School District Number Three v. School District Number One

29 N.W. 489, 63 Mich. 51, 1886 Mich. LEXIS 632
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 7, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 29 N.W. 489 (School District Number Three v. School District Number 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 Number Three v. School District Number One, 29 N.W. 489, 63 Mich. 51, 1886 Mich. LEXIS 632 (Mich. 1886).

Opinion

Morse, J.

The bill of complaint in this case avers that January 1, 1876, the complainant school district consisted of nine sections of land in the county of Newaygo; that the inhabitants of said district lived almost entirely within the boundaries of two villages, White Cloud and Alleyton* situated about one mile apart.

The voters of said school district agreed to build a union school-house as near as may be midway between the two villages, to accommodate all the scholars; that a site was chosen accordingly, and the same conveyed by James Alley [53]*53& Co.', the owners of the land, to said school district, in consideration of the sum of one dollar, and that the same be used for school purposes and a school building, and that a school be maintained thereon.

The district commenced to build a large school building on said site, two stories high, at a great expense; did not wholly complete the same because of the want of funds, yet the lower rooms of said building were used for school purposes by the whole district for about two years.

On the fifteenth day of January, 1880, the board of supervisors of Newaygo county established a new township out of territory belonging to said township of Everett, and named it Wilcox. By this action 5| sections of land belonging to complainant school district were incorporated within the territory embraced by the new township. On the first Monday in April, 1880, the voters of the township •of Wilcox elected the town officers for the new township, who duly qualified and entered upon their respective duties.

By the setting off of such territory from Everett to Wilcox, the three school inspectors of the township of Everett became residents of the new township, and it is claimed became, therefore, officers of the township of Wilcox, But they continued to act as board of school inspectors for Everett, and, on the seventh day of February, 1880, held a meeting, and acted upon a petition to detach all the territory of the complainant school district embraced in the township of Wilcox. The signers to said petition all resided in Wilcox.

The said board of inspectors attempted and pretended to detach the same, being 5J sections, as aforesaid, and, joining it with other territory, formed a new school district, to wit, the defendant school district. The said board then adjourned to the twenty-fourth of February, 1880, and from thence to the twenty-eighth of the same month,’ when it adjourned finally.

[54]*54The members of said board were all signers to the petition upon which they acted, and were promoters of and interested in the scheme to detach said land and form said new school district.

The action of said board in taking away said o{- sections, leaving only 3f sections in the old district, with the large, expensive, and uncompleted school building in said old district, is alleged to be partial, unfair, inequitable, unjust, and illegal. By the division of the territory the union school building became inconveniently located for school purposes by said complainant school district, and it is averred that it was the duty of said school inspectors to have advertised and sol,d said school building, and to have apportioned the proceeds between the two districts.

But they did not do so. They valued the school property, however, at $2,500, and apportioned it as follows: $1,679.32 to defendant school district, and the balance to complainant. The valuation was made on the twenty-eighth day of' February, 1880, but the apportionment did not take place until the twentieth day of March, 1880, at which time said inspectors met, without any notice, an 1 not pursuant to any adjournment, in a drug store in the village of White Cloud.

The inhabitants of complainant school district knew nothing of this apportionment until steps were taken to have said sum of $1,679.32 spread upon the taxable property, of said district.

It is further averred that said school building was not worth $2,500, and is not worth over $1,000, and would not bring that amount if offered for sale, as its value depends entirely upon its joint use for school purposes by the aforesaid two villages.

The defendant school district claims this indebtedness of $1,679.32, because said school building, in the division, was left situate upon lands embraced in th’e complainant school district. The said defendant school district caused. [55]*55the said sum to be certified to the township clerk of Everett as so much money due from the complainant to it, and to be raised by taxation upon its taxable property.

It is further alleged that since the division of the territory the school building has become entirely unsuitable, and so inconvenient as to be nearly worthless as a school building for school purposes, and that it is impossible to remove said building to a locality convenient for school purposes within the territory now left to complainant.

The bill further shows that the township clerk of Everett certified the said sum to the supervisor of said township, and the board of supervisors has certified to and directed the defendant John W. Ohrenberger, supervisor of said township, to spread the said sum of $1,679.32 upon the tax roll of his township, and upon the taxable property of the complainant school district, which he threatens to do..

The complainant therefore prays that the action of the-school inspectors in making said apportionment be declared void, and that the supervisor be enjoined from spreading the said sum of $1,679,32 upon the roll and property of the district.

A general demurrer was filed to this bill, and, upon argument in the court below, the bill of complaint was dismissed.

The bill appears to have been filed in the last of October, 1885, the jurat being dated October 26, 1885.

It appears that in the October term of this Court, 1883,. a mandamus was granted compelling the clerk of the township of Everett to certify to the supervisor the amount of.' said sum of $1,679.321 The mandamus proceedings were-commenced in 1881, and under the petition and answer ,issues of fact were made and sent down for trial. A jury found against the respondent, and on the hearing here the case was practically abandoned by the respondent.

[56]*56There seems to be no excuse for the delay iu instituting the equity proceedings. And it was too late, when this bill was filed, to-question anywhere, in law or equity, the organization of the defendant school district. Whatever may have been the bias or interest of the school inspectors, or however unfair or unjust their division of the territory of the old school district, the delay in proceeding to remedy the same has been fatal to any relief in that direction. Under the statute, the defendant school district must be presumed to have been legally organized. It had exercised the franchises and privileges of a school district for over two years when this bill was filed. See How. Stat. § 5037.

By reason of this statute there is only one objection set forth in complainant’s bill that can now be urged against the spreading of this tax against the taxable property of the complainant; and that is the want of notice of the meeting of the school inspectors to make the apportionment.

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90 N.W. 410 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1902)

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Bluebook (online)
29 N.W. 489, 63 Mich. 51, 1886 Mich. LEXIS 632, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/school-district-number-three-v-school-district-number-one-mich-1886.