6 Dakota 248 | Supreme Court Of The Territory Of Dakota | 1889
{After stating the above facts.) From the evidence in this case and the findings of the trial court it appears that the defendant in this action is, and since May, 1882, has been, a school corporation, organized regularly under and in accordance with the laws of this territory; that on May 26, 1882, the inhabitants of said district lawfully assembled, elected the proper and necessary officers of such school district as provided by law, selected a site for a district school-house, voted a tax of 1 <f0 on the taxable property of such district to pay for such site, and build a school-house, and subsequently, to-wit: August 12, 1882, at a meeting of such inhabitants, they voted to issue bonds in the sum of $1,500, and directed the proceeds thereof to be applied on the debt incurred for such site, school-house, and furniture for the same; that such bonds were duly issued and negotiated by the school board, and the proceeds received by them; that the defendant obtained title to such school-house site June 8, 1882, and that on that day, and for the purpose of paying for such site, and to obtain funds with which to pay for such school-house and
On the trial of the action the plaintiff had judgment for the full amount of said orders, including the interest thereon, and the defendant appealed to this court.
The principal grounds of error relied upon by the defendant for a reversal of this judgment are two, viz.: First, that the school board exceeded its authority in issuing orders for a greater
Upon the former of these propositions the true rule doubtless is that corporations of the character of the defendant have only such powers as are expressly granted by the law providing for their creation, and such others as must necessarily be implied to have been given them in order to carry the purposes of their organization into effect,— such as are incidental to the exercise of the powers expressly granted or necessarily implied to effect the purpose and object for which the corporation is created.
Did the defendant exceed its authority by voting the orders in question or ratifying the act of its school board in doing so ? By subdivision o, section 29, chapter 14, Laws 1879, it is provided that the inhabitants of school districts may vote annually a tax of 1$ on the taxable property of the district to purchase or lease a site for a school-house, etc.; and by subdivision 8 of said section it is provided that school districts may vote a tax as may be necessary to furnish the school with blackTboards, stoves, maps, furniture, and apparatus necessary for illustrating the principles of science, and to discharge any debts or liabilities of the district lawfully incurred, such tax, however, not to exceed in any one year on the taxable property of the district. There is not otherwise than in this subdivision any positive authority conferred upon school districts under this law to provide the schoolhouses, which may be or have been erected, with iurnitui’e at all; and yet it cannot be doubted that though nothing whatever had been said upon the subject of furniture for these school-houses in the law itself, that, under the general powers conferred, the school district or its proper officers would have the authority and right to furnish such schooi-house properly, and make the property of the district chargeable with the necessary expense of doing so. This would indisputably have been the proper exercise of an incidental power granted, for there is perhaps no positive grant of such power, but its exercise is necessary, to the end that tne object of the law may be fulfilled.
These officers, during the years 1882 and 1883, had constructed and furnished a school-house upon a site selected by the inhabitants of this school district. In doing this they used, without authority, perhaps, of the district, school orders purporting to represent the credit of the district, though not to any extent greater than the district itself might have used them in the aggregate during the time of the construction of the school-house.
Upon the completion of the school-house the school board reported the number of orders issued, and the amount of each, the amount of proceeds received from them, and the uses to which
The following cases are important, as bearing upon the question involved in this appeal': Robbins v. School Dist., 10 Minn. 340 (Gil. 268); Norton v. County of Shelby, 6 Sup. Ct. Rep. 1132; Holmes v. City of Shreveport, 31 Fed. Rep. 113.
We find no error in the record, and the judgment appealed from must, therefore, be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.