School District No. 28 v. Larson

260 P. 1042, 80 Mont. 363, 1927 Mont. LEXIS 63
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 29, 1927
DocketNo. 6,183.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 260 P. 1042 (School District No. 28 v. Larson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
School District No. 28 v. Larson, 260 P. 1042, 80 Mont. 363, 1927 Mont. LEXIS 63 (Mo. 1927).

Opinion

*365 MR. JUSTICE MYERS

delivered the opinion of the court.

School District No. 28 has been a joint public-school district, situate partly in Lake county and partly in Missoula county. A petition, addressed to the county superintendent of schools of Lake county and the county superintendent of schools of Missoula county and praying for the creation of a new school district out of certain territory of the joint district, was presented to those officials. The territory sought by the petition to be made a new district comprised the southern part of the joint district and included territory in each of the counties, so the proposed new district would be, itself, a joint district and would have within its boundaries all of the territory of Missoula county that was in District No. 28, as well as some situate in Lake county. The petition was signed by a majority of the school electors residing within the proposed new district. Furthermore; it recites that it is signed by parents of more than ten school children residing within the proposed new district. There was a schoolhouse within the boundaries of the proposed new district and there were in District No. 28 several sehoolhouses which were not in the proposed new district.

The petition was filed and, December 31, 1926, at Poison, the county-seat of Lake county, a hearing thereon was held by both county superintendents and, as a result, that night, the night of December 31, there was made and signed by both of those officials an order, granting the petition and purporting to create the proposed new joint district. The order did not describe the boundaries of the new district it assumed to create but recited that “said petition for the creation and organization of a new joint school district as described in said petition is hereby granted and allowed.” It appears that the order was made in duplicate and that each of the officials retained one for the files of her office. The term of office of Mary E. Eckstein, county superintendent of Lake county, expired that night, at midnight. She was succeeded by Carrie Larson, defendant *366 herein. Aurelia Boles, county superintendent of Missoula county, succeeded herself.

January 3, 1927, at Missoula, Montana, Superintendent Boles wrote to Superintendent Larson, at Poison, and informed the latter that she, Superintendent Boles, had added to the order in her office a description of the boundaries of the new district, as set forth in the petition, writing it at the bottom, beneath the signatures of the officials; and, also, that she had written at the top of the order a heading, as follows: ‘ ‘ Order creating a school district out of a portion of School District No. 28, Missoula and Lake Counties, State of Montana, said district to be known as School District No. 21.” In her letter, Superintendent Boles asked that Superintendent Larson make the same additions to the order in her office or send it to Superintendent Boles, that she might make them. It appears that Superintendent Larson did the latter; that Superintendent Boles made like additions to the order sent her by Superintendent Larson and returned it to that official.

Thereafter, an appeal from that order to the boards of county commissioners of Lake and Missoula counties was taken by certain dissatisfied electors and taxpayers of District No. 28. The appeal was heard at a joint session of the boards, held at Poison. The result was that the commissioners of Lake county, at that time or soon thereafter, made an order reversing the order appealed from; that the commissioners of Missoula county refused to take action at that time and place but, at a later date and at Missoula, county-seat of Missoula county, made an order affirming the order appealed from.

Trustees for the supposedly created new joint district were appointed by the county superintendents of the two counties but it appears that they have never functioned. It appears further that the trustees of District No. 28 have refused to recognize the order of the two superintendents in undertaking to create a new district or their action in appointing trustees for the supposed new district and that the trustees of the old district have continued to exercise control over the schoolhouse *367 in the supposed new district and the school therein conducted.

March 21, 1927, the county superintendent of Lake county, the defendant herein, called a meeting of the trustees of District No. 28 and the trustees of the supposed new district, known as District No. 21, to be held March 28, 1927, “for the purpose of apportioning the moneys and adjusting the indebtedness between the aforementioned districts,” and caused notice thereof to be served on all of the parties for whom the call whs intended.

Thereupon, the plaintiff herein, District No. 28, brought this suit to enjoin the defendant from proceeding in the premises as indicated in her call for such meeting and to enjoin her from dividing with the supposed new district the funds of the plaintiff district or its property and from taking, with respect to the supposed new district, any and all action whatsoever which would in any manner withdraw from the plaintiff district any of its funds or other property.

The complaint alleges the foregoing narrated facts; also, that the petition for the creation of a new district was never presented to nor acted upon by the trustees of plaintiff district; that the order of the two county superintendents for the creation of a new district is wholly void and all of the proceedings relating thereto are void; that plaintiff district has large sums of money constituting its school funds, all of which are needed by it for the purpose of maintaining its schools; that it has much permanent property, real and personal, all of which is needed for the conduct of its schools; that defendant threatens to and, unless restrained, will divide such money and other property and deliver a part thereof to those assuming to be trustees of the supposed new district; that if plaintiff district should be thus deprived of a part of its money and other property the same would be dissipated and wholly lost to plaintiff, to its great and irreparable injury; that it has no adequate remedy at law. Some other necessary allegations are made. The complaint prays for appropriate injunction, equi *368 table relief and costs. With the complaint was filed and presented a motion for a temporary injunction.

An order to defendant to appear and show cause was issued and served, accompanied by a restraining order. At the appointed time, defendant appeared by counsel. At the same time appeared other attorneys, who stated that they appeared for District No. 21, represented to be the real party in interest. They asked to be allowed to file a plea in intervention, setting up the claims of that district or supposed district. It was allowed to be filed pro forma, to be passed upon and disposed of at the end of the hearing to be had. Thereupon, the plea in intervention was filed. It alleges what it represents to be the facts of the creation of what is denominated District No. 21. Such alleged facts do not differ materially from those alleged in plaintiff’s complaint.

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State Ex Rel. School District No. 8 v. Lensman
88 P.2d 63 (Montana Supreme Court, 1939)
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55 P.2d 1 (Montana Supreme Court, 1936)

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Bluebook (online)
260 P. 1042, 80 Mont. 363, 1927 Mont. LEXIS 63, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/school-district-no-28-v-larson-mont-1927.