State ex rel. Beakler v. Board of Education

19 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 88, 1916 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 84
CourtClark County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedMay 8, 1916
StatusPublished

This text of 19 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 88 (State ex rel. Beakler v. Board of Education) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Clark County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Beakler v. Board of Education, 19 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 88, 1916 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 84 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1916).

Opinion

Geiger, J.

The relators allege that on the 13th day of December they filed with the defendant, the county board of education of Clark county, and the board of education of Greene county, a petition [89]*89addressed to the boards of said counties, setting up that they are owners of real estate in Mad River township, Clark county, which adjoins the Osborne school district of Greene county, and that the petitioners constitute one hundred per cent, of the electors of the territory proposed to be annexed to the Osborne school district, and praying that the territory be annexed to the Osborne school district; and that on the same day they filed a plat or map of the real estate described in the petition; that on the 26th of February, 1916, the defendant, at a regular meeting, by a resolution duly adopted, denied the prayer of the petition and refused to allow the same, and refused to transfer n the territory described therein, and that it still refuses to transfer the same to the Osborne school district.

The relators allege that they are more than seventy-five per cent, of the electors of the territory described in the petition, they being all of the electors residing in said district,' and are heads of families having children of school age, and that it is necessary that they be transferred to the Osborne school district of Greene county; that the territory, the transfer of which is sought, is now a part of Mad River township, Ciarle county, Ohio, school district; the relators pray for a writ of mandamus commanding the defendant, the county board of education of Clark county, Ohio, to grant the prayer of the petition and. to transfer the territory to the Osborne school district of Greene county.

To this petition the defendant files a general demurrer, on the ground the same does not state facts sufficient to show a cause of action.

The relators claim that they are entitled to have the territory named in the petition transferred by the county board of education of Clark county to the Osborne school district of Greene county, by virtue of Section 4696, Ohio Laws, 105-106, page 397. This section is as follows:

‘ ‘ A county board of education may transfer a part or all of a school district of the county school district to an adjoining exempted village school district or city school district, 'Or to [90]*90another county school district, provided at least fifty per centum of the electors of the territory to be transferred petition for such transfer. Provided, however, that if at least seventy-five per cent, of the electors of the territory petition for such transfer, the county board of education shall make such transfer. No such transfer shall be in effect until the county board of education and the board of education to which the territory is to be transferred each pass resolutions by a majority vote of the full membership of each board, and until an equitable division of the funds or indebtedness be decided upon by the boards of education acting in the transfer; also a map shall be filed with the auditor or auditors of the county or counties affected by such .transfer.”

The relators claim that being more than seventy-five per cent, of the electors of the district sought to be transferred, the mandatory provision'of the section applies, and that the Clark county board of education, under said section, is required to make the transfer, and they seek, by mandamus, to compel the discharge of this duty by the defendant.

Mandamus is defined by Section 12283, to be a writ issued in the name of the state to an inferior tribunal, corporation, board or person, commanding the performance of an act which the law specially .enjoins as a duty resulting from the office, trust or station.

It is claimed, on the part of the defendant, while the statute states specifically that upon the petition of seventy-five per cent, of the electors of the district, the county board shall make the •transfer, yet that this provision is directory merely, for the reason that the section further provides that no such transfer shall be in effect until the county board and the board of education to which the territory is transferred, pass resolutions by a majority vote of such boards, and until an equitable division of the funds or indebtedness be decided on by said boards.

It is claimed that the section reserves to the individual members of the board, a right to exercise a discretion as to whether such transfer shall be in effect and that, therefore, a mandamus will not lie to compel the individual members of the board to make the transfer.

[91]*91The defendant is sustained in this by the opinion of the Attorney-General, dated October 8, 1915, found in Volume 3, No. 4, of the Department Reports of the State of Ohio, page 146. The Attorney-General, in this opinion, quotes from a former opinion to the effect that—

“It is manifest that mandamus would not lie to compel individual members of a board of education to act under Section 4782, G. C., because the action therein referred to is to be ‘by resolution adopted by the vote of a majority of its members,’ from which it clearly follows that the right of the individual members to vote as they see it, is preserved.”

While Section 4696 as found in the Ohio Laws Volumes 105-106, page 397, has been passed as an amendment to Section 4696, as it formerly existed, it bears but slight resemblance to the amended Section 4696, as found in Ohio Laws Volume 104, page 135, or Section 4696, which was formerly Section 3896, R. S., Ohio Laws Volume 97, page 337.

This section, before the present amendment, bore almost solely upon the question of the distribution of the funds, or apportionment of the indebtedness of the transferred district. In the section, before the amendment, there was no power in the board of education to make the transfer of the territory, this having been accomplished through procedure in the probate court. What were formerly Sections 4693-94-95 and 97, relating to transfer of territory through an action in the probate court, have all been repealed by the act found in Volume 104 Ohio Laws, page 225, so there now seems to remain only the two Sections 4692 and 4696, relating to transfer of territory by a county board.

Section 4692 provides that a county board may transfer a part or all of a school district of the county to an adjoining district or districts of the county, and that such transfer shall not take effect until notice of the proposed transfer has been posted, nor if a majority of the electors residing in the territory to be transferred shall, within thirty days, file a written remonstrance against the proposed transfer.

[92]*92Section 4696 relates to the transfer by the county board of education, of a part or all of a school district of the county school district to an adjoining village or city school district, or to another county school district — that is, to the school district of another county. This transfer shall not be in effect until the county board of education and the board of education to which the territory is to be transferred, shall each pass resolutions by a majority vote, and until there is an equitable division of the funds.

Under Section 4692, the transfer shall not be in effect if the electors remonstrate. Under Section 4696, the transfer shall not be in effect until the majority of the two boards shall pass a resolution and make an equitable division of the funds.

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Bluebook (online)
19 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 88, 1916 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 84, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-beakler-v-board-of-education-ohctcomplclark-1916.