Will v. District Boundary Board

16 P.2d 24, 141 Or. 54, 1932 Ore. LEXIS 207
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 18, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 16 P.2d 24 (Will v. District Boundary Board) 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
Will v. District Boundary Board, 16 P.2d 24, 141 Or. 54, 1932 Ore. LEXIS 207 (Or. 1932).

Opinion

CAMPBELL, J.

On November 9, 1931, plaintiffs filed their complaint herein, asking that the court enjoin the district boundary board of Yamhill county from canvassing the vote cast at an election held on November 2, 1931, in a proposed union high school district and from declaring said group of school districts a union high school district. In their complaint, they allege many social and economic, as well as some legal, reasons why a temporary injunction should be issued, and on final hearing, be made permanent. On this showing a temporary injunction was issued.

The answer of the defendants, in effect, denies that there are any legitimate, social, economic or legal reasons why the injunction should have been issued and prays for its dissolution.

Upon hearing, the circuit court dissolved the injunction and dismissed the suit. Plaintiffs appeal.

The main question presented is the legality of the organization of union high school district No. 4, in Yamhill county.

*56 The statute (section 35-3703, Oregon Code 1930) providing for the organization of union high school districts is as follows:

“Whenever two or more contiguous school districts * * * desire to consolidate for the purpose of forming a union high school district, and 10 or more of the legal voters in each of said districts shall have filed with the district boundary board of the county in which said districts are respectively situated, a petition signed by each of said voters and directed to said board that said districts, * * * specified in said petition be united for high school purposes only, which petition shall specify the districts * * * proposed to be so united and the site for the buildings of said proposed union high school district, the district boundary board of said county, * * * shall cause notices of the hearing of said petitions by the board * * * and that remonstrances against the formation of said union high school district may be filed as hereinafter provided, to be posted in three conspicuous places in each of said school districts by the clerk thereof for a period of 20 days prior to the date upon which said petitions are to be considered and acted upon by said board * * * provided, that it shall not be necessary in any such district to require more than one-third of the legal voters to sign such petition; * * * If 10 or more legal voters in any of said districts * * * shall, at any time before the date for the hearing of said petitions, file with the district boundary board * * * their written remonstrance, signed by each of them, against the formation of said union high school district, the district boundary board shall proceed to give notice, * * * of an election to be held in all the districts proposed to be united, * * * for the purpose of submitting to the legal voters therein the question of the formation of such union high school district. If no such remonstrance is filed with said district boundary boards, * * * prior to the date set for hearing said petitions for the formation of a union high school district by said boundary *57 board * * * the said board * * * may thereafter proceed to unite said school districts and parts of districts into a union high school district for high school purposes only. In the event that a remonstrance * * * has been filed * * * the district boundary board * * * shall, within 10 days after the date of the hearing upon the petitions by said boundary board, direct the respective school boards of the districts proposed to be united, * # * to state in the notice of the next annual school meeting or election in said school districts, or at a special meeting or election * * * to be designated by said boundary board * * * that the question of uniting said school districts * * * for high school purposes only, thus forming a union high school district, will be submitted at said election. * * * the vote on the question is to be by ballot, and the ballot shall have written or printed thereon the words:

“ ‘For Union High School — Yes’

“ ‘For Union High School -— No.’

# # # #

“If the vote is taken in polling places previously designated by the school board, the judges of the election shall accept the votes, and the clerk of election shall record the names of the voters. * * * If the tally sheet is kept by a clerk of election, the clerk and the judges shall certify to the school board the result of the vote on this question, * * *. The tally, sheet, poll list and ballots shall be placed in a sealed package by the district clerk, who shall indorse thereon the number of the district and the date of the election. Such sealed package together with a statement of the result of the election, signed by the school clerk and chairman of the school board, shall be forwarded within five days to the district boundary board, addressed to the county school superintendent as a member thereof. Within 10 days after receipt of the sealed returns from the district, the district boundary board shall open the sealed packages and canvass the votes. If the board shall determine that a majority *58 of all votes cast on the high school subject is in favor of uniting such districts for high school purposes, providing, however, that the majority of all votes cast in a majority of districts shall be in favor of such proposition, and provided that the removal of no standard high school is involved, then said board shall declare such union high school district regularly organized, * * *. If the district boundary board shall determine that a majority of all votes cast or a majority of the votes cast in a majority of the districts, other than such district or districts maintaining a standard high school, is not in favor of uniting said district for high school purposes, then said board shall immediately notify the respective school boards concerned that the proposition is defeated. If the district boundary board shall determine that a majority of all votes cast on the high school subject in the districts other than those maintaining a standard high school, provided, however, that a majority of all votes east in a majority of all such districts shall be in favor of such proposition, then the district boundary board shall declare such union high school district regularly organized as to such district, only, excluding such district, or districts, maintaining a standard high school in which last district or districts the proposition failed to carry. The ballots, tally sheets and poll lists shall be kept on file in the office of the county superintendent for a period of one year.”

Thus it will be seen that in order to organize a union high school district the law requires that, at the election held for that purpose, a majority of all the votes cast on the high school subject, a majority of the votes cast in a majority of the districts, and a majority of the votes cast in a majority of the districts other than the district maintaining a standard High school.

On November 12, 1930, school districts Nos. 4, 20, 25, 33, 49, 94, in Yamhill county, filed due and legal *59 petitions properly signed by tbe required number of legal voters, with the district boundary board of Yam-hill county, desiring to be consolidated for the purpose of forming a union high school district. These districts will be hereinafter referred to as the Amity group.

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Related

Union School District No. 5 v. Stanley
202 P.2d 509 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1949)
State Ex Rel. Brown v. Union High School District No. 7
90 P.2d 202 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1939)
School District No. 1 v. School District No. 45
37 P.2d 873 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1934)

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Bluebook (online)
16 P.2d 24, 141 Or. 54, 1932 Ore. LEXIS 207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/will-v-district-boundary-board-or-1932.