State Ex Inf. Thompson Ex Rel. Pugh v. Bright

250 S.W. 599, 298 Mo. 335, 1923 Mo. LEXIS 169
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 9, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 250 S.W. 599 (State Ex Inf. Thompson Ex Rel. Pugh v. Bright) 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. Thompson Ex Rel. Pugh v. Bright, 250 S.W. 599, 298 Mo. 335, 1923 Mo. LEXIS 169 (Mo. 1923).

Opinion

*344 DAVID E. BLAIR, J.

This is a proceeding in quo warranto in the Circuit Court of Ray County, attacking the validity of the proceedings attending the organization of Consolidated School District No. 2 of Ray and Carroll Counties, and seeking to oust respondents as directors of such consolidated school district. From a judgment sustaining the validity of such proceedings and denying the ouster, relators have appealed.

The appeal was granted to the Kansas City Court of Appeals and that court transferred the case to this court. Counsel for- relators and respondents filed a stipulation *n ^ie Court of Appeals agreeing that the case be transferred to this court, stating in such stipulation: <£It being mutually understood, .herein, that a constitutional question is involved.” The mandate of the Court of Appeals was based on such stipulation. There is no constitutional question involved, as a careful examination of the record discloses. As said by Faeis, J., in the case of In re Letcher, 269 Mo. at page *345 147: “We are by law the keepers of our own jurisdiction and we have the right and it is our duty to determine this question for ourselves as the initial question up for decision in any ease which comes before us. ’ ’ The parties attempted to confer jurisdiction upon this court by stipulation. Such stipulation was utterly futile for that purpose, and did not authorize -such transfer to this court. As we said in Estate of Bennett v. Bennett, 243 S. W. at page 769; “Parties to cases cannot confer appellate jurisdiction upon this court by agreement.”

However, an examination of the record discloses that the appeal should have been granted to this court in the first instance because “the title to an office under this State” is involved. [Article VI, sec. 12, Mo. Constitution; State ex inf. Sutton v. Fasse, 189 Mo. 532; State ex rel. v. Stone, 152 Mo. 202; State ex rel. v. Hill, 152 Mo. 234; State ex rel. West v. Consolidated School District No. 2, 234 S. W. 54.] The foregoing eases hold that the office of school director is an “office under this State’.’ within the meaning of Article VI, Section 12 of the Constitution. Since the case falls within our appropriate appellate jurisdiction, it is our duty to dispose of the case regardless of the grounds upon which it wTas transferred to this court.

The validity of the proceedings attending the organization of the consolidated school district and the right of respondents to hold their offices as directors of such district is challenged in the petition upon the following grounds:

“Because proper and legal notices of said special meeting to vote on the proposition to form said proposed consolidated district were not posted according to law; because said county superintendent did not post proper 'and legal plats of said proposed consolidated district as required by law; because said county superintendent did not file a. proper and legal plat of said proposed consolidated district with the county clerks of said Eay and Carroll Counties as required by law; because the special meeting at which said proposition was attempted to be voted on was not legally organized and said proposition *346 was not legally submitted; because the proceedings of said special meeting were not properly and legally certified to the county clerks and to the county superintendents of schools of the counties affected, because the petition asking for said special meeting was not filed with the county superintendent of schools in the county in which a majority of the petitioners resided, to-wit, Ray County; because proper and legal copies of said petition and of said plat were not filed with the county clerks of each county, to-wit, Ray and Carroll, from which territory was proposed to be taken.
“Your petitioner further states to the court that at the purported election that your petitioner, Rust, who was then and there a qualified voter was denied the right and privilege of franchise and voting. That he arrived at the place of voting about five or ten minutes after two o’clock p. m. That the votes at that time had not been counted nor had not been finally collected. That he tendered his vote, expressed his desire to vote. That he was a qualified voter, and the defendants well knew that he was a qualified voter, and well knew that he was interested in the outcome of said election. That notwithstand-nig this knowledge on the part of the defendants they then and there refused the petitioner, Rust, the right to vote and did not accept his ballot and the same was not counted.
“Your petitioner further states that if he had been permitted to vote and cast his ballot he would have cast his ballot£ Against Consolidation. ’ That thereafter when the result of the said vote was tabulated, the result was fifty-two for consolidation and fifty-one against consolidation.
“Your petitioner desires to show the court that had he been permitted to vote the result of the said election would have been a tie, and there would have been no so-called consolidated district formed. The directors were illegally elected and there is nothing in the records to indicate how the ballot stood for the respective directors who purported to hold the office of director.
*347 “Your petitioner further desires to show that there is nothing in the petition filed with the county superintendent of schools to indicate that there are at least two hundred children of school age or that there is at least twelve square miles óf territory embraced in the district proposed,
“That the county superintendent of schools did not in truth and in fact visit the district and really investigate the needs of the community. That all the information had and received on that subject by the county superintendent of schools was made and provided by the parties interested in that consolidation. That there were no proper legal notices posted. That there were no proper maps or plats posted. That the maps or plats which were purported to have been posted and purported to cover the territory embraced were not properly authenticated. They were not properly certified. That they, bore no official title or the names of any official. That there was nothing about said plats to inform the people resident of said district. That the same were posted by authority of law to embrace the properties purported to have been covered, and there was nothing about said plats that would indicate that they had anything to do with the purported and expected meeting for the purpose of voting on the consolidation of the district for the purpose of establishing a high school.”

Before stating the facts in the case it is well to understand the province of this court with respect to the facts found by the trial court. The proceeding is in quo warranto. It is a suit at law. The findings of the trial court on. questions of fact, if supported by substantial evidence, are binding on this court. [State ex rel. v. Wright, 270 Mo. 376, l. c. 387; State ex rel. v. Ice Co., 246 Mo. 168, l. c. 200; State ex inf. v. Hall, 228 S. W. 1055, l. c. 1057.] The case was tried by the court without a jury. No declarations of law were asked or given.

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Bluebook (online)
250 S.W. 599, 298 Mo. 335, 1923 Mo. LEXIS 169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-inf-thompson-ex-rel-pugh-v-bright-mo-1923.