School District Number 14 v. Sims

186 S.W. 4, 193 Mo. App. 480, 1916 Mo. App. LEXIS 40
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 1, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 186 S.W. 4 (School District Number 14 v. Sims) 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 Number 14 v. Sims, 186 S.W. 4, 193 Mo. App. 480, 1916 Mo. App. LEXIS 40 (Mo. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

JOHNSON, J.

School District Number 14 in Clinton county filed its petition in the circuit court for a writ of prohibition against the respondents who were the School Commissioner of that county and four arbitrators appointed under the provisions of section 10837, Revised Statutes, 1909, to prohibit them from assuming and exercising as a board of arbitration jurisdiction over an appeal to the Commissioner in a proceeding to change the boundary between adjoining school districts numbered 14 and 27. The board had not convened and its right to meet, hear and determine the cause was attacked in the petition on the ground of a lack of jurisdiction in the board (first) because: The proceeding was an attempted encroachment upon District No. 14 for the mere acquisition of territory by District No. 27, there being neither voters nor persons of school age residing in the territory. in question, and, (second) because the petition presented to the clerk of District 14 was signed only by qualified voters in District 27 and, therefore, was insufficient. A preliminary writ was issued commanding respondents to appear in court on a date stated therein to show cause why a peremptory writ should not be issued.

Respondents appeared and filed an answer and return which alleged the following facts: In March, 1915, a petition signed by ten qualified voters residing in the two districts was presented to the respective district clerks in which the area desired to be detached from District 14 and added to its neighbor was •clearly and accurately defined. Thereupon the. respec[482]*482tive clerks caused a notice to be posted in five public-places in each district at least fifteen days before the. annual school meeting and election. which set forth a true description of the proposed change in the boundary line and notified the qualified voters that the question of changing the line would be submitted to the voters at the annual meeting and election to be held in each district April 6, 1915. The election was held pursuant to the notice and the proposal to change the boundary was carried in District 27 but lost in District 14. Afterward and within the time prescribed in the statute (sec. 10837) the directors of District 27 filed an appeal with the school commissioner in which they prayed that as superintendent of public schools she would appoint four arbitrators and with them “inquire into and determine as the law directs,, the necessity of said proposed change in said boundary lines and that the same be granted as prayed for in the petition.”

Pursuant to the appeal the Commissioner appointed the respondent arbitrators but, as stated, the present suit was filed and the preliminary writ issued before any proceedings were taken by the board thus created in the exercise of jurisdiction over the cause appealed. Plaintiff then filed a motion that the preliminary writ of prohibition be made absolute “because the petition of the relator and the answer and return of respondents show that the relator is entitled to the relief demanded.” The motion was heard and sustained, judgment was rendered accordingly and respondents appealed.

The absence from the return of a specific denial ■of the averments in the petition that the territory involved in the change contained neither voter nor resident of school age, and that the sole object of the 'proposed change was the acquisition of territory by District No. 27, affords the principal support invoked [483]*483for plaintiff’s contention that the commissioner exceed!, ed her authority under the statute in appointing arbitrators, and that the extraordinary remedy of prohibition properly was invoked td prevent a usurpation of power by the inferior tribunal thus sought to be created.

The statute provides (see. 10837) that no boundary line between two school districts shall be changed “by which any district shall be left containing within its limits by actual count less than twenty persons of school age,” or by which one district shall encroach upon the other “simply for the acquisition of territory.”

Where the territory which it is proposed to de.tach from one district and add-to the other contains no resident of school age, the charge that the sole purpose of the change is territorial aggrandisement by the district to be benefited would seem to be conclusively proved, and in such case the board of arbitrators: would have no authority under the statute to change the boundary. But the statute does not require that, the petition to change a boundary line shall state either that the change, if made, will not leave a district without twenty persons of school age or that it is made simply for the acquisition of territory, and the rule is well settled that the notice of election will be deemed sufficient if it is as broad as the petition. “The important thing for the voter to know was how his district was to be affected by the change of boundary and what particular territory his district would, lose. . . .'by changing said boundary line. .Of all this the notices and petitions fully informed the voter and this was sufficient.” ■ [State ex rel. v. Job, 205 Mo. 1; Mason v. Kennedy, 89 Mo. 1. c. 30.]

• The proceedings leading up to the appeal to the-commissioner (superintendent) conformed to the stat[484]*484utory requirements and the appeal having been taken in proper form and time, the superintendent acquired jurisdiction of the matter and properly complied with the statute in the appointment of “four disinterested men, resident taxpayers of the county” to sit with her as a board of arbitration whose duty it became “to consider the necessity for such proposed change and to render a decision thereon which decision shall be final.” [State ex rel. v. Andrae, 216 Mo. l. c. 636; School District v. Chappel, 155 Mo. App. 1. c. 511.]

The Supreme Court hold in the Andrae case: “The petition for appeal is the document upon which the superintendent first acts. If this petition shows that there had been a valid election held in the two interested districts upon the questions submitted, and that one district voted in favor of the proposition .•and the other against it, and this appeal is taken in five days, then the superintendant acquires jurisIction of the matter and can act.”

Having acquired jurisdiction of the subject-matter and parties the board, as an informal and inferior tribunal, had authority to consider and determine the following issues: First, Is the proposed change necessary? Second, Is it for the mere acquisition of territory? And, third, Will it leave the curtailed district with fewer than twenty persons of school age?

The statute contemplates and intends that the 'decision rendered by the tribunal determining these issues shall be final, i. e. not subject to review on appeal, or proceedings in error, and certainly not subject to collateral attack. It could be reviewed and set aside on certiorari, but only for a lack, or excessive exercise, of jurisdiction appearing on the face of the record. As is well said in School District v. Chappel, supra, l. c. 509: “The statute devolves it upon the board of arbitrators to find the fact as to the [485]*485necessity for the change of the boundary line between the two districts and to determine as well that its purpose was not for the mere acquisition of territory by one district from the other.”

Manifestly the board should not be deprived by extraordinary process of the very jurisdiction it was called into being under the statute to exercise.

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Related

State ex rel. McGuire v. Hermann
403 S.W.2d 1 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1966)
School District No. 14 v. School District No. 27
193 S.W. 634 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1917)
Cleveland Village School District No. 118 v. Zion
190 S.W. 955 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1916)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
186 S.W. 4, 193 Mo. App. 480, 1916 Mo. App. LEXIS 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/school-district-number-14-v-sims-moctapp-1916.