State ex rel. Davis v. Board of County Commissioners

95 N.W. 6, 69 Neb. 100, 1903 Neb. LEXIS 12
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedMay 20, 1903
DocketNo. 13,105
StatusPublished

This text of 95 N.W. 6 (State ex rel. Davis v. Board of County Commissioners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Davis v. Board of County Commissioners, 95 N.W. 6, 69 Neb. 100, 1903 Neb. LEXIS 12 (Neb. 1903).

Opinion

Barnes, C.

The relators commenced this action in the district court for Cass county, for the purpose of procuring a peremptory writ of mandamus, against the hoard of county commissioners and the county clerk -of said county, requiring the commissioners to levy a tax of two mills on the dollar valuation of all taxable property in the territory comprising ninety-five school districts situated therein, and to compel the county clerk to extend such tax upon the tax list of said county for the year 1902, for the purpose of meeting the expenses of carrying on the business of an adjunct school district, which it was alleged in the petition had been created under the provisions of chapter 63 of the laws of 1901, which we will designate as the “Adjunct School District Act,” comprising all of the school districts in said county, and the territory embraced therein, except five.

It appears from the record that Cass county is divided for scliexd purposes into one hundred school districts; that in ninety-five of these districts the electors are. entitled to vote on the question of establishing an adjunct district, but that districts numbered 1, 22, 82, 36 and 95 are high school districts, and can form no part of such adjunct district; that the relators are resident electors of certain school districts in said county, and each of them has a child, who has completed the course of study in the school of his respective school district and whose education can not profitably be carried further in the public schools of the district of his residence, and who is entitled to pursue the course of study provided by law in the high schools of said county; that the districts in which the relatoi-s reside are [102]*102those entitled to vote on the question of creating an adjunct school district; that four of the five high school districts in said county have been designated by the state superintendent as accredited schools, and have voted to open their said schools for the reception of pupils from an adjunct district; that after the approval of the act in question, which passed with the emergency clause and took effect immediately, the question of establishing an adjunct district in Cass county under the provisions of said act was submitted to the electors of the various school districts in said county tó vote thereon at their annual meetings held on June 24, 1901, and that said proposition failed to carry. It further appears that more than fifteen days prior to the annual school meetings held on June 30, 1902, the county superintendent of said county sent a circular letter to the moderators of each of the ninety-five districts above mentioned in which he requested the moderator to submit the question of creating an adjunct school district to the voters at the coming annual meeting; that he also furnished them with blanks for the purpose of returning the vote cast upon that proposition to him. It further appears that this was the only notice or proclamation of any kind relating to the submission of the question ever made by the county superintendent, or any other person or officer, whomsoever. It also appears that each of the ninety-five directors made out and posted a notice of the annual school district meeting in his district, as follows:

“notice.
“For the Annual School District Meeting.
“The annual meeting of the legal voters of school district No.-of Cass county, Nebraska, will be held at the schoolhouse on Monday the 30th day of June, 1902, at 8 o’clock P. M. for the purpose of electing a director for said district, and for the transaction of such other business as may lawfully come before it.
“'-, Diréctor.”

This was the only notice ever published or posted relat[103]*103ing to the annual school meeting in the several districts of the county for the year 1902. It further appears that in seventy-five of the ninety-five school districts above mentioned, the moderators at the annual meeting caused the question of creating an adjunct school district to be submitted to the voters then and there assembled; that in sixty of the districts, the vote taken on that proposition was canvassed .and returned to the county superintendent within ten days, which return showed that 315 votes had been cast for an adjunct district and 287 against the proposition ; that fifteen districts failed to make return to the county superintendent within ten days, and their votes were not considered, although it was ascertained that in those districts forty-two votes had been cast for and fifty-nine against the proposition. No account whatever was taken of the other twenty districts in which the question does not apear to have been submitted; that in three of these districts, alone, there were eighty-four voters entitled to cast their votes on the proposition, which was. a greater number than Avould be necessary to change the result of the election, as declared by the county superintendent. It further appears that Avithin the ninety-five school districts, entitled to vote on the proposition, there Avere more than 2,000 legal voters, and yet only 602 votes, cast upon the proposition, Avere considered by the county superintendent at the time he declared the question carried. It further appeared that in several of the school districts the voters at the annual school meeting had voted to levy a tax of 25 mills on the dollar for school purposes, the same being the largest amount which they could lawfully levy. It was also shoAvn that the respondents, the county commissioners, had made no estimate at the time of their January meeting, at which they were required to malte an estimate of the necessary expenses for the ensuing fiscal year, for the purpose of meeting the expense of an adjunct school district, and that the board had levied, for the year 1902, the full amount of county tax which they were entitled to levy under the constitution and laws of this state.

[104]*104The cause was submitted to the court on the petition and the facts above stated, who found generally for the respondents, denied the writ and dismissed the action. From that judgment the relators prosecute error to this court.

The first question .which confronts us is, was the proposition to. create an adjunct school district lawfully submitted-to the electors of all of the school districts comprising the territory sought to be included in such district? We think not. Waiving the question of the validity of the act, it appears from its terms that it was self-executing as to the submission of the question to the voters at the first annual school meeting after it went into effect. Section 4 reads in part as follows:

“For the purpose of meeting the expenses contemplated by this act, all of the territory of each county of this state not included in any high school district may be constituted as an independent taxing district known as the adjunct district of such county; the common school districts or parts of districts included in such adjunct district shall be the voting precincts of such adjunct districts; it is hereby made the duty of the moderator of each common school district in this state to submit the question of the establishment of an adjunct district in the county in which it is located to a vote of the legal voters of his district at the annual meeting of said district next occurring after the taking effect of this act, and to certify the result of such vote to the county superintendent.”

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Bluebook (online)
95 N.W. 6, 69 Neb. 100, 1903 Neb. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-davis-v-board-of-county-commissioners-neb-1903.