30 Mo. App. 641 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1888
delivered the opinion of the court.
This was a proceeding by taxpayers to restrain by injunction two of the defendants, who are directors of a school district, and a third defendant, who is treasurer of Knox county, from maintaining a supplementary public school in the town of Hurdland, in that county, in addition to the school which is maintained in the schoolhouse of the district, about half a mile from Hurdland. An injunction was granted by two county court justices, but afterwards in the circuit court a demurrer to the petition was sustained and the injunction dissolved.
The petition shows that a public school, presided over by one teacher, is kept in the old schoolhouse, and that the directors have rented rooms for an additional school of a superior grade in the town of Hurdland and have employed two teachers to keep such school. The petition does not allege that the old schoolhouse is sufficient to accommodate the pupils residing within the district. The plaintiff’s case proceeds upon the theory that no power is given by the .Revised Statutes, or by subsequent acts of the legislature, to the directors, to rent rooms for school purposes, except for the establishment of colored schools, or to establish separate schools at places other than the school-house site, and to employ teachers in such schools.
The plaintiffs are residents of the district, owning property and paying taxes therein. According to the allegations of the petition, the defendants are threatening to divert the moneys raised for school purposes within this district to an illegal use. The plaintiffs are entitled to an injunction to restrain such illegal diversion. Newmeyer v. Railroad, 52 Mo. 82; Ranney v. Bader, 67 Mo. 476, 479; Ruby v. Shain, 54 Mo. 207.
We do not see that there was any misjoinder of defendants. The petition is drawn upon the theory of restraining the two directors from issuing warrants for the payment of the wages of the teachers and for the rent of the schoolhouse in the town of Hurdland, and of restraining the other defendant, who is the treasurer of Knox county, from paying the same; and such is the relief prayed for. It would, therefore, seem that the county treasurer is, if not a necessary, at least a proper, party defendant, in order that the plaintiffs' may have the full relief which they seek.
The judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded.