State ex rel. Hall v. Peterson

177 P. 245, 55 Mont. 355, 1918 Mont. LEXIS 109
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 16, 1918
DocketNo. 4,271
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 177 P. 245 (State ex rel. Hall v. Peterson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana 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. Hall v. Peterson, 177 P. 245, 55 Mont. 355, 1918 Mont. LEXIS 109 (Mo. 1918).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE PIG-OTT

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a judgment denying a writ of certiorari and dismissing the proceeding in that behalf. It arises [357]*357out of the effort of certain persons to bring about a division of School District No. 28 in Missoula county. The statute under which the steps were taken is section 405 or Chapter 76 of the Session Laws of 1913, reading thus: “Whenever any school district has more than one sehoolhouse, and the school electors residing in any particular portion of said district, in which portion there is a sehoolhouse, desire a division of said district, they shall present a petition in writing to the board of trustees of said school district, signed by a majority of the school electors of that portion of said school district out of which they desire to create a new school district which petition shall describe the boundaries of the proposed new school district. The board of trustees of said district at any regular meeting or at any special meeting called for that purpose, may approve or deny the said petition in their discretion and shall enter their approval or denial upon the minutes of said meeting and transmit the original petition together with a certified copy of the minutes of said meeting to the county superintendent of schools. If the board of trustees of said school district shall approve of the division of said school district, and no appeal is taken from their decision as herein provided, the county superintendent of schools may thereupon make an order establishing such new district and defining its boundaries. Any three resident taxpayers of either the old or new district may within thirty days appeal from the decision of the said board of school trustees to the county superintendent of schools and may, within thirty days appeal from any decision or order made by the county superintendent of schools to the county commissioners whose decision shall be final.”

The petition recited that the persons who signed it were a majority of the school electors and resident freeholders in the territory which they sought to have created into a new district; it described the boundaries of the proposed new district; it stated that there was then standing on the territory of the proposed new district a sehoolhouse of sufficient size and well located in respect of the school population; and that the assessed [358]*358value of the property within the proposed new district was then over $20,000 and on or before January 1, 1918, would exceed $40,000; it stated that there were then living in that territory twenty-eight children of school age; and the petitioners prayed that the new district be created. The petition was presented to the board of trustees of School District No. 28, which on September 21, 1917, heard the petition and after investigation and consideration denied it on the merits. On October 8 following, sixteen persons, describing themselves as resident freeholders and electors of the territory embraced within the proposed new district, fourteen of whom had signed the petition, served on the board notice of their appeal from its decision to the county superintendent of schools, in whose office the notice was filed on October 24, 1917. The superintendent of schools considered the petition on its merits and denied it, and thereupon resident taxpayers to the number of fifteen, all, or at least a majority, of whom had signed the petition for the division and also the notice of appeal from the board of trustees of the school district to the county superintendent, gave notice to the superintendent of their appeal from her decision to the board of county commissioners of Missoula county, which board heard the appeal, trying the petition on its merits and taking evidence for that purpose. After investigation and consideration of all the facts, the board granted the- petition and ordered that the proposed new district be created. Afterward it refused a rehearing. Upon these facts, which were disclosed by the record certified to the court below, the relator applied for the writ of ceriiorari to annul the order of the respondent board. Judgment was entered refusing the writ and dismissing the proceeding, and relator appeals.

The relator insists that the statutes under which the steps were taken for the creation of the new district are sections 404 and 405 of Chapter 76 of the Laws of 1913; but it is manifest that the petition was prepared and presented, and that all the proceedings were taken, under section 405.

[359]*359The following are the chief contentions urged by relator for reversal:

1. That the facts set forth in the petition to the board [1] of school trustees were insufficient to clothe the board with jurisdiction, for the reason that the petition did not show that the territory sought to be created into a new district was any part of School District No. 28. Suffice it to say that the petition is addressed to the board of school trustees of District No. 28 in Missoula county, and describes by reference to section lines, as well as courses and distances, the boundaries of the proposed new district, and it was not necessary that the petition should state formally in set terms that the proposed new district was a part of District No. 28. The section does not prescribe that such a statement shall be made in the petition. Whether or not the territory sought to be set apart as a new district was part of District No. 28 presented a matter of fact; if not a part of District No. 28 the petition would, of course, be futile. The petition was addressed to and was to be acted upon by the board of school trustees of District No. 28, and it was for the board to ascertain whether the territory described constituted part of its district.

2. That the petition did not allege that there was more than [2] one schoolhouse in District No. 28, and did not allege that the petitioners resided in that district. But the petitioners alleged that they resided in the described territory which was sought to be segregated from District No. 28, and the board of school trustees knew, or could readily have ascertained, whether that territory was part of the school district. Nor was it necessary that the petition should have alleged that the district had more than one schoolhouse, for the statute does not require it to contain such statement. Whether there was more than one such house in that district presented a question of fact for the determination, in the first place, of the board of school trustees when it came to consider the petition.

The petition is not a pleading. Its sufficiency is not to be [3] tested by subjecting its contents to analysis by the trained [360]*360legal mind searching for, or bent on discovering, defects; nor are its averments to be construed against those who have signed it. Statutes such as the one here involved have been fashioned broadly and without regard to technical nicety, the purpose being to serve the vital interests of the public. It was not contemplated or purposed that such a statute should be taken into the closet and there subjected to critical scrutiny and microscopically minute examination in the hope or expectation of revealing occult meanings different from those fairly apparent from the language used and contrary to the general design of the law-making power.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
177 P. 245, 55 Mont. 355, 1918 Mont. LEXIS 109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-hall-v-peterson-mont-1918.