State ex rel. Beu v. Lockwood

181 Iowa 1233
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 11, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 181 Iowa 1233 (State ex rel. Beu v. Lockwood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Beu v. Lockwood, 181 Iowa 1233 (iowa 1917).

Opinion

Preston, J.

1. Schools axd SCHOOL DISTRICTS : consolidation : election: failure to provide separate ballot boxes. Upon the refusal of the county attorneys to bring suit, a judge of the district court gave relators leave to commence action. Plaintiffs thereupon filed their petition, and alleged, in substance, that they are property owners and taxpayers [1235]*1235within the limits of the territory of the proposed school district; that defendants are exercising authority illegally, as the pretended officers and directors of the pretended school district; that there is in fact no such school distinct, because no valid election was ever held authorizing the same; that the platted village of Oran is within the pretended district; that, at a pretended election held about February 23, 1915, for the organization of said pretended school district, no separate ballot boxes were provided in which the voters within and without the village of Oran deposited their ballots, but that all ballots were cast in one box; that voters residing in the village and outside thereof voted at said election. Belators ask that defendants be required to show by what authority they claim to hold and exercise the rights, powers and authority of officers and directors of said district; that defendants be ousted and altogether excluded from such offices, etc.

The allegations are denied, except that some are admitted. Further answering, defendants say that, at the date of said election, there resided within the village aforesaid 18 voters who cast their ballots, and that, without the platted limits of said village, there resided 76 voters who cast tlieir ballots; that, of the 91 ballots so cast, 62 were in favor of consolidation, 31 were opposed, and 1 ballot was spoiled; that every ballot cast by the voters within the platted village of Oran was in favor of consolidation; and that, of the voters outside, 11 were cast in favor of consolidation and 31 in opposition; that a clear majority of the votes both within and without said village were cast in favor of the organization and consolidation of the aforesaid district. It ivas stipulated in writing as follows:

“1. The plaintiffs are citizens of the state and taxpayers owning land within the limits of the territory embraced in the proposed consolidated school district referred to in the pleadings.
[1236]*1236“2. That plaintiffs are acting not only in their own behalf bnt in behalf of numerous other taxpayers living within the territory embraced by the proposed district.
“3. That the defendants John Clark, Jesse Clark and Henry Etgeton ,are citizens and residents of Bremer County, and the defendants E. H. Lockwood, August Bahe and L. A. Rohde are residents of Fayette County.
“4. That all of said defendants reside in and about the village of Oi-an in Fayette County, and claim to exercise authority, and claim the right to act as officers ana directors of the 'Bremer-Fayette Consolidated Independent School District of Bremer and Fayette Counties/ under and by virtue of the election hereinafter referred to. That the defendants are acting and claim the right to act under such election as officers, directors and secretary of said district.
“5. That within the territory included within the consolidated district which was sought to be established by the election is located the village of Oran, which is and for years has been a regularly laid out and platted village.
“6. That the proposed consolidated school district included not only the village of Oran, but included territory outside of the platted limits of said village of Oran.
“7. That on February 23, 1915, there was held an election for the purpose of determining the question whether the consolidated district herein named should be formed, and that at the election so held votes were cast by residents of the village of Oran and residents of the platted portion thereof, and also by voters residing upon the territory outside of the platted limits of said village of Oran.
“8. That at said election but one ballot box was provided for the reception of all the ballots cast at said election, there being no separate ballot boxes provided in which to deposit the votes cast by the voters for their respective territory.
“9. That at said election a number of voters residing [1237]*1237in the village of Oran voted at said election, and at the same election a number of voters residing outside of said village voted thereat- — -all ballots being deposited in the one ballot box. * * *
“11. It is further stipulated that, if the voters who voted at said election were called, and allowed to testify over the objection herein set out, they would testify- to the facts hereinafter set forth; and the court may regard such facts as offered by the lips of said voters, subject to the following objection, which shall be considered and ruled upon as if the voters were called and sworn and offered to testify to said matters in open court, to wit:
“ ‘Plaintiffs object to the testimony proposed to be offered on the ground that the same is incompetent, irrelevant and immaterial; that the voters are not competent to testify how they voted at said election; that the evidence proposed to be offered is secondary and not the best evidence, and that the only competent evidence on the question of how many votes were cast and whether cast in the affirmative or negative of the question voted upon are the ballots themselves, as deposited in the ballot box provided for said election; that the individual voters cannot testify as to how they voted at said election, neither can the court go behind the ballots and election returns.’
“If the court overrules said objection, it shall consider the case as if the witnesses had testified to the matters hereafter set out; but if it sustains the objection, such matters shall not be considered, to wit:
“The village of Oran is situated within said district, is platted, and within the platted limits of said village there resided, on the date of the aforesaid election, to wit, February 23, 1915, eighteen (18) voters who cast their ballots in said election. That without the platted limits of said village of Oran on said date, there resided seventy-six (76) voters who cast their ballots in said election. [1238]*1238That of the ninety-four (94) votes cast by the voters of the district aforesaid, sixty-two (62) were in favor of consolidation, thirty-one (31) were opposed to consolidation, and one (1) ballot was spoiled.
“That each and every ballot cast by the voters residing within the platted limits of the village of Oran were in favor of consolidation.
“That of the ballots cast by the voters of said district residing without the platted limits' of the village of Oran, forty-four (44) ballots were cast in favor of consolidation and thirty-one (31) ballots were cast in opposition to consolidation.
“Exceptions shall be reserved to the ruling of the court on the objection above set out.”

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State Ex Rel. O'Dowd v. Rottman
139 A.2d 818 (Connecticut Superior Court, 1956)
State Ex Rel. Warrington v. Community School District
78 N.W.2d 86 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1956)
State Ex Rel. Carstens v. Miskimins
72 N.W.2d 571 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1955)
State Ex Rel. Little v. Owens
60 N.W.2d 521 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1953)
McRobbie v. Registrars of Voters of Ipswich
78 N.E.2d 498 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1948)
State v. Consolidated Independent School District
195 Iowa 637 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1923)
State ex rel. Dusey v. Creston Mutual Telephone Co.
195 Iowa 1368 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1923)
Whitmore v. Gamble
192 Iowa 356 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1921)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
181 Iowa 1233, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-beu-v-lockwood-iowa-1917.