State ex rel. Kirchgatter v. Thompson

190 Iowa 1160
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 15, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 190 Iowa 1160 (State ex rel. Kirchgatter v. Thompson) 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. Kirchgatter v. Thompson, 190 Iowa 1160 (iowa 1921).

Opinion

F avíele, J.

— This is an action in quo warranto, submitted upon the pleadings of the parties and a stipulation of facts. The relators and interveners bring the action for the purpose of testing the validity of the organization of the Consolidated Iildependent School District of Carpenter, and of the right of the defendants to act as a board of directors and officers of said alleged school corporation.

From the pleadings and stipulation of facts, it appears that, in 1915, an attempt was made to organize a consolidated independent school district, including territory lying in Mitchell and Worth Counties, and adjacent to the town of Carpenter. This attempt, however, was a failure, the project being defeated at the election. Subsequently, proper proceedings were had, as provided by statute, for the organization of a consolidated independent school district, and an election was duly held on September 15, 1915, at which time the election was carried. The territory embraced in the said consolidated independent school district included territory in Newberg Township, Mitchell County, and in Barton Township, Worth County. The territory included within the said consolidated district embraced all of Subdistriets Nos. 1 and 2 in said Barton Township, Worth County, and a portion of Subdistricts Nos. 5 and 6 in said township, but left less than four government sections of land in Sub-[1162]*1162district No. 5 and less than four government sections of land in Subdistrict No. 6; but the entire school township of Barton was left with approximately 27 government sections. In like manner, certain subdistricts in Newberg Township were reduced to less than four government sections of land; but, after said consolidation, there remained in Newberg Township, outside of the territory so taken by the new district, approximately 26 government sections of land. In each of the townships the greater portion of the sections remaining were intact, but a portion of them were subdivided by the lines run by the formation of the new district.

The district so organized proceeded to hold its election of officers, and also held an election, and voted bonds, secured a schoolhouse site, and erected and equipped a sehoolhouse, at a cost of $37,400, and school was conducted therein, and taxes were levied within the said consolidated district, for the purpose of operating said school.

Subsequently, proceedings were had, as contemplated by the statute, for the organization of a new consolidated independent school district which should include all of the land incorporated within the said consolidated independent school district formerly organized, and in addition thereto, other territory lying in Newberg Township and in Barton Township. The lines of this new territory were more irregular than those of the original territory, and left less than four government sections of land in certain subdistriets in each of said townships, but left a total of something like 20 government sections of land in Newberg Township, and more than 23 government sections of land in Barton Township. As in the original organization, the lines of 'the district did not conform to section lines, and some of the subdistricts remaining in each of the said townships contained, after the consolidation, irregular tracts, embracing portions of sections, and containing a total of less than four government sections.

Said last consolidation also included a portion of Subdistrict No. 1 in Deer Creek Township, Worth County, and left in said subdistrict, after said consolidation, less than four government sections of land, but left in said Deer Creek Township, after said consolidation, a total of approximately 34 government sections of land. This last election was held on June 25, 1917.

[1163]*1163From the foregoing, it will be noticed that these proceedings for consolidation were all had prior to July 4, 1917, the date upon which Chapter 432 of the Acts of the Thirty-seventh General Assembly went into effect, and therefore said proceedings were had under Section 2794-a of the Supplemental Supplement to the Code, 1915.

l. Schools and SCHOOL DISTRICTS : consolidated districts : division of suMistricts. I. The contention of the appellant is that the proceedings for the organization of the original Consolidated Independent School District of Carpenter were void, and also those for the organization of the new- district, because, in each instance, the lines of the district were so arranged as to divide subdistricts, and leave less than four government sections of land in various subdistricts. It is conceded, however, that in each district township, after the consolidation, there remained more than four government sections of land which were contiguous. Appellants lay great stress upon the fact that the thirty-sixth general assembly amended the statute as it existed prior to that time, and added thereto the following:

“And where after the formation of such consolidated school corporation, whether heretofore or hereafter formed, there is left in any school township one or more subdistricts each of such sub districts containing four or more government sections, each of such pieces of territory shall thereby become a rural independent school corporation, and it shall be the duty of the officers of the former school township to call an election in each of such rural independent districts for the purpose of electing school officers in the manner provided by law for the election of officers in rural independent school corporations.”

It is urged by the appellants that, when the vote was recorded for consolidation, the same vote automatically made independent districts of each subdistrict of four sections or more remaining in the district township. It is argued that the district proposed for consolidation could not take part of a sub-district so as to leave less than four government sections, becaxise it was obligatory to make independent districts of at least four sections each, at the same time the vote was taken for the consolidation. It is conceded that certain of the sub-districts were divided in such a way as to leave less than four [1164]*1164government sections of land therein, and it is argued that the consolidated district in question was illegally formed, because its lines separated certain of the sub districts so that they could not become “rural independent districts containing not less than four government sections of land.”

' school rassoiidated dis-of subdistricts: effect. The theory of appellants is that the school township lying outside of the consolidated district is entirely destroyed as a corporation; that each subdistrict automatically becomes a rural independent district by the vote of consolidation; and that there can be no district township left and no territory left therein, outside of an automatically formed rural independent dis- , . , trict.

We think the question as to the status of subdistricts and portions of subdistricts left in townships under this statute is not open to review by us at this time. We had occasion to pass upon a situation almost identical with that in the case at bar in State v. Wald, 184 Iowa 51, and in that case, we discussed the statute in question and the effect of the formation of a consolidated independent school district which left sub districts of four government sections in the old school township, and also which left in the district township “disputed” territory irregular in size and not constituting a subdistrict.

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Bluebook (online)
190 Iowa 1160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-kirchgatter-v-thompson-iowa-1921.