Stadtler v. School District No. 40

73 N.W. 956, 71 Minn. 311, 1898 Minn. LEXIS 561
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJanuary 26, 1898
DocketNos. 10,730-(37)
StatusPublished

This text of 73 N.W. 956 (Stadtler v. School District No. 40) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stadtler v. School District No. 40, 73 N.W. 956, 71 Minn. 311, 1898 Minn. LEXIS 561 (Mich. 1898).

Opinion

COLLINS, J.

This litigation arises under G. S. 1894. § 3677, subd. 4, which provides for changing a school-house site in a common-school district after it has once been designated. The cause was here before on an appeal from a judgment entered upon an order dissolving and setting aside a temporary injunction, and dismissing the action really upon the ground that the complaint failed to state a cause of action. 61 Minn. 259, 63 N. W. 638. The statute was there construed, the judgment reversed, and the case remanded for further proceedings.

An answer was then interposed by defendant trustees, and soon after, by reason of an election of officers, the views of the trustees of the defendant district were altered so that a majority were opposed to the change, whereupon eight of the taxpayers and residents of the district favorable to the change applied for, and were permitted to file, a complaint in intervention, which, for convenience, we will hereafter call the intervenors’ answer. Both of these answers, the one made by the defendants and that filed by the intervenors, were prepared and signed by the same attorney.

The complaint alleged, among other things, that each of the five plaintiffs were, and for more than one year had been, taxpayers, legal voters and residents of the defendant district. It also alleged that the old site was within one-fourth of a mile of the center of the district, — a diagram showing the territory, its boundary lines, and the old and new sites, being attached thereto. It also alleged that at the time of the annual school meeting in July, 1894, at which [313]*313time the question of changing the site was voted upon, there were 77 legal voters, resident of and in said district for more than six months, each being numbered and named; and that there were but 46 legal voters present at such meeting, of whom 31 voted in favor of the proposed change, and 15 against it; and, further, that the new site was more than a half mile from the center of said district. It contained other allegations of no particular consequence in the present discussion.

Both answers expressly admitted that each of the five plaintiffs were taxpayers, legal voters and residents, as alleged. Both took issue upon the allegations that the old site was within a fourth of a mile of, and that the new one was more than a half mile from, the center of the district. Both answers denied that there were 77 legal voters, residents for at least six months, within the district, but admitted that there were 60 duly-qualified voters. The defendants’ answer specially denied that certain persons named in the complaint, and numbered 4, 5,15, 24, 28, 47, and 71, — seven in all, — ■ were legal voters. And it expressly admitted that certain persons named in the complaint, and numbered 6, 7, 12, 13, 14, from 16 to 23, both inclusive, from 25 to 47, both inclusive (except the person numbered 28), from 48 to 65, both inclusive, and also those numbered 68, 69, 72, 73, 75, and 76, were duly qualified, and entitled to vote at the election upon the question at issue. As to the rest of the 77, the denial was on information and belief. It was thus admitted that of the 77 persons named and numbered in the complaint 59 were voters.

The intervenors’ answer specially denied that those persons named in the complaint and numbered 3, 4, 5, 7, from 9 to 11, both inclusive, 14, 24, 28, 46, 47, 67, from 69 to 73, both inclusive, 75 and 76, were qualified to vote. It also denied, in the same connection, that one of the plaintiffs, — numbered 1 in the complaint, — was a qualified voter; and, upon information and belief, the same denial was made as to another of the plaintiffs, — numbered 12, — although, as before stated, both of these persons had been admitted to be legal voters elsewhere in this pleading. Fairly construed, the intervenors’ answer admitted the qualifications of the remaining persons named in the complaint. As the denial went to 22 of the 77, [314]*314it particularly stood admitted that there were 55 legal voters in the district, and in this number the two plaintiffs before mentioned as named among the 22 disqualified were not included.

With these admissions, and upon the pleadings before mentioned, and a reply, the parties proceeded to trial before the court without a jury. The principal issues were: First, as to whether the old site was within one-fourth of a mile of the center of the school district; and, second, how many legal voters there were in the district, at the time of the annual election, who had resided therein for a period of at least six months? If the old site was within one-fourth of a mile of the center, and there were 61 legal voters in the district, with a residence for at least six months prior to the day of the meeting, the proposition to change the schoolhouse site was not lawfully carried, and the subsequent proceedings in pursuance of such vote were without authority of law.

Taking up these questions in order, it may be stated that this district was quite of irregular shape, as will be discovered when we say that it comprised all of section 6, township 101, range 5; the N. \ of section 1 and the N. E. and the S. \ of the N. W. | of section 2, township 101, range 6; all of section 31, township 102, range 5; the S. | and the S. of the N. -} of section 25, the S. of the N. E. ¿, the S. E. the E. % of the S. W. and the S. E. -J of the N. W. \ of section 26, the E. £ and the E. | of the W. \ of section 35, and all of section 36, township 102, range 6, — 95 40-acre tracts, lying in four different townships. A road ran east and west through the center of the S. i; of section 31, township 102, range 5, and the center of the S. ■£ of section 36, township 102, range 6; and the old site was just south of this road, in the N. E. corner of the S. W. of the S. E. \ of section 36. The new site was on the E. line of the S. E. ^ of section 35.

The precise center of this irregularly-shaped district might be determined with mathematical exactness, but it is unnecessary, for it would certainly be within a quarter of a mile of the old site. We prefer to take a practical way for ascertaining whether, under the provisions of section 3677, it was necessary, in order to effect a change of site, to have a majority of the legal voters who had resided in the district for a period of at least six months when the [315]*315vote was had, or merely necessary to have a majority of the legal voters who voted on the question. A line drawn north and south through the center of sections 1, 36, and 25 would run on the west line of the old site, and upon the east of said line we would have 50 40-acre tracts, or 2,000 acres of land, while on the west there would be 45 40-acre tracts, or 1,800 acres. A north and south line so drawn as to exactly equalize the number of acres, having 1,900 on each side, would be within three rods of the east line of the old site. A line drawn east and west through the center of the south half of sections 31, 36 and 35 would run along the north line of the old site, and on the north of this line we would have 54 40-acre tracts, or 2,160 acres, while on the south we would find 41 of these tracts, or 1,640 acres of land. Drawing this line further to the north, so as to have exactly 1,900 acres upon each side of it, we find such line within 60 rods — less than one-fourth of a mile — of the old site.

Tested by the strict rule of mathematics, or by the very practical rule just now applied, the old site was within one-fourth of a mile of the center of this district.

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Related

Elk v. Wilkins
112 U.S. 94 (Supreme Court, 1884)
Stadtler v. School District No. 40
63 N.W. 638 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1895)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
73 N.W. 956, 71 Minn. 311, 1898 Minn. LEXIS 561, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stadtler-v-school-district-no-40-minn-1898.