School District No. 94 v. Thompson

146 N.W. 727, 27 N.D. 459, 1914 N.D. LEXIS 56
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedApril 6, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 146 N.W. 727 (School District No. 94 v. Thompson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota 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. 94 v. Thompson, 146 N.W. 727, 27 N.D. 459, 1914 N.D. LEXIS 56 (N.D. 1914).

Opinions

Fisk, J.

Plaintiff school district seeks to perpetually enjoin the defendants, as members of the board of education of the village of Tower City, and the defendant, Addison Leach, as county auditor of Cass county, from doing any act looking to the transfer for school purposes of sections 6 and 7, the west half of section 5, and the west half of section 8, all in township 140 north of range 55 west, lying and being in Cass county, from plaintiff school district to the special school district of the village of Tower City. Such transfer was sought to be effected pursuant to § 133 of chapter 266, Laws of 1911. The section reads as follows:

“When any special school district has been organized and provided [462]*462with a board of education under any general law, or a special act, or under the provisions of this article, territory outside the limits thereof, but adjacent thereto, may be attached to such special school district by the board of education thereof, upon application in writing signed by a majority of the voters of such adjacent territory; provided, that no territory shall be annexed which is at a greater distance than 3 miles from the central school in such special district, except upon petition signed by two thirds of the school voters residing in the territory which is at a greater distance than 3 miles from the central school in such special district; and upon such application being made, if such board shall deem it proper and to the best interests of the school of such corporation and of the territory to be attached, an order shall be issued by such board attaching such adjacent territory to such corporation for school purposes, and the same shall be entered upon the records of the board. Such territory shall, from the date of such order, be and compose a part of -such corporation for school purposes only. Such adjacent territory shall be attached for voting purposes to such corporation, or, if the election is held in wards, to the ward or wards or election precinct or precincts to which it lies adjacent; and the voters thereof shall vote only for school officers and upon such school questions; provided, that nothing in this act shall prevent any such adjacent territory from being annexed because of such adjacent territory being in an adjoining county, and provided, that the county commissioners may detach any part of such adjacent territory which is at a greater distance than 3 miles from the central school in such special district, and attach it to any adjacent common or special school district or districts upon petition to do so, signed by three fourths of the legal voters of such adjacent territory; provided, further, that in all cases fourteen days’ notice of a hearing before the board shall be given, by publication in the nearest newspaper and posted notices in conspicuous places, three in the special district, three in the territory sought to be annexed, and three in the district remaining from which the territory shall be taken. And such territory shall not become a part of the special district until five days, after such hearing, upon order of the board as hereinbefore provided; and all assets and liabilities shall be equalized according to § 217.”

The grounds alleged in the complaint as a basis for the relief prayed [463]*463for are, first. That the school board of such special school district, sometime prior to the attempted annexation of such territory, erected a large school building in Tower City, and in doing so greatly exceeded the debt limit in violation of the Constitution of the state, which limits the indebtedness of each school district to a sum not exceeding 5 per cent of the taxable property of the district; and,

Second. That the petition asking for the annexation of such territory to such special school district is null and void for the reason, as alleged, that the same was not signed by a majority of the voters of the territory sought to be annexed. Nor was it signed by two thirds of the school voters residing in that portion of the territory sought to be annexed, which is located at a greater distance than 3 miles from the center of such special school district. The petition which was thus presented to the board of education of the special school district of Tower City on September 12, 1911, was signed by G. IT. Miller, Mrs. G. H. Miller, TI. Delange, and Mrs. H. Delange, and it is alleged in the complaint that these persons were not bona fide voters and residents of the territory thus sought to be transferred. These allegations were put in issue by the answer, and at the conclusion of the trial of such issues in the district court of Cass county the learned trial judge made its findings and conclusions thereon favorable to the defendants, ordering a judgment in their favor for a dismissal of the action, with costs. Judgment was thereupon entered accordingly, and plaintiff appeals therefrom, and demands a trial de novo in this court.

In such trial de novo this court is, of course, confined to the issues framed by the pleadings and which were tried in the court below; and as we construe the complaint, but one question of fact is involved, which is whether the persons who signed the petition for the transfer of such territory from plaintiff district to the special school district aforesaid were residents and qualified school voters in the territory attempted to be transferred. The fact, if it be a fact, that such special school district had incurred an indebtedness exceeding the constitutional debt limit, is in no way material, as the legislature has not seen fit to provide that such fact shall operate to prevent such an annexation of adjacent territory. The mass of testimony contained in the record relating to such alleged fact is therefore wholly immaterial and irrelevant, and the [464]*464learned trial judge no doubt so held, as no finding was made thereon by him.

Near the close of the trial plaintiff’s counsel asked leave to amend paragraph 4 of the complaint by inserting the following: “And said petition and the order and proceedings thereon were wholly void and of no effect, the said defendants never having complied with the provisions of the statute with reference to annexing said property claimed to have been annexed, and never acquired jurisdiction over the subject-matter for the purpose of annexing said property as described in the petition, or any part thereof.” Such amendment was allowed over defendants’ objection, but the same, as the trial court remarked, alleges nothing but legal conclusions, and does not operate to change the issues in any particular.

It follows that the sole issue of fact for retrial in this court is whether the persons who signed the petition which was presented to the board of the special school district, and acted upon by such board on the 12th and 29th days of September, 1911, were residents and school voters in such territory on said dates. After reading and considering the testimony relating to such issue, we have no hesitancy in adopting the findings of the trial court on this issue. In fact, we are unable to perceive how the trial court could have made any different finding on this question. The testimony is very voluminous, and we shall not attempt to review the same in this opinion, as no useful purpose would be sub-served thereby.

In his printed brief, counsel for appellant raises some questions which it does not appear were raised in the lower court, and which certainly were not raised by the pleadings. However, we will briefly notice them.

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Related

Lee v. Shide
288 N.W. 556 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1939)
Town of South Tucson v. Board of Supervisors
84 P.2d 581 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1938)
State ex rel. School District No. 94 v. Tucker
166 N.W. 820 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1918)
Thompson v. Vold
165 N.W. 1076 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1917)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
146 N.W. 727, 27 N.D. 459, 1914 N.D. LEXIS 56, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/school-district-no-94-v-thompson-nd-1914.