State Ex Rel. Pitman v. Bowling

1923 OK 162, 213 P. 745, 89 Okla. 9, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 957
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 13, 1923
Docket12863
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1923 OK 162 (State Ex Rel. Pitman v. Bowling) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Pitman v. Bowling, 1923 OK 162, 213 P. 745, 89 Okla. 9, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 957 (Okla. 1923).

Opinion

BRANSON, J.

The plaintiff in error in this cause was plaintiff below, and the defendants in error were the defendants below. They will be referred to respectively as the plaintiff and the defendants, as they appeared in the district court.

On June 19, 1920, a petition .was filed by the plaintiff in this cause against the defendants and consolidated school district No. 5.- On August 9, 1920, an amended petition was filed, making the defendants T. J. Bowling, T. M. Kirk, and W. O. Germany the sole and only defendants therein.

This is an action in quo warranto, seeking a finding and judgment of the court that the proceedings instituted and carried on in April of 1920 for the formation of consolidated school district No. 5 in Pottawatomie county, Okla., were illegal to such an extent as to render the same void, and to oust the defendants, who are the officers of said school district, from their official positions.

The petition, in brief, recites that long prior to the 28th day of April, 1920, school districts 35, 38, and 57 of said county, lying adjacent to one another, existed under the law as bodies corporate, with all the functions and powers of school districts organized under the laws of the state. That the county superintendent of public instruction called a meeting in each of said school districts, on petitions alleged to have been signed by 50 per cent, of the qualified voters in said districts, as required by law, but that said petitions on which the said superintendent of public instruction issued the calls were not signed toy 50 per cent, of the qual- *10 ifled voters of said districts, and that notices were not posted or published as by law required, and that notices of the intended establishment or organization of the territory embraced in said districts into consolidated school district No. 5 of said county «were not mailed to the legal voters as required by law, and that the said consolidated district No. 5 contains less than 25 square miles, and has an assessed valuation of less than $200,000.

The - plaintiff further alleges that the proceedings of the county superintendent of public instruction by and under which a portion of district No. 60 had been detached therefrom and attached to consolidated school district No. 5 did not comply as to the petitions filed with him, notices, etc., with the requirements of the statute. Plaintiff further alleged that consolidated school district No. 5 was wrongfully and illegally established, and that said school districts 35, 38, and 57 were illegally and wrongfully disorganized, and that the defendants are not legally constituted officers of consolidated district No. 5, and that said district is not invested with the corporate powers, duties, and privileges of a legally consolidated school district, and the attempt of the said defendants to exercise said authority is without the law and wholly illegal and void. And that said defendants are attempting to exercise the power, duties, and privileges of school officers of said consolidated district, .and that the defendants and each of them should be ousted from the exercise of any such powez-, duties, and privileges.

To this petition the defendants filed their answer, and pleaded all of the details as to l he petitions filed with the county superintendent of public instructions by each of the school districts in question, as well as by that portion of school district No. 60 which was detached therefrom and attached to consolidated school district No. 5, the time when said petitions were filed, the number of the signatures appearing thereon, the orders of the county superintendent of public instruction the results of the meetings held in each district as to the desire of the voters thereon to form consolidated school district No. 5, etc.; and say that the relief sought by the plaintiff should be denied.

The matter came on for trial before the court on the 12th day of April, 1921, and the plaintiff and the defendants waived a jury. The court held that, under the allegations of the plaintiff’s petition and the admissions of the defendants in their answer, the burden of proof was upon the defendants to show that they were properly holding the offices which in their answer they admitted they were holding. The evidence was heard by. the court, a jury being waived; on the request of the defendants, the court made separate findings of fact and conclusions of law, which findings of fact and conclusions of law were separately entered on June 4, 1921.

The plaintiff in error makes Í7 assign, ments of error, which require a review of evidence submitted in this case on which the court based its findings of fact. The findings of fact to which plaintiff in error excepted are very lengthy, but in substance and effect found that school districts 35, 38, and 57 were existing prior to April 28, 1919. That, beginning on April 3, 192Ü the county superintendent received petitions from eacii of said school districts; that said petitions-were signed by more than 50 per cent, of the-qualified voters therein, requesting the said superintendent to call a meeting as provided by law in each of said ‘school districts for the purpose of the voters determining whether or not said districts should be abolished and a consolidated school district should be formed, to be known as consolidated school district No. 5. That after petitions- -from each of said districts were filed, the said superintendent did, on the 10th of April, 1920, call a meeting of the legal voters of said districts, and that said notices were-duly posted and mailed as provided by law, and that the majority of the votes in said meetings were cast for the formation of said consolidated school district, and that said defendants were elected as the officers thereof, and that the report of said meetings was duly filed in the office of the superintendent of public instruction, and that on April 28, 1920, the said superintendent did enter an order in writing, declaring school districts 35, 38, and 57 dissolved, and consolidated school district No. 5 of Pottawatomie-county, Okla., formed.

The court further found that consolidated school district No. 5 had an assessed valuation of more than $200,000, and that it contained more than. 25 square miles.

The court further found that certain residents of school district No. 60, constituting more than 50 per cent, of the voters thereof, duly petitioned that a certain part, described therein, of said school district 'No. 60 should be detached therefrom and added to-said consolidated school district No. 5, and that when so detached, the said school district No. 60 had an area of .not less than six square miles, and an assessed valuation of more than $50,000.

*11 The court concluded, as a matter of law, that the petitions involved were in all respects sufficient, and that all the acts and steps taken in consolidating said districts and attaching thereto the territory formerly included in school district No. 60, were done and taken according to all the requirements of the law, and that said consolidated district No. 5 was legally formed, and said districts 35, 38, and 57 were legally disorganized, and that the defendants were the duly and legally elected officers of said school district and that the relator is not entitled to the remedy prayed for in his amended petition, and that said petition should Ibe dismissed at the cost of the relator.

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Bluebook (online)
1923 OK 162, 213 P. 745, 89 Okla. 9, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 957, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-pitman-v-bowling-okla-1923.