School District No. 42 v. School District No. 45

254 S.W. 726, 212 Mo. App. 670, 1923 Mo. App. LEXIS 128
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 2, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 254 S.W. 726 (School District No. 42 v. School District No. 45) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
School District No. 42 v. School District No. 45, 254 S.W. 726, 212 Mo. App. 670, 1923 Mo. App. LEXIS 128 (Mo. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinions

This is a suit in equity, brought by School District No. 42 of Audrain county against School District No. 45 of said county, to set aside, cancel and annul the finding and decision of a board of arbitration changing the boundary line between said two districts. Upon trial of the issues in the case, judgment was rendered for the defendant and plaintiff prosecutes the appeal.

It appears that pursuant to the provisions of section 11201, Revised Statutes of Missouri, 1919, a petition was presented to the district clerk of each of said school districts, for the purpose of submitting to the voters of said districts a proposition to change the boundary line between these two districts, so that seventy-five acres of territory, situated within district No. 42 and on which Messrs. Herndon and Oestreich lived with their families, would be attached to district No. 45. That thereupon the clerks of each of said districts posted the required notices in each district, as required by said statute, and at the annual school meetings in the two districts, a majority of the voters of district No. 42 voted against said proposition and a majority of the voters of district No. 45 voted in favor thereof. An appeal was filed, within the time prescribed in the statute, with the county superintendent of public schools and that officer, in accordance with the statute, appointed four disinterested men, resident taxpayers of Audrain county, to constitute together with himself a board of arbitration to consider the necessity for such proposed change and render a decision thereon. The board of arbitration found that there was a good cause and a necessity for a change in the boundary sought, and ordered a change of boundary lines to be made in accordance therewith.

The petition states that the order and judgment of said board of arbitration is fraudulent and void and that said board was without jurisdiction to make the same. The grounds assigned therein, and urged here, for setting aside the judgment of said board are as follows:

"The territory, described in the said petition signed *Page 674 by the ten taxpayers of said districts, did not have any children or a child in said territory of school age at the time of the signing of said petition or since said time, and said territory was not separated from the remainder of district 42 by any stream of running water and was not an island in any navigable stream in this State, which facts were well known to the said petitioners at the time of signing and presenting their said petition to the clerks of said school districts aforesaid. That the attempted change of boundary line does not and did not change any child of school age from district 42 to district No. 45 by reason of said changes; that said pretended change simply added to district No. 45 and took from district No. 42 the said territory merely for the acquisition of valuable territory by district No. 45 in violation of the Statutes of Missouri.

"That said order was void and said board without jurisdiction for the reason that said petition and notice did not definitely and clearly describe the land to be detached from district No. 42 and added to district No 45. They did not state and describe any certain tract of land to be detached or taken from district No. 42 and added to district No. 45. . . . They refer to such territory as said territory owned by Amil Oestreich and Phillip Herndon and now belonging in Macedonia school district `No. ___,' when there was no such district as `Macedonia district `No. ___.' The land ordered to be detached did not belong to said parties, but embraced twenty (20) acres belonging to Barnie Parrish. They did not describe and locate the existing boundary line between said district 42 and 45 and show the proposed change in the same. The petition and notice give but three sides of a tract of land, do not locate the county and State where located and do not state what change is asked for."

The evidence showed that only one child resided in the territory that was detached from district No. 42 and attached to district No. 45. This child, at the time of the transfer, was between two and three years old and was the adopted child of Mr. Herndon. The evidence further *Page 675 showed that Mr. Oestreich intended adopting a child that was or would be ready to go to school at the time in question; that a large stream of water, known as Saling creek, ran in a southwesterly direction through the seventy-five acres, involved in this suit, and west of the homes of said Herndon and Oestreich; that said stream at frequent intervals became impassible on account of high water; that the school house, belonging to school district No. 42, was west of said stream and the school house in district No. 45 was east thereof. The evidence also showed that the distance from the homes of said Herndon and Oestreich to the school house in district No. 42 was two and a half to two and three-quarters miles, while the school house in district No. 45 was located a mile to a mile and a half from said homes.

It is contended by counsel for plaintiff that, inasmuch as the facts show that the territory sought to be detached from district 42 and attached to district 45 has no child of school age residing in said territory, the judgment of the board or arbitration is void for want of jurisdiction. It is claimed that section 11201, Revised Statutes, 1919, provides that residence of children of school age is a condition precedent to acquisition of territory from one district to another, and that the finding and judgment of said board of arbitration was a fraud in law.

We cannot bring ourselves to subscribe to this view. The statute does not say that no change in the boundary line of two school districts shall be made unless a child of school age resides in the acquired territory, but merely provides "that, in changing the boundary line between the two established districts, one district shall not encroach upon the other simply for the acquisition of territory." The statute gives the board of arbitration the authority to consider the necessity for the proposed change and to render a decision thereon, and provides that the decision rendered by said tribunal shall be final.

In the case at bar the board of arbitration, among other things, found that there was a good cause and a *Page 676 necessity for a change in the boundary line between the two school districts. Its decision excludes the idea that the proposed change in the boundary lines of the two districts was sought for the purpose of enabling one district to encroach upon the other simply for the acquisition of territory. Whether or not the proposed change was simply for the acquisition of territory was a question which the board was in duty bound to inquire into and determine, and the presumption must be indulged in that it did not disregard the statutory inhibition.

Furthermore, the undisputed evidence shows that the proposed change in the boundary lines of the two districts was sought because it was impossible for Mr. Herndon's child, when it reached school age, or for the child that Mr. Oestreich intended to adopt and take into his home, to regularly attend school in district No. 42. This for the reason that the school house in district No. 42 could not be reached from the homes of said Herndon and Oestreich without crossing Saling creek, and because said stream at frequent intervals became impassible on account of high water.

Another reason for the change in question was that the school house in district No. 45 was situated east of Saling creek (on the side of the creek where the homes of Herndon and Oestreich were located) and was a mile and a quarter nearer to said homes than was the school house in district No. 42.

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Bluebook (online)
254 S.W. 726, 212 Mo. App. 670, 1923 Mo. App. LEXIS 128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/school-district-no-42-v-school-district-no-45-moctapp-1923.