State Ex Inf. Attorney-General v. Foxworthy

256 S.W. 466, 301 Mo. 376, 1923 Mo. LEXIS 138
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 3, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 256 S.W. 466 (State Ex Inf. Attorney-General v. Foxworthy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Inf. Attorney-General v. Foxworthy, 256 S.W. 466, 301 Mo. 376, 1923 Mo. LEXIS 138 (Mo. 1923).

Opinion

*378 WHITE, J.

The relators, in the Circuit Court of Daviess County, sought to oust the respondents, who assumed to act as directors of alleged Consolidated School District Number Three of Daviess County, Missouri, which consolidated district, respondents claim, was created by the merger of five districts, all in said Daviess County, by virtue of an election held on the twenty-fourth day of December, 1920.

The Circuit Court of Daviess County held that said consolidated district was duly organized; that when this action was instituted Otis Johnston, A. C. Jennings, Roy Scott and Clem Reid were duly elected, qualified and acting director's of said district, entitled to the privileges, etc., appertaining to that office; that respondents Fox-worthy and Shoemaker were not then duly elected, and ordered that said Poxworthy and Shoemaker be ousted from said office. The relators appealed from that judgment.

The information, in the nature of quo warranto, alleged that the organization of Consolidated School District Number Three was invalid, and that a board of directors was not legally elected at the meeting at which the organization was attempted. The return of respondents recites the proceedings in accordance with the stat *379 ute leading up to the alleged organization of the consolidated school district, on the twenty-fourth day of December, 1920, and the facts relating to the conduct of proceedings on that day. A trial was had November 23, 1922, and while the trial court had the cause under advisement, the respondents, on the thirteenth day of February, 1922, filed a supplemental answer and return relating to the election of respondents Shoemaker and Pox-worthy, as directors of the said school district. Since, these two directors were ousted by the judgment- of the court, and have not appealed, we have no concern with that supplemental return.

It was stipulated at the trial that the requirements of the statute in regard to a petition for the consolidated district, notice and other proceedings leading up to the election on December 21, 1920, were fully complied with. On that day the vote on the question of consolidation was taken by ballot in due form. The count showed 368 ballots were cast, of which 273 were for the consolidation, and 95 were against consolidation.

The further proceeding is shown by the report of the meeting filed with the county clerk and the superintendent. It is designated as Exhibit P, and is admitted to contain a correct account of what occurred. After the ballot on the question of consolidation was taken, the report proceeds as follows:

‘ ‘ The chairman' further announced that the next .order of business would be the election of six directors for the consolidated district, two of whom were to be elected for three years, two for two years and two for one year, whereupon Dr. D. N. Claggett made a motion to the effect that the chairman appoint a committee of six, one from each district, to nominate a man from each district for the board of education, which motion was seconded by Alva DePord, and on being put by the chairman the motion carried unanimously and the chairman appointed the following committee: C. E. Triem, J. B. Smith, Roy Edward, E. Owings, Ross DePord and J. C. Reid.

*380 “And said committee organized by electing J. B. Smith chairman and Ross DePord secretary and the committee reported by nominating and recommending the following persons for the directors for the different terms as follows: V. E. Foxworthy for one of the 'directors for the three-year term, Otis Johnston for one of the directors for the one-year term, Earl Manring for one of the directors for the two-year term, E. M. Shoemaker for one of the directors for the two-year term, R. O. Strong for one of the directors for the one-year term, and Harl Garner for one of the directors for the three year term.

“Whereupon the chairman submitted each of the above nominees, one at a time and separately,. to the assembled meeting of voters, and they were each and all separately nominated and elected unanimously by acclamation. ’ ’

The bill of exceptions then proceeds:

“Thereupon evidence was introduced to the effect that the election of directors at the special meeting; of December 24, 1920, was not conducted in the manner prescribed by the Constitution of Missouri, Article VIII, Section 3, but was in the manner as shown by the record of that meeting filed with the county clerk, ‘ Exhibit P ’; that they took the oath required by law of the directors, elected the officers designated by the statute, and undertook to discharge the duties of directors; that thereafter it was discovered that Harl Garner was not of legal age; that he therefore resigned and the defendant Roy Scott was selected and elected to take the place of said Harl Garner at a regularly called meeting of the board of directors; that said R. Ó. Strong elected for one year M said special meeting as a director, failed to qualify as such, and that at a regularly called meeting of the board of directors the defendant Clem Reid was selected and elected to take his place for the unexpired term; that said term expired in the spring of 1921; that at the annual meeting and at the election held at said annual meeting in the spring of 1921, said Clem Reid was elected *381 by the voters at said election to succeed himself; that the defendant A. O. Jennings was elected as a director by the board of directors at a. regularly called meeting to take the place of and took the place of Earl Manring, who had resigned and whose resignation had been accepted for the unexpired portion of the two-year term for which said Earl Manring had been elected; that the defendant Otis Johnston, whose term expired in the spring of 1921, was re-elected at the annual school meeting and election of said district held in the spring of 1921, by the qualified voters present and voting at that annual meeting and election. ’ ’

This record shows that the two directors ousted by the judgment, Poxworthy and Shoemaker, were elected on the day of the alleged consolidation; that all the other respondents were elected either at some regular meeting of that first board of directors, or at the* regular spring election of 1921. This was a holding by the trial court that the original election was invalid, but that the subsequent elections by the alleged board were valid.

I. The claim of appellants is that Consolidated School District Number Three never was -> n . , n ,. , legally organized, and that requires a construction of the statute under which the . .. ,, , organization was attempted.

■ Under Section 11259, Revised Statutes 1919, a consolidated school district must be organized at a meeting called and conducted according to Section 11237, Revised Statutes 1919, which is as follows:

“Sec. 11237. Town or city school districts — how organised.—

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Related

State Ex Rel. Mooney v. Consolidated School District No. 3
281 S.W.2d 511 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1955)
State Ex Rel. Parman v. Manring
58 S.W.2d 269 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1933)
State Ex Rel. Attorney-General v. Sullivan
8 S.W.2d 616 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1928)
Hudgins v. Mooresville Consolidated School District
278 S.W. 769 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1925)

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Bluebook (online)
256 S.W. 466, 301 Mo. 376, 1923 Mo. LEXIS 138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-inf-attorney-general-v-foxworthy-mo-1923.