State Ex Rel. School District No. 28 v. Urton

248 P. 369, 76 Mont. 458, 1926 Mont. LEXIS 124
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJune 22, 1926
DocketNo. 5,965.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 248 P. 369 (State Ex Rel. School District No. 28 v. Urton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana 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. School District No. 28 v. Urton, 248 P. 369, 76 Mont. 458, 1926 Mont. LEXIS 124 (Mo. 1926).

Opinion

MR. CHIEF JUSTICE CALLAWAY

delivered the opinion of the court.

For many years prior to 1928 there existed in Missoula county a school district known as No. 28. In October, 1922, proceedings were instituted before the board of county commissioners of Flathead county for the formation of Lake county from portions of Flathead and Missoula, pursuant to the provisions of the “New Counties Act.” (Rev. Codes 1921, secs. 4390-4407.) The greater portion of the proposed new county lay in Flathead county.

On January 24, 1923, the commissioners determined the truth of the allegations of the petition for the new county, as required by section 4394, and pursuant thereto submitted the question of creating the new county to the electors residing therein. As a result of the election Lake county was formed, and it began to function on the tenth day of August, 1923.

*460 Having determined the validity of the proceedings for the institution of the new county, compelling the submission of the question of its creation to the electors, it was the duty of the commissioners to “divide the proposed new county into a convenient number of township, road and school districts and define their boundaries and designate the names of such districts.” (Sec. 4394.) On January 24, 1923, the com'missioners, as a part of their findings and resolutions with 'respect to the new county, made an order concerning school districts of the new county, which in part is as follows: “Be it further ordered that the school districts of the proposed new county of Lake be and the same are hereby established, and the boundaries thereof fixed as follows, to-wit:

“School Districts Number Twenty-eight and Nineteen, as the same are now fixed and established by law, shall constitute and comprise the same numbered school districts in the proposed new county of Lake, and the boundaries thereof, as heretofore established, are hereby fixed and determined as the boundaries of each of said respective school districts save - and except School District Number Twenty-eight shall be a joint school district of the said proposed new county of Lake and the county of Missoula, and shall include and embrace the same territory as is now therein.”

As the boundaries of Lake county were and are established the territory embraced in School District No. 28 - lies partly within Lake county and partly within Missoula county. The schoolhouses in the district are within Lake county. At all times subsequent to January 24, 1923, School District No. 28 has continued to function in all respects as before; school elections have been held within the district, in which electors from all parts of the school district including that within Missoula county, have participated; school trustees and officers have been elected within the entire district; taxes have been duly levied and assessed upon all of the property situated within the entire district and have been paid to the treasurers of the counties of Lake and Missoula as provided by law, that *461 is to say, those having property within Lake county have paid the taxes to the treasurer of that county and those having property within Missoula county have paid their taxes to the treasurer of Missoula county. These taxes have been paid without objection or protest except that six property owners within the portion of the district in Missoula county paid the first installment of their school taxes for the year 1925, aggregating $319.19, due November 30, 1925, under protest. Two of these have commenced actions against the county treasurer of Missoula county to recover the sums of money paid by them under protest and those suits are now pending.

The treasurer of Missoula county transmitted to the treasurer of Lake county the proceeds of the taxes levied and assessed for school purposes upon the property in District No. 28 within Missoula county, which came due and payable to the treasurer November 30, 1923, May 31, 1924, November 30, 1924, and May 31, 1925.

Prior to August 10, 1925, the board of trustees of the district certified to the county superintendent of schools, and to the board of county commissioners of Missoula county their request that the board make a levy of taxes for school purposes for the support of the schools of the district upon the lands and property within the district situated in Missoula county, and the board on that day in compliance with the request of the board of trustees, levied the tax. And thereafter the county treasurer of Missoula county collected all of the taxes due except the $319.19 above mentioned. On May 12, 1926, the moneys collected by the treasurer of Lake county for the district and available for the payment of the general expenses of its operation were exhausted. On that date the district was lawfully indebted to Paul B. Dana in the sum of $145 for his services as a teacher, and the district, through its officers, executed and delivered to him a warrant for the amount, drawn upon the treasurer of Missoula county; and while the treasurer had in his custody sufficient funds, realized from $axes collected from property in that part of the school district *462 wbicb lies within Missoula county, to pay the warrant, he refused to do so. Further he notified the officers of the school district that he would neither pay the warrants of the district drawn upon funds in his hands, nor would he transmit the funds or any portion thereof to the treasurer of Lake county.

Believing that, after the creation of Lake county that portion of School District No. 28 which lies within Missoula county was no longer a part of that school district but was abandoned territory, the county superintendent of schools of Missoula county, on November 23, 1925, made an order attaching what she deemed the abandoned territory to School District No. 41 of Missoula county. Afterward, upon a petition filed with the board of trustees of School District No. 41 of Missoula county, proposing to organize a new school distriei out of a portion of School District No. 41, and following proceedings had thereunder, the county superintendent, in February, 1926, made an order purporting. to create a new district known as District No. 28 of Missoula county, by including therein the same area which she had previously undertaken to attach to District No. 41. After that an election was held in the new district and school trustees were elected, but nothing further has been done in the matter. The children of the so-called new district are attending one of the schools maintained by original District No. 28.

In view of the foregoing situation School District No. 28 “of Lake and Missoula counties” applied to this court for a writ of mandate directed to the treasurer of Missoula county, commanding him either to transmit the funds in his hands derived from the taxes levied for school purposes in the relator district to the treasurer of Lake county, or to pay the warrant drawn upon him in favor of Paul R. Dana. We issued an alternative writ which the respondent, through the attorney general, has moved to quash.

It is not questioned that prior to the creation of Lake county School District No. 28, then lying wholly within Missoula county, was organized in compliance with the laws of this state. *463 It was therefore a public corporation. (Sec. 1022, Rev. Codes 1921;

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177 S.E. 707 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1934)
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Bluebook (online)
248 P. 369, 76 Mont. 458, 1926 Mont. LEXIS 124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-school-district-no-28-v-urton-mont-1926.