute? Fourth, had the school district power in 1878 to purchase a mathematical chart for the district? Fifth, and was such chart purchased in the manner authorized by statute ? vSixth, [215]*215•was the order sued on issued in the manner provided by statute ? Seventh, and if there were any irregularities intervening from the time of purchasing said chart down to the time of issuing the second order, did the school district ratify and approve what had been irregularly done, so as to make the order sued on valid and binding upon the school district?

The school order sued on seems to have been drawn up in proper form; and §7, article 4, of the school law of 1876, {.ch. 122, Laws of 1876; ch. 92, Laws of 1879,) provides as follows: 1

“Sec. 7. The clerk of the district shall draw orders on the treasurer of the district for moneys in the hands of such treasurer, which have been apportioned to or raised by the district to be applied to the payment of teachers’ wages, and apply such money to the payment of the wages of such teachers as shall have been employed by the district board; and said clerk shall draw orders on the said treasurer for moneys in the hands of such treasurer, to be disbursed for any other purpose ordered by a district meeting or by the district board, agreeably to the provisions of this act.”

And §4 of the same article provides as follows:

“Sec. 4. The director of each district shall preside at all district meetings, and shall sign all orders drawn by the clerk, authorized by a district meeting or by the district board, upon the treasurer of the district, for moneys collected or received by him to be disbursed therein.”

From 1868 down to 1876, a school district impliedly had the power to purchase and to furnish a school house with blackboards, outline maps, and apparatus

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
29 Kan. 211, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/school-district-no-17-v-swayze-kan-1883.