Corpier v. Thompson

155 Ark. 509 | Ark. | 1922

Humphreys, J.

The issues involved in this appeal and cross-appeal are, first, whether the trial court erred in upholding the validity of act No.. 598 of the Acts of the Legislature of 1921; 2nd, in refusing to probate the funds of Common School District No. 62: 3rd, -in refusing to permit proof to be made of the value of Mason schoolhonse, fixtures, and furniture therein, removed by Rural School District No. 20; 4th, in quieting the title in J. B. Thomason to four acres on which the Mason schoolhouse was built in old Common School District No. 62.

A criminal prosecution, growing out of an attempt to tear down and remove Mason schoolhonse, found its way to this court. The case is reported in 151 Ark., 370, under the style of Thompson v. State. The record in that case will disclose many of the facts in the instant case.

(1) Appellees, who cross-appealed, assailed the validity of act 598, Acts 1921, upon four grounds, as follows:

(a) This local act attempts to thwart the will of the people residing upon this territory and deprive them of rights given to them by the general laws of the State.

(b) The act contains independent and unrelated matters.

(c) This alleged act would deprive the children of this territory of adequate school, opportunities and facilities, and thus defeat the very purpose of the law.

(d) This alleged act does not annex contiguous territory, but leaves isolated and uncontiguous territory on both sides.

Under the general law, Common School Districts 10, 62 and 68 organized themselves by vote into Rural Special School District No. 20. In a very short time thereafter the Legislature enacted act No. 598, Acts 1921, taking a strip a mile in width and two and one-half miles in length off of the east side of Rural Special District No. 20 and adding it to Oakdale Special School District; and a strip off of the west side thereof and adding it to Oak Grove Special School District No. 17.

This court has recognized the unrestricted and plenary power of the Legislature to create and change the boundaries of school districts in this State, if in doing so the contracts or obligations of the districts affected are not impaired. Such legislation is not void by a failure to adjust equities between the several districts affected, nor on account of hardships and injustice entailed upon persons or communities within the districts. Special School Dist. No. 2 v. School District of Texarkana, 111 Ark. 379; Eubanks v. Futrell, 112 Ark. 437; Hughes v. Robuck, 119 Ark. 592; School Dist. No. 25 v. Parker, 123 Ark. 317. Under the rules announced in the several cases cited, the attacks by appellees on said act 598, designated by the letters a, c, and d, are unfounded. We also think the attack on said act designated by the letter (b) is unfounded. The several districts are in the same part of the county and so related that the different parts of the middle district might be detached and annexed to each of the other districts. We see no good reason, why this result might not have been accomplished in one act instead of two.

(2) We do not think the court erred in refusing to apportion funds of Common School District No. 62 which were not on hand at the time said district was merged in and became a part of Rural Special School District No. 20. As we understand the evidence, District No. 62 had only $67.77 on hand, and that, after the merger, Rural Special School District No. 20 paid the sum of $306.15 to teachers which School District No. 62 owed at the time. At the time of the merger there was no fund or property to prorate.

(3) We do not think the court erred in refusing to permit appellants to prove the value of the Mason schoolhouse or of the fixtures and furniture therein. It was ruled in the case of Thompson v. State, supra, that said schoolhouse, fixtures, and furntiure belonged to Rural Special School District No. 20, when the directors removed the fixtures, furniture, and a part of' the building from the four-acre tract upon which the building stood; that the directors had the right to change the schoolhouse site, fixtures, and furniture.

(4) We do not think the court erred in quieting the title in J. B. Thomason to the four acres of land constituting the site of the Mason schoolhonse. The record reflects that J. B. Thomason purchased the said tract of land from Rural School District No. 20 before act No. 598, Acts 1921, went into effect. The contention of appellant, W. J. Corpier, is that said tract of land reverted to him when Rural Special School District No. 20 abandoned the site for school purposes. The record reflects that W. J. Corpier conveyed the property to Common School District No. 62, which district was subsequently absorbed by Rural Special School District No. 20. The deed was lost, but the proof showed that it contained the following provisions: “But when ceased to be used for school purposes, that I (W. J. Corpier) or any one else owning the land at that time, is to have the land at the specific price of $60.” The above is not a reverting clause. It is an optionary clause on the part of the grant- or in the deed, to repurchase the land, upon a contingency therein expressed, for the sum of $60. The deed passed a fee title absolute to Common School District No. 62, and its successor, Rural Special School District No. 20, sold the land to appellee, J. B. Thomason, before appellant, W. J. Corpier, attempted to exercise the option.

No error appearing, the decree is affirmed.