School District Number 1 v. School District Number 4

94 Mo. 612
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 15, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 94 Mo. 612 (School District Number 1 v. School District Number 4) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
School District Number 1 v. School District Number 4, 94 Mo. 612 (Mo. 1887).

Opinion

Bbace, J.

Prior to the annual school meetings in April, 1882, township 45, range 31, in Cass county, had been organized into school districts. Plaintiff and defendant were districts in said township. The other districts, numbers 2, 3, 4, and 8, the remaining territory not inclnded in these districts, formed parts of districts in adjoining townships. On the fourteenth of March, 1882, a copy of the following petition was delivered to the president and clerk of the board of directors of said district numbered 4:

“March 14, 1882.

“To the Hon. Boards of Directors of School Districts Nos. 1, 2, 3,4, 5, Township 45, Range 31:

“ The undersigned, your petitioners and taxpayers [615]*615in District No. 1, Township 45, Range 31, would respectfully represent that the school districts in Peculiar township, as at present constituted, fail to accomplish the objects for which such districts are usually organized. To the end, therefore, that the whole township and the patrons of' the public schools may be better accommodated, we desire that the township be reorganized into new school districts, and request- your Board to take such action as the law directs in the premises.”

Signed by James P. Taylor and twelve others, and a copy thereof was presented to all the other districts in said township, but at what time does not appear. There was no evidence tending to prove that any notices were posted in any of the districts of said township of said proposed reorganization of said township into new school districts, except in district numbered 1. In regard to that district, one witness, J. P. Taylor, testified: “I put up in district number 1 notices of the election on the question of reorganizing the districts according to the petition twenty days before the first Tuesday in April, 1882.”

There was no evidence tending to show that any vote was taken on the proposition in district number 4, or in any of the outlying districts at the annual meetings held on the last-mentioned date. District number 1 voted in favor of the proposition, and districts numbers 2, 3, and 8, voted against the proposition. After the annual meetings in 1882, the matter of redistrictingthe township was referred to John T. Weathers, who was then, and afterwards until the trial of this case in the circuit court, school commissioner of Cass county ; and he, in March, 1883, redistricted the township and determined the boundaries of the various districts, and thereafter, but at what date does not appear, made a plat of the township showing the boundaries of the school districts therein, as thus changed by him, and sent the same to the clerks of the several boards of [616]*616directors in the township. It does not appear that snch plat was entered upon the records of any of the districts, but at some time thereafter the same was filed in the office of the county clerk. By this reorganization the commissioner undertook to establish one entirely new district (number 10), and to change the boundaries of every other district in the township, and in making this change, detached from the territory of district number 4, defendant herein,' and added to that of district number 1, plaintiff herein, an area of nine hundred and sixty acres. The enumeration list and list of taxpayers made by the boards of directors of all the districts in the township, for the year 1884, and the levy by the county court of Cass county for school taxes for said year, were made upon said districts as laid off by said Weathers, commissioner.

Prior to this redistricting' by the school commissioner, a tax had been levied for building a schoolhouse by district number 1, which was collected and applied in payment for such building in said district after such redistricting. On the tenth of December, 1883, the board of directors of district number 1, appointed one Willis Taylor to proceed with some person to be appointed by district number 4, to determine the valuation of the school property of said district number 1,' and of the proportion thereof of those in the territory detached from said district and attached to district number 4, by the school commissioner. Taylor notified said defendant district of his appointment, but the defendant refused to appoint any person to act with him in the valuation of said property; and on the sixteenth of March, 1885, plaintiff commenced this proceeding by- mandamus in the circuit court of Cass county to compel the defendant to make such appointment. The issuing of an alternative writ was waived ; the defendant answered the petition, denying every [617]*617allegation thereof, and at the close of plaintiff’s evidence, demurred thereto, which demurrer was sustained by the court, the peremptory writ refused, and judgment rendered in favor of defendant for costs, from which plaintiff appeals.

Each organized school district in the state is a body ■corporate, whose corporate life is of unlimited duration (R. S., 1879, sec. 7021), and no power has been vested by law, either in the voters of such district, or of all the districts in the township, or in the boards of directors of such districts, or in the school commissioner of the county, to deprive them of their corporate existence, and in their stead create new districts. The extent of the power of the voters in such organized districts, and of the county school commissioner, when his power is called into action, is to form a new district, composed ■of portions of two or more organized districts, and to ■change the boundary lines of organized districts. This power is conferred and defined by Revised Statutes, section 7023, which is as follows: “Whenever it may be deemed necessary- to form a new district, composed of portions of two or more districts, or to change the boundary lines of any district, it shall be the duty of the directors of the districts affected, upon the reception, of a petition desiring such change and signed by ten •qualified voters residing in either of the districts affected, to post a notice of such desired change in at least three public places in each district interested twenty days prior to the time of the annual meeting. And the voters when assembled shall decide such question by majority vote. If the assent to such formation be given by all the annual meetings of the various districts thus voting, the district shall be deemed formed, or the boundary lines thus changed from that date. But if a part of the districts affected vote in favor of, and a part against, such change, the matter shall be referred to- the county commissioner for final decision, [618]*618who shall proceed to inform himself of the necessity of the proposed change, and his decision thereon shall be final, and shall be transmitted to the various district clerks and by them be entered upon the records of the various districts.”

A moment’s consideration of the provisions of the' foregoing section will satisfy the mind, that the proposition upon which the voters are to be called upon to' vote must be such an one as, if voted for by a majority at all the annual • meetings of the districts interested, will have the effect, by the force of such vote alone, of creating the new district voted for, with defined boundaries in the one case, or of making definite changes in the boundaries of the then organized districts. In other' words the vote cannot have the effect of forming a new district unless the proposition fixes the boundaries of' that district, nor of changing those of old districts, unless it is specified therein where those boundaries, will be should the proposition be adopted.

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