State Ex Rel. Miller v. Lane Rural High School District No. 9

243 P.2d 232, 173 Kan. 1, 1952 Kan. LEXIS 278
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedApril 26, 1952
Docket38,548
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 243 P.2d 232 (State Ex Rel. Miller v. Lane Rural High School District No. 9) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Miller v. Lane Rural High School District No. 9, 243 P.2d 232, 173 Kan. 1, 1952 Kan. LEXIS 278 (kan 1952).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Price, J.:

This was an action in quo warranto brought by the state on the relation of the county attorney of Miami county to test the validity of proceedings leading up to the organization of a joint rural high-school district and to oust the defendant local officials from exercising any and all rights and duties in connection with such district. Judgment was entered in favor of plaintiff and defendants have appealed.

The background of the matter as found by the trial court in its findings of fact is as follows:

In July of 1949 a petition was presented to the county superintendents of public instruction of Franklin and Miami counties requesting their approval of the establishment of a rural high-school district comprising territory in both counties, the school to be established at Lane, in Franklin county. The county superintendent of Franklin county approved the petition, but the county superintendent of Miami county did not. An appeal was taken to the state superintendent of public instruction, and that official, after a hearing, issued an order modifying the boundaries of the proposed district by omitting therefrom two and three-quarters sections of land within which resided some thirty electors, and approved the same as modified. He also found that the total valuation within the proposed district was $1,775,000, and that the organization of the district was permitted by G. S. 1949, 72-3501c, by reason of the existence of a high school within its boundaries for a period of not less than five years next preceding and an average attendance for the last year of the five of forty pupils or more.

The original petition to the county superintendent included a perimeter but omitted in the detailed description two sections of land to be included therein. This perimeter and description were carried to the state superintendent of public instruction. He modified the perimeter and in his order correctly described in detail the land within the modified perimeter. Thereafter petitions were circulated within the district, directed to the board of county commissioners of Franklin county, praying for the calling of an election *3 to vote upon the proposition of establishing such rural high-school district. All of these petitions carried the correct perimeter of the land to be included in the district. Some of them omitted, in the detailed description, several sections of land, while others omitted several sections of land in the detailed description and included several sections entirely outside the perimeter. Each petition stated on its face:

“. . . which said boundaries are located on the attached map, . . .”

An enumeration of the qualified electors within the correct perimeter was filed. This enumeration showed 321 electors residing without the city of Lane, and 168 within the city.

The board of county commissioners of Franklin county passed a resolution finding that the requisite jurisdictional facts existed and called an election for the purpose of submitting the proposed organization to the electors, such election to be held on February 28, 1950.

The election notice published in Franklin county correctly described the real estate to be included in the district both as to perimeter and the detailed description. The notices posted upon the schoolhouse doors throughout the proposed district and those posted about the polling places also carried the correct perimeter and included correct detailed descriptions of the real estate included therein.

The election notice published in Miami county carried the correct perimeter but in the attempted detailed description omitted eighteen and one-half sections of land within the perimeter and included about five sections of land outside the perimeter. At the election a ballot was used which carried the wording:

“Shall the voters of the proposed Lane Rural High School District No. 9 establish and locate a Rural High School in said boundaries as designated in the petition, said Rural High School to be located in the city of Lane, Franklin County, Kansas?”

The proposition carried, 297 voting in favor of the organization of the district and 128 against.

Considerable oral testimony was introduced in the court below, and from it the court found that no elector residing within the perimeter of the district was refused the right to vote, and that no one residing without the perimeter was permitted to vote.

Pursuant to the election the district was organized, and no question is raised as to the validity of those organizational steps taken after the election.

*4 None of the lower court’s findings of fact is challenged by any of the parties to this appeal.

As conclusions of law the court held that the initial proceedings taken for the formation of the district were adequate; that the state superintendent of public instruction had jurisdiction to make the order that he did, and that such order was valid. The court further held that the petitions were sufficient; that the “school year” preceding was the correct period to be considered in the determination of attendance as contemplated by G. S. 1949, 72-3501c; and that as the petitions were sufficient it followed the form of ballot was sufficient.

For its final conclusion, however, the court held that the notice of election published in Miami county was inadequate and insufficient upon which to hold an election due to the fact, as heretofore, related, that such notice, notwithstanding it contained the correct perimeter description of the proposed district, contained erroneous detailed descriptions in that it omitted eighteen and one-half sections of land within the perimeter and included about five sections outside the perimeter.

Pursuant to such conclusion judgment was entered in favor of' plaintiff.

Defendants moved to set aside the conclusion of law last referred to and for a new trial. Both motions being overruled they have appealed.

Plaintiff moved to vacate and set aside all other conclusions of law. This motion being denied it has cross-appealed.

We will first consider the principal appeal.

From the record before us, and from the briefs and oral argument, it is apparent that the basis of the trial court’s decision was that notwithstanding the notice of the special election published in Miami county correctly described the perimeter and boundaries of the proposed district, the legal sufficiency of such notice was vitiated in its entirety by the fact it also undertook to describe in detail all of the real estate within such perimeter and in doing so omitted certain land within the perimeter and included other land outside the perimeter, under the rule laid down in Schur v. School District, 112 Kan. 421, 210 Pac. 1105, where, pursuant to language of a statute requiring publication notice of elections identical to the instant case, it was held that a discrepancy of four hundred acres between the territory proposed to be organized and bonded and that recited in the published notice of the election was of such *5

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Bluebook (online)
243 P.2d 232, 173 Kan. 1, 1952 Kan. LEXIS 278, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-miller-v-lane-rural-high-school-district-no-9-kan-1952.