State ex rel. Good v. Howard

92 N.E. 115, 174 Ind. 358, 1910 Ind. LEXIS 117
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedJune 21, 1910
DocketNo. 21,529
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 92 N.E. 115 (State ex rel. Good v. Howard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana 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. Good v. Howard, 92 N.E. 115, 174 Ind. 358, 1910 Ind. LEXIS 117 (Ind. 1910).

Opinion

Hadley, J.

This is an action by appellant, a citizen taxpayer and school patron, for a writ of mandate against the trustee of Marion township, of Boone county, and members of the township advisory board requiring such board to enter in the proper records a finding that an indispensable necessity exists for the building of a new graded school building in district number thirteen, and an order authorizing the trustee of said township to issue the warrants or bonds of said school township to the amount of $20,000, to raise money with which to erect such building, and also requiring the trustee of said school township to proceed without delay to have constructed a new graded school building in said district in accordance with the plans and specifications already adopted and on file with said trustee. Trustee Howard and the advisory board each separately demurred to the petition and alternative writ for insufficiency of facts, each of which demurrers was overruled. Each then filed a separate return to the alternative writ. Plaintiff filed a demurrer to the second paragraph of the separate return of the advisory board, which demurrer was overruled, and plaintiff electing to stand by his demurrer, judgment was rendered against him that he take nothing by his action. Exceptions were reserved to all adverse rulings, and cross-error assigned on the overruling of the demurrers to the complaint and writ.

1. As to trustee Howard’s demurrer to the petition and alternative writ, there is no semblance of a cause of' action stated against the trustee, and his demurrer should have been sustained. Among many other [361]*361things, it is alleged in the petition and alternative writ, “that said trustee and O. W. Stoops, a member of said advisory board, have been and are willing to do all that is proper and legal in the premises in order to build said new graded school building, but they are prevented from so doing by reason of the unlawful and arbitrary acts” of the majority of the advisory board. It is further averred that there is no money available for the building of said sehoolhouse, and that a majority of the advisory board, though requested so to do at one regular annual meeting, and at one special meeting called for that purpose by the trustee, failed and refused to make a finding that an indispensable necessity existed for the building of said sehoolhouse, and failed and refused to make an order authorizing said trustee to issue township warrants or bonds to raise money with which to construct said building, and failed and refused to take any favorable action towards the construction of said building.

These averments show that mandate will not lie against the trustee, for the reasons that (1) the court will not entertain an action brought against an officer to compel him to do a thing that he remains willing to do and would do if he had the power; (2) the writ should be denied, because it does not clearly appear from the petition and alternative writ that it is defendant’s duty to construct the sehoolhouse, and that he has the means and ability of performance (Dunten v. State, ex rel. [1909], 172 Ind. 59; State, ex rel., v. Anderson [1908], 170 Ind. 540; State, ex rel., v. John [1908], 170 Ind. 233); (3) a trustee has no authority of law to expend the money of his township, or contract a debt in its behalf, for the construction of a schoolhouse, without a previous appropriation for the purpose by the advisory board of the township, or the consent of such board to create an indebtedness therefor. §§9590-9602 Burns 1908; State, ex rel., v. John, supra.

[362]*3622. [361]*361To state sufficient grounds for a mandate against a trustee,, it should have been shown not only that he refused to [362]*362act, but also that the necessary funds had been appropriated therefor by the township advisory board, or that such board, upon finding that an indispensable necessity existed for such house, had granted him permission to create an indebtedness for its construction. Dunten v. State, ex rel., supra; State, ex rel., v. Anderson, supra; Board, etc., v. State, ex rel. (1901), 156 Ind. 550. There is not only an absence in the petition and writ of these necessary averments, but an express negation of each of them.

3. The advisory board set up in its return that Francis M. John, the immediate predecessor of trustee Howard, in August and at the annual meeting in September, 1907, presented to said board that there existed an indispensable necessity for the construction of a graded school building upon the real estate described in the petition and writ, in conformity to plans and specifications set forth, and requested such board to declare the existence of such necessity; that the members of the board at the time duly considered the matter of the indispensable necessity for the construction of such building, and fully heard and weighed all the evidence presented to establish the existence of such necessity, and after duly, fairly and impartially weighing and considering such evidence, said advisory board, by a majority vote of its members, in good faith and in accordance with its best judgment, found and adjudged that such indispensable necessity did not exist, and refused to authorize said trustee to issue bonds or warrants of said township for $20,000, as aforesaid, for the construction of such building. The board further averred that it never had been and was not when the action was filed necessary to construct the schoolhouse described in the writ, as would more fully appear from the facts thereafter alleged.

It is then shown that the respondent’s predecessor, John, in 1907, abandoned school districts eleven and twelve in [363]*363said township, by consolidating them with school district number thirteen, with the object in view of building a graded sehoolhouse at the village of Terhune in said district thirteen for the use of all the school children residing in said former districts eleven, twelve and thirteen; that said consolidation had been accomplished when said John, as trustee, requested said advisory board to permit him to borrow money on the credit of the township for the construction of said new graded school building; that at the time of said request there were not to exceed ninety children residing in the combined territory of said three districts, and the number was, and had been for ten years, growing less each year; that the sum demanded by trustee John for the aforesaid purpose was $20,000, which sum was exorbitant and unreasonable; that a building consisting of three rooms, and costing, including all useful school equipment, not to exceed $10,000, would be fully adequate to meet all the requirements in providing a neat, safe and sanitary school building, and necessary and useful equipments for the accommodation of all the school children residing in the territory comprising said districts eleven, twelve and thirteen if they had remained consolidated.

4. Under the law as it now stands there is no doubt of its being the right and duty of the township trustee to take charge of the educational affairs of his township, establish and locate conveniently a sufficient number of schools to educate the children therein, build suitable schoolhouses, and provide furniture, apparatus and other articles and educational appliances necessary for the thorough organization and efficient management of the schools. §6410 Burns 1908, Acts 1901 p. 514.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
92 N.E. 115, 174 Ind. 358, 1910 Ind. LEXIS 117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-good-v-howard-ind-1910.