School-district No. One v. Union School-district No. One

45 N.W. 993, 81 Mich. 339, 1890 Mich. LEXIS 754
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 6, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 45 N.W. 993 (School-district No. One v. Union School-district No. One) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan 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. One v. Union School-district No. One, 45 N.W. 993, 81 Mich. 339, 1890 Mich. LEXIS 754 (Mich. 1890).

Opinion

Long, J.

This controversy grows out of a claim made by the complainant that the defendant school-district, without warrant of law, has since the year 1881, to and including the year 1886, extended assessment for taxes [340]*340over certain territory which, the complainant district now claims as a part of the territory lying and being within its boundaries, and that the taxes so levied were collected by the township treasurer for those years, and turned over to the school fund of the defendant district. The bill is filed for an accounting for moneys so assessed and collected amounting to over $1,000, and for an injunction restraining the defendant district from assuming jurisdiction over that portion of the territory in controversy, and also restraining the defendant Robinson, who is supervisor of the township of Pine River, from assessing any tax upon the property in said territory for the use and benefit of the defendant district.

The territory in dispute comprises one and three-quarter sections of land, and lies between the two districts, and from and including the year 1881 has been regarded as comprised within the territorial limits of the defendant district. It appears that prior to 1881 this territory was embraced within complainant’s districts The bill alleges that .the complainant district was organized in 1854, composed of certain territory, and of which the territory now in controversy formed a part, and that it has retained the whole of such territory ever since, and has been entitled to receive the taxes assessed on said lands to its own use.

The defendant district, by its answer, alleges that in-April, 1881, by the action of the joint boards of school inspectors of the townships of Pine River and Bethany, this territory in the township of Pine River was detached from the complainant district, and added to that of defendant; that said action in detaching said territory from complainant district, and adding the same to defendant district, has since been duly recognized and acquiesced in by all parties interested; and that no pro[341]*341test or complaint was made until exhibited by the bill of •complainant.

On the hearing in the court below a decree was made perpetually enjoining and restraining the defendant district from receiving the sums of money arising from the taxes assessed on said territory, and also restraining and •enjoining the defendant Robinson, as supervisor, from assessing and levying any taxes thereon for the use and benefit of the defendant school-district. Decree for accounting was denied. From this decree all parties •appeal.

We need not discuss at length the testimony offered in the case, as it very satisfactorily appears that this decree ■cannot stand. The complainant, by its bill, attempts to •explain the reason of the long delay in asserting its rights to the moneys arising from this territory as follows:

“And your orator further shows that it has delayed action against the defendant school-district, and the respective supervisors of the township of Pine River, from year to year, in the hope and belief that they would •cease to cheat and defraud your orator out of its just rights in the premises, and legally perform their duty to your orator and the public as in justice and in equity they ought to have done, and because your orator was poor, and needed all the moneys it could raise for school purposes, and thus hesitated to expend the same in litigation.”

It is quite apparent, however, that the bill was filed ■because it was discovered that the records in the offices ■of the township clerks of Bethany and Pine River failed to show the joint action taken by the boards of school inspectors of these two townships. The complainant, in making its case at the outset, introduced as witnesses these two township clerks. The clerk of the township of Bethany was first called, and complainant’s counsel, at the outset of his direct examination, asked:

“Have you in your possession the actions of the joint [342]*342boards of school inspectors of the townships of Pine River and Bethany since and including the year 1880?"

Counsel also asked the witness:

“Have you any record in the book that you have in your hands of a joint meeting of the boards of school inspectors of the townships of Pine River and Bethany held on the 23d day of April, A. D. 1881, in which the following territory of School-district No. 1 of Pine River was detached therefrom, and annexed to Union School-district No. 1 of Pine River and Bethany, to wit" (counsel here describing the territory in controversy)?

Other questions of similar import were asked by the counsel of this witness, and also of the clerk of the township of Pine River, and from such examination it appeared that the records did not show the action taken by this joint board detaching this territory from complainant's district. Counsel also called as a witness an officer of the complainant district, and showed that, during the year 1880 and thereafter, no notice was ever served upon him of the joint action of the boards of school inspectors for these two townships. It appeared,, however, from complainant's proofs that prior to 1881 the district had a log school-house on the north-west corner of north-east quarter of section 27 of Pine River, which was within the territory in dispute, and that it was torn down in 1880 or 1881, and in 1882 or 1883 a new school-house was built one-half mile west and outside of the disputed territory; and no claim was then made that the territory in dispute should be treated as belonging to that district, and no taxes were attempted to be laid on this territory to aid in building this schoolhouse.

The defendants offered testimony tending to show that in the year 1881 there was a meeting of the school inspectors of these two townships, and action taken setting this territory into the defendant district, though no [343]*343record of such proceedings is found or produced. It appears, however, that ever since that time the inhabitants of that territory, as well as the. defendant district, have regarded that territory as within the jurisdiction of the defendant district, and the children of these inhabitants have attended school in the defendant district ever since. It appears, also, that on April 1, 1881, a petition was presented to the defendant district asking- permission that this territory might be added to the defendant district, and the petition' was granted. This was before the joint meeting of the boards of inspectors. Since that time it also appears that petitions have been presented to the defendant district, to have certain of this disputed territory set off from it, by the inhabitants residing within this territory. If the complainant never had noticq of the meeting and action of the joint board of inspectors, it is apparent that it has had notice of the claim made by the defendant over this territory during all these years.

How. Stat. § 5033, provides that the township board of school inspectors may regulate and alter the boundaries of school-districts, and by section 5040 the action of the joint boards is required in case of fractional districts. The statute gives these hoards power to do what the defendants claim was done in this case, and the two school-districts have acquiesced for all these years in that action.

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Bluebook (online)
45 N.W. 993, 81 Mich. 339, 1890 Mich. LEXIS 754, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/school-district-no-one-v-union-school-district-no-one-mich-1890.