State Ex Rel. Miles v. Wedge

72 P. 817, 27 Nev. 61
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedApril 5, 1903
DocketNo. 1638.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 72 P. 817 (State Ex Rel. Miles v. Wedge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada 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. Miles v. Wedge, 72 P. 817, 27 Nev. 61 (Neb. 1903).

Opinion

By the Court, Fitzgerald, J.:

This is an original proceeding in this court by the relators as the board of school trustees of the Delamar school district, No. 18, in Lincoln county, for writ of mandate to respondent, that, of the state school moneys apportioned to said county, respondent, as the regularly elected, qualified, and acting county superintendent of public schools of said county, apportion the sum of $90.15 in addition to the sum that respondent has already apportioned to said district. Relators base their claim to the writ on the report of the school census marshal of said district, made in 1902, claiming that under said report the number of census children in said district was sufficient to entitle the said district to said additional sum.

In answer to the alternative writ herein issued, respondent states as follows:

"Now comes the respondent, Sarah Wedge, and admits, narrates, and alleges, in her answer to the alternative writ of mandamus issued out of the Supreme Court of the State of Nevada on the 23d day of March, A. D. 1903, in which she is the respondent: She admits that she is the duly elected, qualified, and acting county superintendent of public schools in and for Lincoln county, State of Nevada. Respondent alleges that she has no way to answer the allegations alleged against her in relators’ application for this writ, for the reason that a copy thereof has not been served upon her. Wherefore she respectfully asks the permission of said court to narrate herein all of the facts and circumstances which caused her to apportion the public school money as she did, and not to be guided by the census marshal’s return, taken during the month of May, 1902, for School District No. 18; that being the Delamar school district. Firstly, she denies the said census marshal’s return of all school children between the age of 6 and 18 years of Delamar school district, No. 18, is a legal census, taken, as is required by the laws of this state made and provided, in May, 1902, for Delamar school district, No. 18. In justification of this denial, *65 respondent alleges that she knows of her own knowledge that two of the children recorded in said census return, alleged therein to be F. F. Wilcox’s, are the daughters of Mr. N. Wadsworth, of Panaca; that they drew school money in Panaca district during the year 1902, were registered in Panaca census return for May, 1902; and that they never resided in Delamar school district, nor went to school there.
"Upon her information and belief, respondent further alleges: That there are fully sixty children recorded in said census marshal’s return which are unlawfully and wrongfully, and contrary to law, recorded on said census return. That she believes that she -can show by good and competent witnesses that, at the time said census was taken, some of said sixty children were living in Italy, some in England, and some in other states of this republic, who had never been to the State of Nevada; those born in the United States had never been to the State of Nevada. Others, your respondent can show, who had previously lived in the town of Delamar, State of Nevada, and attending school- there, had left and removed to other states of this republic, and to other counties in this state, and had at the time said census was taken, in May, 1902, permanent and substantial homes in other states, and other counties of this state, and did not intend to return to said Delamar school district, or had not yet returned. That your respondent had inquired of the officers competent to advise her in such matters, and she had been advised to proceed in accordance with the 5th subdivision of section 2, art. VII, of the school law of 1901, and retake the census of said district, but subsequently she received a communication from the state school superintendent, who advised against such proceeding at that time; hence, knowing that there had been a public wrong done, and knowing of her own knowledge that there had been two children recorded on said census return, and believing that they had been wrongfully and unlawfully put there, and knowing that said two children were all that entitled said Delamar district to three teachers, and the portion of the school money alleged in said writ, and so prompted by her own sense of justice, she took it upon herself to apportion *66 the money as she did, and she now believes that she was justified in so doing.”

To this answer the relator filed the following demurrer:

"Now comes the relator and demurs to the answer filed by the respondent herein in the above-entitled matter, upon the ground (1) that the said answer does not state facts sufficient to constitute a defense to said action, in this: (a) The said answer admits the census marshal’s return taken during the month of May, 1902, for school district No. 18; that being the Delamar school district. (&) The said answer admits that respondent failed to order a new census taken, and, therefore said census marshal’s return is confessedly the only return upon which the apportionment could be legally based. (r) The said answer is insufficient, in that it is, in form and substance, a petition praying for leave of court to set. up facts and circumstances in justification, and does not purport to deny immediately the averments in relator’s petition, or any thereof, (d) That the so-called answer itself shows that the respondent acted judicially, and not ministerially; that she was directed to perform a duty which she failed to perform, or advised to refrain from performing a duty which she should have performed; and that it is no defense to attempt to justify a wrong, where the wrong consists of the violation of a duty which the statute mandatorily imposes. Wherefore relator prays judgment for the sum of $90.15, paid as prayed for in relator’s petition, and for costs.”

On the petition for the writ, the answer, and the.demurrer, two questions, it seems, are before this court, to wit: (1) Is the answer sufficient? and (2) if not, what disposition of this proceeding should be made?

In answer to the first question, we state that we think the answer is not sufficient. The three following sections of the school law of Nevada, it would seem, control and govern this matter :

Section 1301 of Compiled Laws of Nevada (1900) reads as follows:

"It is the duty of the census marshal: First — To take annually between the first and thirty-first days of May, inclusive, a census of all children under eighteen years of age and over six years, who are residents of his district on the *67 first day of May. Second — To report the result of his labors to the county superintendent of schools on or before the fifteenth day of June in each year. Third — He shall, when practicable, visit each habitation, home, residence, domicile, or place of abode in his district, and by actual observation and investigation enumerate the census children of the same.”

Section 1303 reads as follows:

" * * * Fifth — If at any time the county superintendent has reason to believe that a correct report has not been returned, he may appoint a census marshal, have the census retaken, and the compensation shall be audited by the county commissioners, and paid out of the county general fund.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
72 P. 817, 27 Nev. 61, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-miles-v-wedge-nev-1903.