State Ex Rel. Wildin v. Eickoff

276 P. 954, 84 Mont. 539, 1929 Mont. LEXIS 151
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedApril 25, 1929
DocketNo. 6,466.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 276 P. 954 (State Ex Rel. Wildin v. Eickoff) 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. Wildin v. Eickoff, 276 P. 954, 84 Mont. 539, 1929 Mont. LEXIS 151 (Mo. 1929).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE GALEN

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a judgment directing a peremptory writ of mandamus to issue, requiring the board of trustees of school district No. 41 of Fergus county to call an election to select a school site in compliance with a petition, signed by more than one-third of the voters who are taxpayers, residing in the district, regularly filed with the board. Upon filing the affidavit for the writ, an alternative writ of mandate was issued, and thereafter the defendants appeared by demurrer to the application, which was overruled. Subsequently, the defendants having failed to answer within the time allowed by the court, their default was regularly entered, and a peremptory writ was issued, commanding the defendants to forthwith convene as a board of school trustees, to reconsider and allow the petition, and “fix a time and place for-a meeting or election of the voters of said school district to select a school site, and to issue or cause to be issued” and posted notices of election as prescribed by law.

*542 The only question presented for decision is whether the court was in error in overruling the defendants’ demurrer to the application for the writ.

■ So far as pertinent here, our statutes provide: “Every school board, unless otherwise specially provided by law, shall have power and it shall be its duty: * * * 8. To build or remove schoolhouses and to purchase or sell school sites: Provided, that in districts of the third class they shall not build or remove schoolhouses, nor purchase, sell, or locate school sites unless directed so to do by a majority of the electors of the district voting at an election held in the district for that purpose, and such election shall be conducted and votes canvassed in the same manner as at the annual election of school officers, and notice thereof shall be given by the clerk by posting three notices in three public places in the district at least ten days prior to such election, which notices shall specify the time, place and purpose of such election.” (Sec. 1015, Eev. Codes 1921.)

“Whenever, in the judgment of the board of trustees of any school district of the third class, it is desirable to select, purchase, exchange, or sell a schoolhouse site, or whenever petitioned so to do by one-third of the voters of such district, the district board shall without delay call a meeting at some convenient time and place fixed by the board to vote upon such question of selection, purchase, exchange, or sale of schoolhouse site. Such election shall be conducted and votes canvassed in the same manner as at the annual election of school officers. Three notices giving the time, place, and purpose of such meeting shall be posted in three public places in the district by the clerk at least ten days prior to such meeting. If a majority of the electors of the district voting at such meeting or election shall be in favor of selecting, purchasing, exchanging, or selling the schoolhouse site, the board shall carry out the will of the voters thus expressed: Provided, that all sites so chosen must be approved by the county superintendent of schools and the county health officer; and also provided that *543 any sites so changed cannot again be changed within three years from the date of such action, except upon the advice of the county superintendent of schools and county health officer.” (Id., see. 1173.)

“The school should naturally be located to best serve the greatest number. Its location can in no way be so satisfactorily determined as by a vote of the electors of the district. Such determination is in accordance with the American principle of majority rule. We take it that it rarely, if ever, occurs that a schoolhouse is moved. * * * We can scarcely conceive of circumstances where it would be practicable to move the house. On the other hand, changes in the centers of population frequently occur in rapidly developing communities. When they occur, the trustees are likely to be elected from such new center. The people of such new center are likely to want the school near to them. But the trustees must not change the place of the school without the vote of the district. At such election all elements express themselves. Matters of convenience to the majority, questions of expense to the district, suitability of site, and scores of opinions and influences which sway a rural school district are sifted down through the ballots, and the result demonstrates the will of the people as to the site of their school.” (State ex rel. Jay v. Marshall, 13 Mont. 136, 32 Pac. 648; State ex rel. Bean v. Lyons, 37 Mont. 354, 96 Pac. 922.)

Under the provisions of the statute it is the defendant’s contention that the relator’s application for the writ is faulty, in that it failed to show (1) that any proposed school site to be voted upon had been approved by the health officer of the county or by the county superintendent of schools; (2) that it did not appear from the petition filed with the board that it had been signed by one-third of the voters of the school district; (3) and that such petition did not indicate any definite site to be voted upon. All of these contentions are wholly without merit.

*544 1. While it is true that the site for a schoolhouse “must be approved by the county superintendent of schools and the county health officer,” yet it is plain that they have nothing whatsoever to do with the selection of a suitable site in the first instance. Upon the voters of the district the statute confers the exclusive power of “selecting, purchasing, exchanging, or selling the schoolhouse site.” And such determination must be made at a meeting of the voters of the district held pursuant to required notice, at a convenient time and place whereat an election shall be “conducted and the votes canvassed in the same manner as at the annual election of school officers.” It is plain that such an election may be called by the board of trustees of the district of its own initiative, and that the board is required to call a meeting for the conduct of an election on the question “whenever petitioned so to do by one-third of the voters of the district.” School sites “so chosen must be approved by the county superintendent of schools and the county health officer”; that is, after the voters have determined upon a site for a schoolhouse, before a school building is moved thereto or a new one constructed, the site must have the approval of the two officers named. The language employed will admit of no other construction. This has reference to an accomplished event, indicative of intention that these officials are given no voice in the selection of the site in the first instance. It is the site “so chosen,” which they must approve. It is not contemplated that these officials shall act until the qualified voters at an election have chosen a site, after which fact the site “so chosen” must be approved by them. The word “approve” means “to sanction officially; to ratify; to confirm” (Webster’s International Dictionary; Long v. Needham, 37 Mont. 408, 96 Pac. 731), and it is manifest that approval of a site as required in the statute can only be made after selection thereof has been made.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
276 P. 954, 84 Mont. 539, 1929 Mont. LEXIS 151, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-wildin-v-eickoff-mont-1929.