131 Wash. 508 | Wash. | 1924
This is an injunction proceeding, brought by appellant as a resident and taxpayer of school district No. 171, a district of the third class, in King county, Washington, against the directors of the district, to enjoin them from proceeding to purchase a two-acre tract of ground as an additional school site, and to restrain the county auditor from issuing a warrant to the Standard Oil Company in payment for the property.
The complaint presents two causes of action:
(1) That a majority of the board are proceeding fraudulently pretending to buy the property as an ad
(2) That even though the board is proceeding in good faith, nevertheless it is proceeding without authority from the electors.
It was admitted at the trial that it was the intention of the board of school directors to buy the property unless restrained, and that they had in fact drawn a voucher for that purpose and delivered it to the county auditor, asking for the issuance of a warrant to pay for the property. It was also admitted that the county auditor would, unless restrained, issue and deliver the warrant to the owner of the property. It was admitted that the school district has owned its present school site for upwards of twenty years, and that it was acquired as the result of a majority vote of the electors of the district; that a school building has been built thereon and for all of that period of time has been and now is being used by the district for school purposes.
The question of removing the school to another site has been previously submitted to the voters of the district and voted upon. On May 8, 1923, a special school district election was held in which the voters voted upon two propositions: (1) to remove the present school to another site; and (2) to purchase additional property adjoining the existing school site for the purpose of enlarging the same. The election board, upon canvassing the ballots, found that both propositions had carried. A suit to test the validity of the
A two-thirds vote is required to remove a school from one site to a new site under the conditions here involved, and a majority vote only to purchase an additional site. This matter involves the following proceedings had by the board of directors of the district, and the voters thereof:
On November 9, 1923, the board held a meeting and passed a resolution directing the clerk to call a special school district meeting for December 8,1923, from four o’clock p. m. to eight o’clock p. m., for the purpose of determining whether or not the purchase of the additional school site of two acres from the Standard Oil Company, as described on another page of the record of the board of directors, should be made, and it was decided to have the voting by secret ballot, and that the entire board of directors would officiate.
“Notice of Special School District Meeting.
“Notice is hereby given that a special meeting of the legal school electors of School District No. 171 of Medina, King County, Washington will be held at school house in said District on the 8th day of December, 1923, beginning at the hour of 4 p. m. of said day for the purpose of determining whether or not to purchase Standard Oil Tract as additional school site, . Price $2,800.00. Polls close at 8 p. m. By order of the Board of Directors.
“Dated this 24th day of November, 1923.
(Signed) R. Zaloudek,
“School District. Clerk.”
Upon arrival at the school house on December 8, at 4 p.m., the directors Bechtel and Flagg took the oath that they would act as judges of the special meeting to be held on the 8th day of December, 1923, at the school house, and attend the special meeting during its continuance, etc. Zaloudek took an oath as clerk of the school board following the form used by the directors.
After this special meeting or election of December 8, the board of directors met to consider the results thereof, and made the following entries on the minute books of the district:
“School Board authorized a special school district meeting to be held at School House on December 8, 1923, from 4 p.m. to 8 p.m. The purpose of the meeting was to determine whether or not the Board was to purchase the two acres of the Standard Oil Company at $2,800.00, and fully described on page 24 of these minutes. . . . The voting starting promptly at 4 p.m., and ceased promptly at 8 p.m. One man coming purposely from Yakima to vote was denied the right as he arrived three minutes past 8 p.m. Ballots were printed on white paper and numbered consecutively and‘had the following notation: Shall School District No. 171 purchase the Standard*512 Oil Tract as an additional school site for the snm of $2,800.00? The results of the vote were as follows: Total votes cast 183; Total votes ‘Yes’ 98; Total votes ‘No,’ 85.’ ”
The evidence shows that there are about 200 legal voters of the school district, and that 183 of them voted at this special meeting or election.
