27 Ind. 465 | Ind. | 1867
The appellee filed a complaint against Gar-son, trustee of Hanover township, averring that the town of Hanover was an incorporated town, situated in said township ; that Blythe, Garrat and Patton were the school trustees of the town; that they had made an enumeration of the children of the town, and of persons residing out of it,, but desiring to send their children to the public schools of the town, for the year 1865, as required by law, and hadi been awarded the public school moneys for said year, belonging to the town; that formerly the town of Hanover was not an incorporated town, and being situated in Hanover township, the public school of the town had been under the care and management of the township trustee,
The deed is in the ordinary form, with the exception that there is no consideration named. It conveys the lot in fee “to the Hanover school township of Jefferson county, Indiana.” The appellant demurred to the complaint, but the demurrer was overruled. This -is the first error assigned.
The defendant then answered: 1. The general denial. 2.‘ That about the year 1850, Hunn conveyed by warranty deed, in fee simple, the real estate in the complaint described, to the civil township of Hanover, in the county of Jefferson, and State of Indiana, for school purposes, and delivered the deed to the proper and duly elected trustees of the township ; that the trustees neglected to have the deed recorded, and finally lost it; that afterwards, on the 5th of November, 1859, Dunn being dead, his heirs executed the warranty deed mentioned in the complaint, conveying the real estate to the civil township of Hanover, in fee simple, which deed had been duly recorded, and reference was made to the copy thereof filed with the complaint; that the last mentioned deed was executed to supply the place of the lost deed, in order to furnish evidence of title to the civil township; that at the time of the delivery of the lost deed, in 1850, the trustees of Hanover township took possession of the real estate, and had had uninterrupted and quiet possession
The appellee demurred to the second paragraph of the answer, which demurrer was sustained by the court below, and this is assigned for error.
The main question involved in the case at bar is, did the town of Hanover, when it became incorporated under the general law, succeed to the rights of the civil township in which it is situated, in the management and control of the public schools within it territorial limitsV
By the act of March 5,1855, it is provided that “incorporated towns and cities shall constitute school corporations, independent of the townships in which they may he situated, and shall he entitled to the proportional amount of school funds to which the number of children between tho ages prescribed by law will entitle them, and shall, by trustees elected by the people, or by officers appointed by the
By the law in force when the title to the lot in question was acquired, school districts were corporations for school purposes, and had the control and management of school property within their respective bounds. R. S. 1843, § 41, p. 310; § 60, el. 6, p. 313. And it was not until the act of June 14,1852, came in force, that civil townships were made corporations for school purposes. 1 R. 8. 1852, § 4, p. 440.
Under the constitution and laws of this State, school property is held in trust for school purposes by the persons or corporations authorized for the time being by statute to control the same. It is in the power of the legislature, at au*y time, to change the trustee.
"We think the facts averred in the complaint, as well as in the second paragraph of the answer, show that the property in question was held in trust for school purposes, and that by the law of March 5, 1855, supra, the town of Hanover, when it became incorporated, succeeded to the trusteeship. The court below committed no error in overruling the demurrer to the complaint, nor in sustaining the demurrer to the second paragraph of the answer,
The judgment is affirmed, with costs.