Wilkins v. Newkirk, Trustee

155 N.E. 516, 85 Ind. App. 663, 1927 Ind. App. LEXIS 25
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 11, 1927
DocketNo. 12,655.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 155 N.E. 516 (Wilkins v. Newkirk, Trustee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilkins v. Newkirk, Trustee, 155 N.E. 516, 85 Ind. App. 663, 1927 Ind. App. LEXIS 25 (Ind. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

NICHOLS, J.

Action to enjoin the trustee and advisory board of Madison school township, Montgomery county, Indiana, appellees, from issuing and selling bonds in the amount of $56,000 and from levying taxes upon the taxpayers and property of such township to pay for the same, and from letting a contract or contracts for the construction of an addition to a school building in the town of Linden, located in such township, and from paying out the moneys of the township for the architect’s charges and other expenditures in the project of such construction because of the claimed illegality of the proceeding, and because, appellants alleged, the extent and cost of school facilities from such school township had already been fixed by an order of the state tax board, which appellees were ignoring; also that a duplicate proceeding for the same project was pending on appeal in the Supreme Court.

Upon complaint filed, a restraining order was issued which stopped all proceedings. Thereafter, the defendants filed answer in general denial. Trial was had, and special findings of facts made; with the result that judgment was rendered against appellants, dissolving the injunction. The error assigned is the court’s conclusion of law. We are able to understand, without difficulty, the points which appellants undertake to present and we therefore give no attention to appellees’ *666 objections to appellants’ brief which shows a good faith effort to present the points involved.

It appears by the findings that in the town of Linden, Madison township, Montgomery county, Indiana, exists a schoolhouse which has been built for some years and is in use for high school purposes for the entire township, and for the grades for part of the township. This building is in good condition and of modern type and construction, except that from increased' branches of study adopted in recent years, it has become crowded in certain departments.

In January, 1922, the trustee and advisory board, at a special session properly called, found that an emergency existed for the construction of an addition to the school building and, under proper proceedings, adopted plans and specifications and gave notice of an intention to issue bonds for such addition to the amount of the estimated cost of such addition. Objection was made by taxpayers, in the numbers and in the manner authorized by law, and a hearing was had before the State Board of Tax Commissioners, with the result that the proposed issue of $80,000 of bonds was disapproved by such board, but it entered an order approving an issue of $80,000 for the construction of such addition to the building as was necessary, and this order has never been appealed from, modified or set aside.

In April, 1924, the trustee and advisory board of this same township instituted proceedings again as an emergency matter, at a special meeting, for the construction of the same addition to the school building, ignoring the former proceedings and order of the tax board, and proposed to issue bonds of the township in the amount of $55,000 for such project. Plans and specifications were adopted of the same general type and design as were had in the proceeding in 1922, except the plans were reduced in size so as to reduce the cost of the *667 project to approximately $55,000, it being intended to take care of additional items of construction and equipment to the extent of several thousand dollars outside of the bond issue. To this proceeding, taxpayers of the township in the proper number and manner again remonstrated, and a hearing on this project was had before the State Board of Tax Commissioners,.with the result that the state board issued an order directing the trustee and advisory board to advertise and receive bids, and if proper bids were received, the bonds would be approved. The trustee and advisory board then advertised for bids and proposed to proceed with the letting of a contract for the school addition and the issuing of bonds, but, before this was done, certain taxpayers of the township filed in the Montgomery Circuit Court proceedings to enjoin the construction and issuing of bonds, with the result that a restraining order was issued and later a hearing on this proceeding was had, with the result that the court dissolved the restraining order, and thereupon the plaintiffs in that case prayed and perfected an appeal to the Supreme Court of the state, which appeal is now pending and the township authorities are resisting it, and the question in issue on the appeal has not yet been decided.

All proceedings were in proper and legal form. And the proceedings begun in 1924, were, as to the forms of record, notices, remonstrances and other statutory steps, it is claimed by the township authorities, all in due form, as provided by law.

Appellee Newkirk, is and since January, 1923, has at all times been the properly qualified and acting trustee, and appellees Rhea, Kantz and Vincent, have at all times for the same period been the properly qualified and acting members of the advisory board of Madison school township, and the proceedings had in 1922 were had by the then qualified and acting township trustee *668 and advisory board members. The township trustee and advisory board members now claim it is their intent wholly to abandon the proceedings had for the schoolhouse construction in 1922 and in 1924, and that they have abandoned these proceedings; although they have not abandoned the proceedings on file in the Supreme Court taken by the taxpayers from the township proceedings in 1924.

On June 3, 1925, without notice in any way to the taxpayers of the township, the trustee issued a notice to the members of the advisory board for a special meeting to be held on that date, to determine whether an emergency existed for appropriating funds for building an addition to said school building, which notice was duly received. Pursuant to such notice, the trustee and advisory board members met on June 3, 1925, and unanimously consented to consider whether such an emergency existed, determined that it did exist, and authorized and directed the trustee to issue bonds of the township in the sum of $65,000. Proper record was made of such proceeding.

, No further action was taken toward the issuing of the bonds in question until in September of that year, and no notice to the taxpayers of any intention to issue such bonds given until in September, and in making up the annual budget for the township, the township trustee did not include in the estimate of taxes to be levied for such township, which he duly published in August, 1925, any levy or estimate for taxes to provide funds for the payment of the principal or interest of any bond issue for said township. But the trustee and advisory board, at the regular annual meeting held in such township September 1, 1925, in making the tax levy for the township for the ensuing year, included an item of twenty-five cents on the hundred dollars of the taxable property of said township for the purpose, as *669 stated in their record, of paying the principal and interest of a proposed bond issue made for the construction of the addition to the school house in question. And they claimed the levy was so included as an emergency levy left out of the annual budget as published.

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Bluebook (online)
155 N.E. 516, 85 Ind. App. 663, 1927 Ind. App. LEXIS 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilkins-v-newkirk-trustee-indctapp-1927.