Appellant contends that the Laws of 1921, p. 179 [Rem. Comp. Stat., §5143], provided that all general and special elections in counties of the first class and class A counties, whether for the election of municipal district officers or for the submission to the voters of any city, town, township or district, or for the adoption, approval or rejection, shall be held on the first Tuesday after the first Monday in May in the year in which they are called. An amendment to this law, ch. 53, Laws of 1923, p. 171 [Rem. 1923 Sup. § 5143], provides for the holding of elections where emergencies exist whenever requested so to do by resolution of the governing board of such municipality or district, by the election officers of such county.
Brushing aside some of the contentions of appellant, as for instance, that the school directors are in fact purchasing the additional site for the purpose of changing the present site, and removing the present school thereto, and that there was in fact no election authorizing such change of site in conformity with the law, until these questions come squarely before-us, since at present the school officers disclaim any such intention, we will proceed to consider what we believe to be the determining factor in this ease.
At the trial the respondent directors disclaimed any attempt to hold any election either general or special. The trial court held that their proceedings on December 8, were sufficiently regular, even though somewhat
We are obliged to hold that the notice in this case was sufficient under the cases above cited, and it is that directed by the state superintendent under the school code, with the exception of the addition to the notice that the polls would close at 8 p.m. In the School District No. 56 case, supra, cited and relied upon by the trial judge, there is a distinction in the facts. In that case, the voters of the district convened in a special meeting in a deliberative form as contemplated by law, but voted by rising vote instead of by ballot as the statute directs. This court observed that there was no requirement in the statute that ballots shall be upon white paper, that ballot boxes shall be prepared or judges appointed to receive and count the ballots; that it does not provide what the ballots shall contain, nor require secrecy as to the ballots or manner of voting; in fact, none of the requirements usually accompanying the usual form of election are made essential. And, furthermore, that no original provision of the statute, either direct or implied, declares an election void if the requirements of the statute are not followed in detail. It was therefore held that the manner of voting was merely directory, and that, since there was no contention that the election complained of did not express the popular will of the electors, it would not be held invalid. Similar informalities were passed over as not invalidating an election for such purposes in the other cases cited.
A school district meeting is described in Regan v. School District No. 25, supra, as follows:
“But the meeting provided for by § 2442 is not an election, and we do not think that there is anything in the statute requiring a vote by ballot, a ballot box or the keeping open or closing of polls. It was a meeting of the voters of the district for conference and consultation, fashioned after the town meetings of the New England and other older states of the Union. That it was not intended to be an election is evidenced by the fact that no provision is made by the statute, for an inspector, judges, or other election officers; hut provision is thereby made for a chairman and a clerk of such meeting and for a record of the proceedings to be kept, certified and filed by said clerk.”
Such New England or town meetings are clearly distinguishable from elections. Chicago & Iowa R. v. Miller, 101 Ill. 583.
“The school meeting is a meeting of the qualified electors of the district at which all business of the district upon which they are to vote is to be transacted, and the term ‘District Meeting’ means the coming together and assembling of the electors in a body at a stated time and place.”
Parker v. School Dist. No, 4, 17 Wyo. 534, 101 Pac. 944.
“It is well settled that the powers given to any legislative or other deliberative body must be exercised by the body itself, and cannot be exercised by the members thereof in their individual capacity, although all of the members join in the act.”
State ex rel. Bruce v. Davidson, 32 Wis. 114.
So here, although each of the two hundred electors of this district may have exercised his judgment in his individual capacity, he did not meet with the other electors of the district in a deliberative legislative body. The purpose of the statute was, therefore not complied with. These are matters of substance, not merely irregularities.
We are therefore of the opinion that, there being no legal meeting of the voters of the district, as provided by statute, on December 8, 1923, the directors of the district are not authorized to proceed to purchase the
The judgment is therefore reversed.
Main, O. J., Fullerton, Parker, and Mackintosh:, JJ., concur.