101 Minn. 163 | Minn. | 1907
Section 3669, G. S. 1894, was amended by chapter 125, p. 152, Laws 1901, so as to provide for an appeal from the action of the board-
Any petitioner, voter or freeholder of any of the districts affected by such order, feeling aggrieved by the action of the county commissioners, organizing or refusing to organize the district as prayed in such petition may appeal to the district court of any county in which is situated any part of the territory embraced within the boundaries of such proposed new district, upon any of the following grounds:
First. That the board of county commissioners had no jurisdiction to act.
Second. That the board of county commissioners exceeded their authority.
Third. That the action of the county commissioners is not in accord with the best interests of the inhabitants of the territory to be affected thereby.
Ai j such person desiring to appeal from the action of such commissioners, shall within thirty (30) days after the entry of the order appealed from, make and serve upon the auditor •of the proper county or counties a notice of appeal, specifying the grounds thereof, and shall execute a bond to the board of •county commissioners of the county to which an appeal is taken, in the penal sum of three hundred dollars ($300), with two or more sureties, to be approved by the auditor of such county, to secure the payment of the costs that may be taxed against such appellant in case such appeal shall not be sustained. Such appeal shall be certified and tried, and such subsequent proceedings had as in other appeals from the board of county commissioners to the district court.
Section 3670, G. S. 1894, provides that, when the territory embraced in the proposed district consists of parts of two or more counties, the petition shall be in duplicate, or more, as the case may be, and one presented to the boaird of commissioners of each of said counties, who shall severally proceed to hear the petition in the manner directed; and it shall be requisite to the organization of such dis
In August, 1903, John P. Bloomquist, respondent, with fifteen others, signed a petition in duplicate, addressed to the boards of county commissioners of Washington and Chisago counties, representing that they were a majority of the freeholders residing within the territory therein described, and were entitled to vote in school meetings in their respective districts. The petition set out the proposed territory for a new district and contained the following statement: “Fourth. That the school districts affected by the organization of the said proposed new district are school district No. 38, Chisago county; * * * also school district No. 38, Washington county; * * * also school district No. 1, Washington county.” As appears from the minutes of the official proceedings of the board of county commissioners of Washington county, this petition was considered May 3, 1904, as the following entry shows: “Matter of petition of J. P. Bloomquist and others for organizing new school district came up for action. A remonstrance signed by Peter Larson and 46 others, protesting against the proposed new district was filed. On motion, the prayer of the petitioners was denied, and the petition dismissed.” Thereupon respondent appealed' to the district court of Chisago county from the action of the board of commissioners of Washington county, and the notice of appeal recites that the ground upon which the appeal is based is “that the action of the county commissioners of said Washington county is not in accordance with the best interests of the inhabitants of the territory affected by said petition.” As appears by the return, on May 27, 1904, due service of the appeal was made on the auditor of Chisago county, and a bond for $300 was duly executed by respondent and sureties May 27, 1904, and approved by the county auditor of Chisago county. The matter came on for trial at the October, 1906, term of the district court for Chisago county, and counsel for the board of county commissioners of Washington county, appellant here, moved to dismiss the appeal, first, upon the ground that it should have been taken to the district court of Washington county, and that the district court of Chisago county had no jurisdiction to try the action; second, that the notice of appeal was not served upon the county auditor of Washington
It is true that it would be most confusing if there were no restrictions upon the number of appeals, and if it were permissible to try the same question in different jurisdictions. It should be remembered, however, that a school district is a peculiarly local institution, and has no close connection with the county in which the district is situated, although the county commissioners are authorized, primarily, to pass upon the necessity of organizing new districts within the county. The legis
What follows in the law with reference to service of notice of appeal and bond is not inconsistent with this construction. The notice ■of appeal is required to be served on the auditor of the proper county, viz., the county to which the appeal is taken, and the bond is required to be approved by the auditor of such county. Jurisdiction having been conferred upon the district court of Chisago county by the appeal, Washington county had no further interest whatever in the matter. It is not chargeable with any expense connected with the litigation, and it is of no importance that the notice of appeal was not properly served on the county auditor and that no bond was -filed therein.
In Gerber v. Board of Co. Commrs. of Wright County, 89 Minn. 351, 94 N. W. 886, we held that jurisdiction was conferred upon the board of county commissioners to establish a new school district upon a proper petition duly signed by a majority of the residents, freeholders of the proposed district, entitled to vote at the meetings. The notices of meeting to be held for the consideration of the petition, as provided by section 3668, shall be caused to be posted and published by the county commissioners; and, the board having acquired jurisdiction by presentation to them of the duly signed petition, it will not be presumed that they lost it by failure to comply with the law as to the publication and posting of notices. It does not appear from the record that the proper notices were not served and published; and, if jurisdiction was lost by reason of any default on the part of the commissioners in that respect, the burden was upon appellant to show it. Such is the effect of the holding in Gillette-Herzog Mnfg. Co. v. Board of Co. Commrs. of Aitkin County, 69 Minn. 297, 72 N. W. 123. It not being shown that the county board lost jurisdiction by failing to post and publish the proper notices, it will not be presumed that the board denied the petition for that reason; hence, although the minutes of the board meeting do not state the precise ground, it fairly appears from the record that the board passed upon the question stated in the notice of appeal, namely, the third statutory ground.
Order affirmed.