Stayton v. Butchee

1905 OK 117, 82 P. 726, 16 Okla. 232, 1905 Okla. LEXIS 122
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 7, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1905 OK 117 (Stayton v. Butchee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stayton v. Butchee, 1905 OK 117, 82 P. 726, 16 Okla. 232, 1905 Okla. LEXIS 122 (Okla. 1905).

Opinion

Opinion of the court by

Beauchamp, J.:

Plaintiff in error commenced this action in the district court of Greer copnty to enjoin the defendants in error, as the school district board of school district No. 15, in Greer county, from erecting and completing a school house then being erected in said district. In the absence of the district judge, on application, the probate judge granted a temporary injunction. Afterwards on -motion of the defendant in error, and after a hearing, the district court dissolved the temporary injunction, to which order of the court the plaintiffs excepted, and was by the court allowed thirty days in which to file his petition in error in the supreme court. Plaintiff in error brings case here by petition in error and case made for review.

On bearing on the motion to dissolve in the district court, counsel for the respective parties stipulated in writing as to facts, which are about as follows: Tn the year 1890, school dstrict No. 15-, Greer county, was organized and has been a school district ever since. At the annual meeting of *234 the district held in July, 1898,'by a vote oí qualified electors, a site for. a school house for said district was designated, which was within one half mile of the center of said district, and a house was built thereon; that said site has been used continuously as a school site for said district ever since. The site was selected by the board on the homestead of L. M Davis, which was donated by him to the district, and accepted by the district at said annual meeting; the site was immediately surveyed by the school authorities, a school house erected, and a well dug thereon. Prior to the year 1903 the school district comprised a large territory, and in July of the year, the county superintendent detached a considerable portion of the east side of the district, and created a new district composed of said detached territory and other territory, leaving the school house site within, the boundaries of the old district, and within one half mile of the east side thereof, and that the value of the old school house was less than $500. In 1904 tire old district voted bonds in the sum of $500.00 to erect a new school house. No different site or new site has been designated. Subsequent to the time the bonds were voted, Davis never having executed and delivered a deed to the district, he executed and delivered a deed to the district for the old site previously donated by him. The board, without submitting the question of the selection of a new or different site for the new school house to the vote of the people, sold the bonds, and with the proceeds bought material and commenced the erection of a new school house on the old site; that at the time this action was commenced the improvements on the site were worth more than $500.00 consisting of the old house and the unfinished new house.

*235 The only question ior our consideration is as to whether the trial court erred in dissolving" the temporary injunction upon the admitted, facts in the case. The contention of the plaintiff in error is that when an old district is changed, and such a considerable portion of its territory detached as to leave the school house site far to one side, and more than one half mile from the center of said district, and the school house of said district is of less value than $500.00 and the district has never acquired title to the old site until after a large portion of the territory had been detached and until it had voted bonds to build a new school house, that the district board has no power or authority to locate the new school house on the old site, but must, before commencing the erection of the school house, submit the question of the selection of a proper site to a vote of the people of the district, and that the site designated by the people of the school district must be within one half mile of the center of the district, as then bounded. Counsel on both sides have cited no authorities, and observe that they have been unable to find any.

Under the provisions of the statutes of this Territory, Wilson’s statutes, section 6139 provides:

“’6139. It shall be the duty of the county superintendent of public instruction to divide the county into a convenient number of school districts and to change such districts when the interests of the people may require it, by making them conform to existing topographical or physical conditions. * * * *”
“6147. When a new district is formed in whole or in part from one or more districts possessing a school house or entitled to other property, the county superintendent, at the time of forming such new district sháll equitably determine *236 the proportions of the present value of such school house or other property justly due to said new district. Such proportions when ascertained shall be levied by the district board of the district retaining the school house or other property upon the taxable property of the district, and shall be collected in the same manner as if the same had been authorized bv a vote of the district for the building of a new school house, and when collected shall be paid to the treasurer of the new district, to be applied towards procuring a school house for such district.”
“6149. An annual meeting of each school district shall be held on the' second Tuesday of July in each year, at the school house belonging to the school district, at 2 p. m. Notice of the time and place of said annual meeting shall be given by the clerk by posting written or printed notices in at least three public places within the' district, at least ten days previous to the time of such meeting: * * * *”
“6154. The inhabitants qualified to vote at a school meeting lawfully assembled, shall have power: * * * * * *
“4th. To designate by vote a site for the district school house: Provided, that the designation of a site for a district school house shall not be over one half mile from the center of said district.
“5th. To vote annually a tax not exceeding two per cent, on all the taxable property in the district, as the meeting shall deem sufficient for the various school purposes, and distribute the amount as the meeting shall deem proper in the payment of teachers’ wages, and to build, hire, or purchase a school house and to keep it in repair and to furnish the same with necessary fuel and appendages, and to purr chase or lease a site: Provided, that when not included within the limits of a town or village said site shall not contain less than one acre.
“6th.n To authorize and direct the sale of any school site or other property belonging to the district (when the same shall be no longer needful for the district) ******
*237 “Sec: 6156. That in school districts having school houses the value of which is not less than five hundred dollars the school house site shall not be changed except by a vote of at least three fifths of the legal voters of such district in favor of such change.”
“See. 6181.

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Related

Sears v. Board of Education
1954 OK 161 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1954)
Torgerson v. Golden Valley School District No. 85
171 N.W. 626 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1919)
McCarty v. Cain
1910 OK 260 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1910)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1905 OK 117, 82 P. 726, 16 Okla. 232, 1905 Okla. LEXIS 122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stayton-v-butchee-okla-1905.