State ex rel. School District Number One v. Andrae

116 S.W. 561, 216 Mo. 617, 1909 Mo. LEXIS 352
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 25, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 116 S.W. 561 (State ex rel. School District Number One v. Andrae) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri 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 Number One v. Andrae, 116 S.W. 561, 216 Mo. 617, 1909 Mo. LEXIS 352 (Mo. 1909).

Opinion

GRAVES, J.

At the school meeting in April in the year 1905, an attempt (whether successful or unsuccessful remains to be determined) was made to change the boundary line between two adjoining school districts in St. Louis county. The relator is one of said two, and School District Number Pour in Township 45 North, Range 3 East, is the other. After the school election, one district having voted for said change of boundary and the other against it, the matter was taken before J. Will Andrae, the then Superintendent of Public Schools of said county for determination. He is one of the defendants in error herein. The other four defendants in error are the four men appointed by him as a Board of Arbitration under the provisions of section 9742, Revised Statutes 1899. This Board of Arbitration, in a written decision signed by the members thereof, found that a necessity existed for the change of the boundary line in question. The relator then made application to the circuit court of St. Louis county for a writ of certiorari, and was granted such writ. Returns were made to the writ, and after the filing of the returns, relator filed its objections thereto and moved for judgment. These both being overruled, final judgment was entered in favor of the respondents in that court, the defendants in error here. Relator filed motion for new trial which was overruled, and in proper time, to complete its record, filed its bill of exceptions. Thereafter, within one year, the pending writ of error was sued out in this court. J. Will Andrae having died before the hearing in this court, and proper suggestions of such death having been made, W. T. Bender, the successor in office of said Andrae, entered his appearance as defendant in error.

[624]*624The numerous alleged weaknesses in the record of this inferior tribunal, the Board of Arbitrators, are thus set out by relator in its objection to return and motion for judgment:

“Now comes the relator and objects to the returns herein made by the several defendants, and alleges that it appears by said returns that the proceedings of defendants, as Superintendent of Public Schools of said county and alleged arbitrators, are void and that defendants had no jurisdiction to hear or determine or decide the matter in controversy as stated in the petition for writ of certiorari filed herein and which petition is made a part hereof, for the following reasons, to-wit:
“It does not appear by ány act, record, finding, order or judgment of said alleged board of arbitration:
“1. That said petition or appeal was filed with.or presented to said superintendent within five days after the annual meetings in said two districts.
“2. That said superintendent appointed four disinterested men, resident taxpayers of said county, to act with himself as a hoard of arbitration.
“3. That the other defendants alleged and claimed to be said board were or are disinterested or were or are resident taxpayers of said county.
“4. That said alleged board met said superintendent at any time or place in said county.
“5. That said alleged board met within fifteen days after said annual school meeting.
“6. That any notice of the time and place of said meeting, if any was held, was given to the relator herein.
“7. That a petition desiring any change of boundary between said districts was given or received by the clerks of either of said two districts fifteen days or more prior to the annual meeting in said districts.
“8. That any such alleged petition desiring a change of boundary was signed by at least ten quali[625]*625fied voters residing in both or either of said districts.
“9. That any such petition described the change of boundary desired.
“10. That both of the clerks of said districts posted or caused to be posted notices of said desired change in at least five public places in both of said districts at least fifteen days before said annual meetings.
“11. That any notices claimed to have been posted in said districts contained a description of said proposed change of boundary.
“12. That either or both of said districts voted on said proposed change of boundary.
“13. That any vote taken by said districts, or by either of them, did or did not favor said proposed change of boundary.
“14. That the decision of said alleged board of arbitration conforms to the proposition contained in any notice of the said proposed change of boundary.
“15. That the decision of said alleged board of arbitration conforms to the proposition voted on at the annual meeting of either or both of said districts.
“16. That the alleged decision of said board of arbitration defines, sets out or describes the proposed change of boundary between said districts, and that said decision is so vague and indefinite that the rights of the respective districts can not be determined therefrom.
“17. That the proposed change of boundary does not leave in any district, by actual count, less than twenty pupils of school age.
“18. That the proposed change of boundary between said districts is not made simply for the acquisition of territory one from the other.
“19. That any necessity exists for the proposed change or the facts upon which any such necessity is supposed to depend.
[626]*626“And it further appears that said hoard of arbitration exceeded its jurisdiction in said controversy, and that said board had no jurisdiction whatever to decide said controversy for the following reasons:
“20. That the statute under which said alleged board was constituted and organized is contrary to and in violation of article VI of the Constitution of the State of Missouri and the amendments thereto.
“21. That said board as a court attempted to act under said statute and by said article of said Constitution the Legislature had and has no power or authority to constitute, authorize, organize or otherwise provide for any courts other than the courts in said article enumerated.
“Wherefore relator asks the court by its judgment and finding to declare and hold the proceedings of said alleged board null and void, and to vacate the same, and to render judgment for costs against said defendants. ’ ’

The case reaches this court owing to the fact that the constitutionality of section 9742, Revised Statutes 1899, is challenged. The portion of such section so challenged is the part which provides for the determination of appeals by the school commissioner and a board of arbitrators, and reads:

“ ...

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Bluebook (online)
116 S.W. 561, 216 Mo. 617, 1909 Mo. LEXIS 352, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-school-district-number-one-v-andrae-mo-1909.