State Ex Rel. v. School District No. 23

172 P.2d 655, 179 Or. 441, 1946 Ore. LEXIS 175
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 3, 1946
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 172 P.2d 655 (State Ex Rel. v. School District No. 23) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon 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. v. School District No. 23, 172 P.2d 655, 179 Or. 441, 1946 Ore. LEXIS 175 (Or. 1946).

Opinion

BOSSMAN, J.

This is an appeal by the plaintiff from a judgment entered by the circuit court in favor of the defendants, School District No. 23 of Union County, its directors, its clerk and First State Bank of Elgin. The action was instituted by the State upon the relation of one Joe *443 Hallgarth, who is the owner of property situated in the school district. The relator claims that a consolidation order, which was entered June 14, 1945, by the Union County district boundary board, and which consolidated ten school districts into the defendant district, was not a valid order. Based upon that premise, he contends that the district and its officials lack lawful authority to pursue their functions. The action was submitted to the circuit court upon an agreed statement of facts as authorized by §§ 6-501 to 6-503, O. C. L. A. The parties agree that the action is quo warranto in nature! See §§ 8-801 to 8-815, O. C. L. A. Specifically, the appellant cites §8-804, subd. 3, which reads as follows:

“An action at law may be maintained in the name of the state, upon the information of the prosecuting attorney, or upon the relation of a private party against the person offending, in the following cases: * * * (3) When any association or number of persons act within this state, as a corporation, without being duly incorporated.”

In other words, the appellant challenges the validity of the defendant school district.

We quote from the agreed statement of facts:
“The relator demands judgment against the defendants that they be perpetually enjoined and restrained from transacting business as a consolidated school district, that the attempted consolidation of the outlying districts with the original School District No. 23 be declared void and of no effect, and that as to such lands and districts the defendant’s directors and clerk be adjudged to be unlawfully usurping and exercising power and jurisdiction over these districts, * *

*444 The circuit court found that the consolidation was effected in the manner permitted by law and granted judgment in favor of the defendants.

Before the entry of the attacked consolidation order the boundaries of School District No. 23 were virtuáíly the same as those of the city of Elgin. It was a school district of the third class as that term is defined, in § 111-802, O. C. L. A. The nine other sehool districts which were consolidated with No. 23 by the order of June 14, being Nos. 14, 26, 29, 36, 45,'51, 59, 64 and 67, were also third class districts. ' The parties refer.'to them ás the outlying districts. The number, of school children residing in each of them was less than in the Elgin district, but after all ten were united into the consolidated district the latter’s school population was in excess of two hundred and it was, therefore, a'district of the second class (§ 111-802, O. C. L. A.). '

In April of 1945 the Elgin school facilities, with the exception of the gymnasium, were destroyed'by á fire and thereupon a proposal was made to consolidate the ten districts.

As the result of an election held June 1, 1945, the district boundary board (§ ill-401, O. C. L'. A.) entered the attacked order. It. united into.; one the aforementioned districts and entitled it Consolidated School District No.. 23. Chapter 49, Oregon Laws of 1943, ¡authorizes the consolidation of “contiguous school districts” and delineates the procedure which must be followed in their consolidation. The appellant does not challenge the personnel of the Union County boundary board, the votes which were cast June 1, .1945, the form, of the ballots nor. the entry-of the consolidation order.. It is conceded that the consolidation measure prevailed in all of the ten districts. According to the statute last *445 cited, whenever it is .proposed that “two or more contiguous school districts” .shall consolidate into' one district,, .a petition mnst he presented to the district boundary board from each of the districts which it is sought to unite “setting forth specifically the districts it is proposed to consolidate.” After the act has specified the number of qualified voters who must sign the petitions it says that the district boundary board, upon receiving petitions properly signed, must select a day for the election, notify the district school boards thereof and “be responsible for the posting of notices for a school meeting in each district to vote upon the question of consolidation of the districts designated in the notice from the district boundary board.” It adds that the districts which it is proposed to consolidate “shall specifically be designated in the notice .of the meeting.”

The appellant’s brief sets forth six assignments of error which, however, present only five contentions. They are: (1) The petitions filed with the district boundary board by all of the districts, except No. 23, and which resulted in the election of June 1, were invalid because they Jailed to name all of thé districts which it was proposed to consolidate; (2) the notices which [were posted in all of the districts, except in No. 23, failed to designate all of the districts which sought consolidation; (3) the ten districts which sought consolidation were not contiguous; (4) the clerk and the three school directors, who were chosen in an election which was held after the consolidation order had been entered, were not lawfully elected; and (5) the school building bonds, which are described in the agreed statement of facts, and which the defendant district proposes to issue, will not be lawful obligations of the district.

*446 The predicates for the two contentions last mentioned are virtually the same as for the first two, and if the first two are resolved against the appellant, the latter two must fail.

The following drawing shows the relative position of the ten original districts; the attacked order united them into one known as School District No. 23.

*447 May 11,1945, there was presented to the aforementioned district boundary board the petitions for consolidation which the appellant attacks. They were ten in number. Each emanated from one of the aforementioned school districts and each bore the required number of signatures. May 12, 1945, the board met, considered the petitions and ordered that an election be held in all of the districts on June 1,1945, upon the issue of consolidation. The ten school boards were promptly advised of the boundary board’s action. May 14, 1945, the school clerk of each of the ten districts posted in three public places in his district notice of the impending election. The clerk of District No. 23, besides posting the notice in three public places, published it in the issues of May 17 and 24,1945, of the Elgin Recorder, a newspaper which circulated throughout the. ten districts. According to the agreed statement of facts:

“The proposal to consolidate the adjoining school districts with the Elgin School District was widely discussed and debated.”

The agreed statement of facts recites incidents upon which that statement is based, and seemingly the latter is well founded.

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Bluebook (online)
172 P.2d 655, 179 Or. 441, 1946 Ore. LEXIS 175, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-v-school-district-no-23-or-1946.