State Ex Rel. Little v. Owens

60 N.W.2d 521, 244 Iowa 1356, 1953 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 443
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 20, 1953
Docket48374
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 60 N.W.2d 521 (State Ex Rel. Little v. Owens) 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. Little v. Owens, 60 N.W.2d 521, 244 Iowa 1356, 1953 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 443 (iowa 1953).

Opinion

Oliveb, J.

Consolidated Independent School District of Saydel, in Polk County, lies immediately north of Des Moines. It was organized in'1952, under the procedure provided by chapter 276, Code of Iowa, 1950. It was a consolidation of all the five school districts in Saylor civil township, and also of Berwick Independent District and Delaware Township Sub-district No. 3, both of which were in Delaware civil township.

Relators assailed the validity of the organization of the consolidated district upon two grounds. The trial court adjudged neither asserted defect invalidated the organization. Hence, this appeal by relators, who have set up two propositions for reversal.

I. The first proposition for reversal is: “The establishment of Saydel Consolidated School District was illegal because it left the Delaware Township School District with less than four government sections of land.”

The rough plat of Delaware Township here set out shows the several school districts of that township immediately prior to the Saydel consolidation. Of these, Berwick Independent and Delaware Township District No. 3 (sometimes referred to as Norwoodville), which are contiguous to and east of Saylor Township, were included in the consolidation. Bondurant Consolidated District which extends north and east into other townships was not ineltided and is not involved in this case. West Independent District was not included and is not here involved.

Delaware No. 3 and Delaware No. 5 were the only remaining subdistricts of Delaware Township School District. Each of these subdistricts covered about two government sections of land. They were not contiguous but were separated one and three-fourths mile by West Independent District. The Saydel consolidation included Delaware No. 3 but did not include Delaware No. 5. It may be noted Delaware No. 5 was not contiguous to any part *1358 of Saydel consolidated and, hence, could not have been included in it, without the intermediate territory.

The general history of Delaware Subdistricts 3 and 5 may be outlined without much difficulty. It is fair to conclude the first school corporation was coterminous with Delaware civil township. As stated in Rural Independent Sch. Dist. No. 3 v. McCracken (1930) 212 Iowa 1114, 1123, 1124, 233 N.W. 147, 152:

“The oldest form of school district in Iowa today is the school township composed of subdistricts. Before there were any independent school districts in this state there was a statute that still remains as Section 4130, Code, 1927, in almost its exact original form, requiring that, ‘when a new civil township is formed, the same shall constitute a school township.’ For this *1359 reason independent districts have never been formed from virgin territory, that is, from territory not included in some other form of school district. They have always been formed out of the territory of districts, or parts of same, already in existence, and originally at the voluntary instigation of the territory to be made independent.”

The foregoing quotation refers to independent districts. Statutes authorizing consolidated independent districts were enacted later. As indicated by the name, consolidated districts are formed out of the territory of other districts. Hence, the earliest school corporation in the township was Delaware Township School District which covered the entire township. Thereafter, parts of the township school district had been taken in connection with the formation of Berwick Independent, Bondnrant Consolidated and West Independent, leaving only the two Delaware Township Subdistricts No. 3 and No. 5, which were one and three-fourths mile apart.

Appellants’ precise complaint here is that the Saydel consolidation was invalid because in taking Subdistrict No. 3 it left in Delaware Township School District only Subdistrict No. 5 which had an area of less than four government sections, contrary to section 276.20, Code of 1950, which provided in part, with reference to a consolidated school corporation: “Minimum territory. * * *. No remaining portion of any school corporation from which territory is taken to form a new district shall contain an area of less than four government sections which shall be so situated as to form a suitable corporation.”

Although similar provisions had appeared in statutes governing- other school district's, the first provision of this nature in statutes relating to the organization of consolidated independent school districts .was made in Acts of Thirty-fourth General Assembly (1911) chapter 143, section 1. Similar provisions were retained in the various statutes and amendments thereafter enacted or in effect prior to 1953. See Code Supplement 1913 and Supplemental Supplement to Code, 1915, section 2794-a; Codes of 1924 to 1939, section 4173.

Appellees contend the applicable statute was Code section 276.21, which stated: “Organization of remaining territory. *1360 "Where, after the formation of a consolidated corporation, one or more parts of the territory of a school township is left outstanding, each piece shall constitute a rural independent school corporation and be organized as such unless two or more contiguous subdistricts are left * *

The original of this provision first appeared in Acts of Thirty-sixth General Assembly (1915) chapter 342, section 1, and was placed in section 2794-a, Code Supplemental Supplement 1915. It stated: “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 sub-districts each of such subdistricts containing four (4) or more government sections, each of such pieces, of territory shall thereby become a rural independent school corporation * # (Italics supplied.)

In Acts of Thirty-seventh General Assembly (1917) chapter 432, section 1, this, provision was changed to state: “And where after the formation of such consolidated school corporation, there is left in any school township one or more pieces of territory containing four or more government sections, each of such pieces of territory shall thereon become a rural independent school corporation, unless two^ or more subdistricts remain in a contiguous body * * (Italics supplied.)

In Acts of Thirty-eighth General Assembly (1919) chapter 149, section 1, in which the statute was .again revised, this part of it was rewritten. The language used was the same as in the part of the statute it superseded, and limited its effect to pieces of territory containing f our or more sections.

The change relied upon by appellees occurred when the statute, as theretofore amended, was repealed by Acts of the Thirty-ninth General Assembly (1921) chapter 175, section 21, which provided in lieu thei~eof: “Where, after the formation of a consolidated corporation, one or more parts of the territory of a school township is left outstanding, each piece shall constitute a rural independent school corporation and be organized as such unless two or more contiguous subdistricts are left * *

This language was not changed in the Code of 1924 and was carried through in section 4174, Codes of 1924 to 1939, and in

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Bluebook (online)
60 N.W.2d 521, 244 Iowa 1356, 1953 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 443, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-little-v-owens-iowa-1953.