Smith v. State ex rel. Shepard

120 N.E. 660, 187 Ind. 594, 1918 Ind. LEXIS 70
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 7, 1918
DocketNo. 23,335
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 120 N.E. 660 (Smith v. State ex rel. Shepard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. State ex rel. Shepard, 120 N.E. 660, 187 Ind. 594, 1918 Ind. LEXIS 70 (Ind. 1918).

Opinion

Harvey, J.

— Appellees sued for a writ of mandate against appellant, trustee of Madison.school township, Carroll county, requiring appellant to construct a high, school building and maintain a high school in said township. The complaint is based on the theory that §2 of the act of 1913 (Acts 1913 p. 331, §6584a Burns 1914) mandates the trustee to erect a high school building when the facts recited in the section exist.

One essential fact required by the act is that there is not at the time in question “established a high school in [597]*597such township, or in any town within such township, * * * and where there is no high school within three (3) miles of any boundary line of such township.” The absence of any such high school is alleged in the complaint. An issue was not made by a general denial; but an issue was made by appellant’s twelfth paragraph of answer, all other special answers being held insufficient.

1. Appellees’ twelfth paragraph of answer was an argumentative denial, alleging that at the time in question two high schools were being conducted within three miles of the boundary of said township. This answer was not of such affirmative character in confession and avoidance as to relieve appellees (plaintiffs) from the burden of proving the allegations of their complaint that no such high school so existed. This answer did not require appellant (defendant) to sustain the same by a preponderance of the evidence. Bishop v. State, ex rel. (1882), 83 Ind. 67, 73.

As appellees introduced no evidence whatever in chief, appellees did not prove this essential, unadmitted fact, and are not, so far as said pleadings and evidence in chief are concerned, entitled to a mandate against appellant. Appellees, however, evidently regarded the twelfth paragraph of answer not as in any sense a denial of any allegation of the complaint, but as a special affirmative answer, placing the burden of proof thereof on appellant; and therefore appellees filed a reply in three paragraphs: First, a general denial. By their second and third paragraphs of reply appellees alleged in substance that appellant’s predecessor trustee had determined that a high school building should be erected, and upon refusal of the advisory board to make appropriation therefor had secured a writ of. mandate compel[598]*598ling such appropriation, and that in the action for such writ there was in issue, and was tried, the question whether a high school existed within three miles, and it was adjudicated that no high school so existed; and appellant alleged that none had been established since said judgment, and that the judgment determining the nonexistence of such a high school is still in force.

2. Appellees introduced no evidence upon the trial of this cause except in support of these replies, and the only evidence introduced by appellees for that purpose was the pleadings, proceedings arid judgment in said cause to mandate the board. That judgment was rendered November 13, 1914. This action was begun October 21, 1915, and was tried March 21, 1917. The judgment, even if admitted to be otherwise binding on appellant, was rendered practically one year before this action was commenced, and was introduced solely for the purpose stated, and did not settle the question as to whether some other township may have erected a building and established a high school within the year following the judgment. The issue was whether a high school existed within three miles at the time this action was commenced; not whether one so existed one year before this action was commenced.

3. 4. The evidence that none existed one year before may have been properly admitted as tending to support plaintiff’s case in reply, and having been admitted on that theory may. have been considered as tending to support the complaint; but, standing alone, it does not make plaintiff’s case in either respect, as there is a total lack of evidence that there was no high school within three miles at the time this action was commenced, and the burden of so proving was upon plaintiff throughout the trial. The rule is that the existence of facts imposing a legal duty justifying a writ of mandate must be shown by clear [599]*599and positive evidence covering every necessary fact, and leaving no room for conjecture. Weir v. State, ex rel. (1903), 161 Ind. 435, 438.

5. But it is asserted by appellees that, the nonexistence .of a high school within three miles having been adjudicated in an action wherein that question was in issue, and wherein the township trustee was a party, that question is settled for and against all interests represented by the trustee and the board, and not open to allegation to the contrary; that the present trustee is the same in legal contemplation as his predecessor, and the judgment is operative to the same extent upon him.

What was the adjudication? It was that all facts then existed imposing a then legal duty upon the advisory- board to make an appropriation. It was not ad-, judicated that the trustee must use the appropriation. He was not mandated by said judgment to build; and if later a high school was established within three miles, the mandate of the statute was removed, and then no imperative duty rested upon the trustee to use the appropriation. He then was free to exercise, subject to appeal, the discretion allowed him in such matters. Furthermore, the parties were not the same. There the trustee sued the advisory board; now three taxpayers sue the trustee. The cause was not the same. Then the action was to secure an appropriation; now the action is to compel the trustee to use the appropriation in a specific manner.

We -have so far treated of the pleadings and evidence on appellees’ theory that the statute is mandatory without exception under the circumstances named therein. That such is not a proper construction of the statute appears from a further consideration of the statute as related to the Constitution, and facts presented by the second paragraph of answer of appellant.

[600]*600This answer alleges in substance that two primary school buildings in said township had, prior to the commencement of this action, been condemned by the state board of health; that said board ordered that said buildings should not be used thereafter for school purposes; that eighty pupils reside in the district where one of said buildings is located, and 102 pupils in the other district; that seven-eighths of said pupils are entitled to primary education in buildings in their respective districts. -That the cost of new buildings therein and of the proposed high school, all of which must be borrowed, will exceed the amount the township is permitted by the Constitution to borrow; that to avoid such excess of debt appellant revoked the order of his predecessor that a high school building be erected and the request of his predecessor for an appropriation therefor; that prior to the commencement of this action he had asked the advisory board to make appropriations enabling appellant to erect two school buildings in lieu of the condemned buildings; and appellant alleges that he will proceed “as soon as said appropriation is- made to erect such buildings, so that all of said'school children of his township, including high school pupils, may be accommodated.” A demurrer was sustained to this answer.

6.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
120 N.E. 660, 187 Ind. 594, 1918 Ind. LEXIS 70, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-state-ex-rel-shepard-ind-1918.