Sheffield v. Fountain

1924 OK 345, 224 P. 339, 101 Okla. 168, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 52
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 18, 1924
Docket15097
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 1924 OK 345 (Sheffield v. Fountain) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sheffield v. Fountain, 1924 OK 345, 224 P. 339, 101 Okla. 168, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 52 (Okla. 1924).

Opinion

COCHRAN, J.

The defendants in error commenced this action for the purpose of procuring a writ of mandamus to compel the school board of union graded district No. 3 of Muskogee county to maintain a school at Fowler’s Chapel in said district for the remainder of the school year 1923-24. Upon a trial of the case on December 27, 1923, a peremptory writ of mandamus was issued commanding the school board of union graded district No. 3 of Muskogee county to immediately equip, open, and maintain Fowler’s Chapel school and employ a teacher at a salary not to exceed $75 per month., to continue the same for three months beginning January 1, 1924. From the judgment so rendered, the school board has appealed.

Union graded district No. 3 of Muskogee county was organized several years ago, and embraces what were formerly designated as school districts 70 and 77. At the time the old district was disorganized and the union graded district No. 3 was organized, district No. 70 had one school buildingg and maintained one school. District No. 77 had two school buildings and maintained two schools, one being located at Webbers Falls and the other at Fowler’s Chapel. Since the organization of the union graded school district, a central school has been established and maintained at Webbers Falls for those pupils who have advanced beyond the 6th grade. This school was in addition to the school which already existed at Webbers Falls and which is still maintained. It does not appear from the record just when the union graded dis. trict was formed, neither does it appear whether after its formation locations for schools were designated at an annual meeting of the electors of the district. It does appear, however, that a school was main *169 tained at Fowler’s Ohapei through the spring term of 1923, but in the fall of 1923 the school board of' union graded district No. 3 did not open the Fowler’s Ohapei school, although the other schools which had been theretofdre maintained were opened and maintained. The evidence shows that the school board did not maintain a school at Fowler’s Ohapei because the school of Webbers Falls was only two and one-half miles from the patrons who would have been served at the Fowler’s Ohapei school; that by reason of the small amount of taxable property in the union graded district and the fact that the district was burdened with the additional expense of the central school at Webbers Falls and also the desire to maintain this central school and two other schools for a full nine months period, instead of maintaining three schools in addition to the central school for a shorter period of time, and also because the building which had been used as a school house at Fowler’s Chapel was considered to 'be in a dangerous and unsafe condition. It is the contention of the defendants in error that the board has no discretion in this matter and no authority to discontinue the school at Fowler’s Chapel because of the following provision in section 10483, Comp. Stat. 1921, to wit:

“No schoolhouse shall ever be abolished, sold or removed except by a majority vote of the school electors living in the area included in the original district.”

This portion of the statute has no application to the selection of places for holding school in the school district, but applies only to abolishing, selling, or removing schoolhouses which have been purchased by taxes levied on the property of that portion of the union graded district. The purpose of the statute was to prevent the sale or removal or destruction of such building unless authorized by a majority vote of the school electors living in the area which had been taxed for the purpose of erecting the building or which had authorized its purchase or construction in the first instance.

It is next insisted that the school hoard has no authority under the statute to discontinue a school, and that such authority rests only with the electors of the school district, to be exercised at the annual school meeting or a duly called special meeting. The statutes of Oklahoma do not give the school boards of union graded districts authority to discontinue schools, and such school board can exercise no other powers than those expressly granted by statute or necessarily implied from those granted, or such as may be necessary to carry out the orders of the school meeting. The authority to designate places for holding school and the authority to discontinue schools, after places have been designated in which to hold the same, rests with the electors of the school district and must be expressed at the annual meeting or a duly called special meeting. In the instant case it does not appear that Fowler’s Ohapei was ever designated as a place for holding school in union graded district No. 3 after its organization. The fact that a school had been maintained at that place prior to the organization of the union graded district did not require that the same should be continued at that place, and if no designation of school sites was made after the organization of the union graded school district, Fowler’s Ohapei would not be a regularly designated place for holding school in the union graded district. Section 10482, Comp. Stat. 1921, is in part as follows:

“The clerk of the said special meeting shall report to the county superintendent the result of the said special meeting, and if the organization of the proposed union graded district was authorized by majority vote of the legal voters at the said special meeting, the county superintendent shall declare the union graded school district duly formed and the original districts comprising the union graded school district disorganized, and he shall notify the members of the board of the union graded school district to qualify.”

It is apparent that the union graded school district is >a new municipality, having, new 'boundaries, additional obligations, and new officers to manage it and, when organized, it becomes necessary for the electors of the district to designate the places for holding school in such district. Whether places for holding school were properly designated after the formation of the union graded school district, we are unable to tell from the record in this case. If the places were properly designated, the school' board would have no authority to discontinue any such school without authority given at a school meeting, but if the places for holding school had not been designated, and if Fowler’s Chapel had not been designated as a place for holding school, there was no duty or obligation on the part of the school board to maintain a school at that place. If has been uniformly held by this court that where it does not appear that the plaintiff has a clear right to the thing demanded, the writ of mandamus should be denied. Stearns v. Sims, 24 Okla. 623, 104 Pac. 44; McKee v. Adair County Election Board, 36 Okla. 258, 128 Pac. 294; Strother v. Bolen, 72 Oklahoma, 181 Pac. 299.

As the evidence in this case fails to show that Fowler’s Chapel has been designated as a place for holding school in union graded district No. 3, it is our opinion that the writ should have been denied, as the plaintiffs *170 did not show a clear legal right to have the school maintained at Fowler’s Chapel.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1924 OK 345, 224 P. 339, 101 Okla. 168, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sheffield-v-fountain-okla-1924.