Shore v. Bd. of Ed., Town of Crescent

1924 OK 222, 223 P. 867, 97 Okla. 273, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 1094
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 19, 1924
Docket14787
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 1924 OK 222 (Shore v. Bd. of Ed., Town of Crescent) 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
Shore v. Bd. of Ed., Town of Crescent, 1924 OK 222, 223 P. 867, 97 Okla. 273, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 1094 (Okla. 1924).

Opinion

Opinion by

PINKHAM, C.

This action was commenced in the district court of Logan county by S. E. Shore, as plaintiff, against the Board of Education of the town of Crescent, and others, to enjoin the defendants'and all other persons from issuing certain bonds aiid from negotiating and selling the same or from doing any act that would injure plaintiff in the premises or be a charge and burden on his property or cloud the title thereof.

The petition alleged, among other things, that the plaintiff was and is now the owner of certain real estate described in said petition located in said county, and also in what was formerly school district No. 9 in said county; that he was a tax payer and legal voter in the precinct where his said land lies and where plaintiff lives; that at all the times referred to in said petition the town of Crescent in said county was and now is an independent school district under the laws of this state; that prior to the month of June, 1920, said town of Crescent desired to attach additional territory to the independent • district, of Crescent for school purposes, and desired for said purpose to take in school districts No. 9 and No. 10; that at the same time said town of Crescent and persons residing therein caused petitions to be circulated in said districts 9 and 10 under the provisions of the school law of the state relating to union graded school districts, and asking that an election be called for the purpose of voting on the proposition to form a union graded school district; that plaintiff did not sign said petitions; that the town of Crescent, having more voters than district 9 and 10, outvoted said districts, and as a result it was declared that said election had carried, and that a union graded school district, being union graded school district No. 1, was formed out of said three districts; that said election was held on or about the — day of June, 1920, and that at said election Charles Graff was declared elected clerk, Ira Culp, director, and Claude Mize, member of the board of directors of said pretended union graded school district, and that since said time it is and has been pretended that there was a legally constituted and organized uni< n graded school district composed of said three districts; that in the. month of January, 1923, the independent district of the town of Crescent aforesaid desired to build a new high school building in said town, and for said purpose desired to issue bonds which would be a charge upon the property of tax payers in said town of-Crescent, and also in said county districts 9 and 10, in the sum of $45,500; that notices were posted calling an election at the central school house in said *274 town of Crescent; that said election was held on January 29, 1923, and that at the close of said election it was declared tliat said election was carried; that subsequent thereto bonds in the sum of $45,500 were prepared and signed in such a way as to make it appear that they were bonds against the property in the two said country districts as well as in said town of Crescent; that said bonds purport to be for the purpose of erecting and furnishing a school building in said independent district in the town of Crescent; that on or about the — day of February, 1923, said bonds and the proceedings under which they purported to be issued were submitted to the Attorney General, as ex-officio bond commissioner of the state of Oklahoma, and that the said Attorney General, as ex-officio bond commissioner, approved the said bond issue.

The plaintiff further alleges in his petition that the town of • Crescent being and constituting an independent school district at the time when said election to form a union graded school district as aforesaid was held in the year 1920, there was no authority of law for said town of Crescent to be or constitute a part of a union graded school district and no authority of law for attaching territory thereto for school purposes by an election and that the election held as aforesaid for said purpose was and is unlawful and of no effect; that no union graded school district was formed as a result of said election; that the said pretended union graded school district No. 1 was never legally incorporated as a municipal corporation, and that it has no legal existence as such; that the said bond issue was and is without authority of law, and is illegal and void, and of no effect: that the plaintiff has applied to the Attorney General and county attorney of Logan county to bring suit in the nature of quo war-ranto or other proper action to try the questions involved herein but that they have refused to bring any action whatever in the name of the state for said purpose.

The Attorney General filed a motion to dismiss as to him for the reason that he was not a necessary party to the litigation, which motion was by the court sustained.

The other defendants filed a demurrer to the petition upon the grounds: First, that plaintiff has no capacity to maintain an action against said defendants or any of them of the character set forth in plaintiff’s petition against said defendants; second, because the petition fails to state a cause of action in favor of the plaintiff and against said defendants or any of them,

The demurrer was argued to the court, and upon due consideration was sustained and judgment rendered in favor of the defendants.

To the rulings and judgment of the court the plaintiff duly excepted and said exceptions were allowed. Thereupon, plaintiff duly appealed to this court by transcript.

'The errors assigned by plaintiff may be reduced to the proposition that the court erred in sustaining the defendants’ demurrer to the plaintiff’s petition.

It clearly appears from the averments of the petition that the suit is one for injunction against the school board of union graded school district No. 1, to enjoin them from issuing bonds in the sum of $45,500, which had been voted by said district January 29, 1923, and had been approved by the Attorney General, as ex-officio bond commissioner of the state, on February 21, 1923, on the ground only that the union graded school district was not properly incorporated, and therefore a void corporation.

The bonds were not attacked on any other ground such as that the bonds were not properly voted or that the bonds would create an indebtedness in the district in excess of five per cent, of the assessed valuation of the district.

The argument is that the bonds are void because the school district attempting to issue them is not a legal entity, and that these officers represent a void corporation, and are attempting to place an illegal burden and tax upon the plaintiff’s property.

The effect of plaintiff’s petition was to raise in a collateral proceeding the question of the existence in law of the corporation “union graded school district No. 1”, its existence in fact being admitted.

The decisive question in the case, as we view it, is: Could the plaintiff, in his individual capacity, institute this proceeding or should it have been by information in the nature of quo warranto in the name of the state?

In the case of City of El Paso v. Ruchman, 92 Tex. 89, it is said in the opinion:

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Bluebook (online)
1924 OK 222, 223 P. 867, 97 Okla. 273, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 1094, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shore-v-bd-of-ed-town-of-crescent-okla-1924.