State Ex Rel. School District No. 8 v. Lensman

88 P.2d 63, 108 Mont. 118, 1939 Mont. LEXIS 75
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 17, 1939
DocketNo. 7,862.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 88 P.2d 63 (State Ex Rel. School District No. 8 v. Lensman) 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. 8 v. Lensman, 88 P.2d 63, 108 Mont. 118, 1939 Mont. LEXIS 75 (Mo. 1939).

Opinions

MR. JUSTICE MORRIS

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an original application for a writ of mandate to compel the board of county commissioners of Lake county to act on the budget presented to it and to levy the tax necessary to meet the requirements of the budget of a school district.

The facts as developed by appropriate pleadings are that Joint School District No. 28 contained territory lying partly in Lake and partly in Missoula counties. A petition was filed to create a new district from territory lying wholly within the joint district, but including all of the territory of Joint District No. 28, which was within Missoula county, and a portion of the territory of this district lying in Lake county. This petition was presented to the county superintendents of the two counties, who made an order creating the new district known as Joint District No. 8.

■ An appeal was thereafter perfected to the boards of county commissioners of Lake and Missoula counties; these boards, sitting jointly, heard the appeal. After hearing, the vote of the commissioners was a tie, resulting in no action on the appeal. The county superintendents thereupon appointed trustees of the new district, who furnished the county superintendent of Lake county a preliminary budget for the new school district containing the proper information. The county treasurer of that county attached to this budget a statement for the new district as required by the statute — section 1019.10; Revised Codes. The certificate was attached by the county clerk as provided in section 1019.11. The county commissioners of Lake county thereafter met as the board of school budget supervisors, but refused to consider the budget for the new district on the ground that the district was not legally created. This proceeding followed, and in it Joint School District No. 28 and its trustees, individually, *122 and in their official capacity, intervened and joined with respondents in resisting the proceeding.

Joint school districts, i. e., districts lying partly in one county and partly in another, may be formed in the same manner in which other new districts are created, except that the petition must be made to the county superintendent of each county affected, and all things to be done by the county superintendent must be done by concurrent action of both superintendents. (Sec. 1035.)

Some question is raised in this case as to whether an appeal lies to the boards of county commissioners where a joint district is created. In the event of the creation of a district from territory lying wholly within one county, section 1024 provides for an appeal to the board of county commissioners. Section 1035 provides that joint districts may be created in the same manner as other new districts, with certain exceptions as to procedure which we have heretofore noted. This section would indicate that an appeal would lie to the boards of county commissioners in the event of the creation of a joint district.

This court, in the case of School District No. 28 v. Larson, 80 Mont. 363, 260 Pac. 1042, 1046, said of these sections : ks is seen, section 1035 is very brief, and, in itself, is incomplete. Differing from the other sections mentioned, it does not, in itself, provide a complete plan of procedure. It refers to ‘the same manner as other new districts are formed.’ By that expression evidently it refers to some provisions of either section 1024 or section 1025. All are in the same chapter of the Codes (Political 'Code, chap. 79), which treats of school districts, their organization and formation. The three sections mentioned are the only sections of the Codes which can have any possible application to the issues of this ease. Hence it is inevitable that section 1035, for a part of its procedure, draws on either section 1024 or section 1025, which one, in a case such as this, is not plain.” Section 1025 has since been repealed. This court there proceeded to test the sufficiency of the petition with reference to sections 1024 and 1025, holding it to be insufficient under either section.

*123 Our legislature has apparently adopted this construction of this existing statute, by section 1037.2, where it declared that districts created out of joint districts without the concurrent action of the various county superintendents and boards of county commissioners of the various counties having territory within the districts, are thereby declared to be valid and subsisting districts. If the boards of county commissioners were without authority to hear an appeal, there was no occasion for their being mentioned in this section. True, this section is only a curative statute, but it discloses the construction of the other statutes to which we have referred, as being in accord with our views.

By the provisions of section 1024, upon the creation of a new school district, an appeal lies to the board of county commissioners. Since no question is raised as to the sufficiency of the proceedings had to perfect the appeal, we need not consider them. After the appeal is perfected the county superintendent must transmit, within the time provided, to the boards of county commissioners and file in the offices of the county clerks, the notices of appeal and all petitions, plats and papers in their possession pertaining to the petition for the creation of new school districts. Upon receipt of these papers and documents the county clerk must give notice, in the manner provided by this section, that the board of county commissioners will, upon a certain date, ‘ ‘ finally hear and determine said appeal and said petition for the creation of such new district.”

The relators contend, in effect, that the new district was created by the concurrent action of the county superintendents, and, since that order was not set aside on appeal, the order of the county superintendents is a valid, subsisting order creating the new district. The respondents and interveners contend that the appeal operated to set aside and vacate the order of the county superintendents, and therefore no district has been created. The primary question presented by these contentions is: Did the perfection of the appeal operate to vacate and annul the order of the county superintendents; or did it, at the most, operate to suspend or delay the effective creation of the district ?

*124 An appeal, in general terms, is a resort to an upper court or tribunal. (State ex rel. Johnson v. Case, 14 Mont. 520, 37 Pac. 95.) This court, in the case of State ex rel. Hall v. Peterson, 55 Mont. 355, 177 Pac. 245, held that on appeal from an order of the county superintendent to the board of county commissioners, the hearing is d& novo upon the merits. It is here argued that, by reason of the hearing being de novo, the order is therefore annulled as soon as the appeal is perfected.

In the ease of Weasel Head v. Armstrong, 99 Mont. 364, 43 Pac. (2d) 243, 245, we said: “A new school district can only be ‘created’ by a county superintendent of schools on compliance with the provisions of section 1024, Revised Codes 1921, as amended by Chapter 138 of the Laws of 1927 (section 1).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
88 P.2d 63, 108 Mont. 118, 1939 Mont. LEXIS 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-school-district-no-8-v-lensman-mont-1939.