State v. CONSOLIDATION INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DIST.

68 N.W.2d 305
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 8, 1955
Docket48615
StatusPublished

This text of 68 N.W.2d 305 (State v. CONSOLIDATION INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DIST.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. CONSOLIDATION INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DIST., 68 N.W.2d 305 (iowa 1955).

Opinion

68 N.W.2d 305 (1955)

STATE of Iowa ex rel. Ray F. COX, C.V. Barnhart, Clarence Myerhoff, Joseph Tribon, Paul Schneider, August W. Grappendorf, Martha Rewoldt, Mary Bockholt, Fritz W. Diers, Emil Schneider, James R. Alexander, Nelson Gaede, Clarence Klenzmann, Wilbert Wedemeier, Albert Erhardt, Erwin Thurm, Louis Westendorf and Edwin Heineman, Appellees,
v.
CONSOLIDATED INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT OF READLYN, Victor Happel, Walter Meier, Herbert Pries, Fred Matthias, Bernard Matthias, R. D. Merill and Fred W. Piehl, and their successors in office, Appellants.

No. 48615.

Supreme Court of Iowa.

February 8, 1955.

*306 Pike, Sias, Butler & Hoxie, Waterloo, for appellants.

Donohue & Wilkins, New Hampton, for appellees.

*307 SMITH, Justice.

On July 19, 1952, a petition was filed with the county superintendent of schools of Bremer County, Iowa, for the organization, under chapter 276, Iowa Code 1950, repealed Acts 1953, 55 G.A., Ch. 117, § 35, I.C.A. of defendant Consolidated Independent School District of Readlyn. Some fifty sections of land are embraced in the project, consisting of parts of four townships, and including the town of Readlyn, all in Bremer County, Iowa.

The county superintendent, in proper time ("within ten days") caused to be published in the Waverly Democrat, of Waverly, Iowa, "Notice of Limiting of Time to File Objections to the Formation of Consolidated Independent School District."

This notice was presumably given pursuant to Code section 276.4, I.C.A. which so far as pertinent here provided:

"Within ten days after the petition is filed, the county superintendent shall fix a final date for filing objections * * * and give notice * * * in a newspaper published within the territory described in the petition, or if none be published therein, in the next nearest town or city in any county in which any part of the territory * * is situated. * * *" (Emphasis supplied.)

It is conceded no newspaper was published in the described territory and that the Tripoli Leader, published in Tripoli, Iowa, met the language of the statute emphasized above.

Code section 276.5, I.C.A. next following, read: "On the final date fixed for filing objections, interested parties may present evidence and arguments, and the county superintendent shall review the matter on its merits and within five days after the conclusion of any hearing, shall rule on the objections and shall enter an order fixing such boundaries * * * as will in his judgment be for the best interests of all parties concerned, having due regard for the welfare of adjoining districts; or dismiss the petition. The county superintendent shall at once publish this order in the same newspaper in which the original notice was published."

After this hearing the county superintendent in the instant case ruled on the objections that had been filed and entered an order fixing the boundaries, and published notice thereof in the Bremer County Independent, also published in Waverly.

Later sections in Code chapter 276, I.C.A., provided for appeal to the county board of education by "any petitioner, or any person who filed objections, or any person residing upon or owning land included in or excluded from the district by any change in the boundary lines from those proposed in the petition," Code section 276.6, I.C.A. and later details not pertinent here.

In the present case appeal to the county board of education from the county superintendent's ruling was taken by ten of these relators and numerous others who are not named as relators and the ruling was affirmed, thus fixing the boundaries of the proposed district. The statute provides no further appeal. The decision is final. Code section 276.8, I.C.A.

Code section 276.11, I.C.A., provided the county superintendent shall call an election "when the boundaries * * * have been determined", * * * "by giving notice * * * in the same newspaper as previous notices concerning it have been published * * *."

This notice was published in the Waverly Democrat, and the election was held September 30, 1952. There is no controversy over the details or result of the election. The proposition to establish the consolidated independent district carried by a majority of five of the votes from outside the town of Readlyn, and 133 of those within the town limits.

When such a consolidation proposition carries Code section 276.18, I.C.A., required a special election to be called for election of directors "by giving notice by one publication in the same newspaper in which the *308 former notices were published". Such election was held October 18, 1952, in the instant case upon publication of the notice in the Waverly Democrat.

The present proceeding was initiated December, 1952, and trial was commenced December 22, 1953. Decree was filed January 21, 1954, holding that the "purported Consolidated Independent School District of Readlyn, Bremer County, Iowa, is a de facto public corporation, and as such is performing the services and duties, and exercising the privileges of a school corporation."

The decree holds further that because of the failure "to observe the mandatory statutory provisions as to publications of notices * * * there was a failure to substantially comply with the law in such respect, and that such failure prevented a de jure formation of the said purported district * * *."

The decree provides further that since it is essential school facilities be maintained and since the school year commencing in the fall of 1953 is well advanced, the de facto corporation may continue to function "until the end of the current year."

Defendants have appealed.

I. The trial court's decision poses the question as to the intention of the legislature in providing for publication of the various notices in a newspaper published "in the next nearest town or city" in case there is none "published within the territory described in the petition." It holds them mandatory and necessary to the formation of a de jure school corporation.

Defendants contend the county superintendent acquires jurisdiction "by the filing with him of the petition required under" Code section 276.2, I.C.A., "and his jurisdiction once acquired is not lost by subsequent omission to follow literally and strictly the statutes."

They argue the courts have been liberal in construction of school organization statutes and that the notices in question are "of the informational type rather than the type upon which jurisdiction depends, since jurisdiction is conferred not by the notices, but by filing the petition.

The term "jurisdiction" has been said to be one "in general use, of comprehensive and large import, having different meanings, dependent on the connection in which it is found and the subject matter to which it is directed". 50 C.J.S., Jurisdiction, pp. 1089, 1090. As applied to courts it is "a term of large and comprehensive import and embraces every kind of judicial action, and hence every movement by a court is necessarily the exercise of jurisdiction. It includes jurisdiction over the subject matter as well as over the person." 14 Am.Jur., Courts, § 160.

It is important to determine in what sense the word is used when we find it in a judicial opinion or in legal argument. Defendants' argument does not do this. As used in Zilske v. Albers, 238 Iowa 1050, 1055, 29 N.W.2d 189

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State v. Consolidated Independent School District
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State ex rel. Cox v. Consolidated Independent School District
68 N.W.2d 305 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1955)

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Bluebook (online)
68 N.W.2d 305, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-consolidation-independent-school-dist-iowa-1955.