182 Iowa 1324 | Iowa | 1918
On April 5, 1916, a petition signed by the requisite number of qualified voters, and approved by the county superintendent of schools, was presented to the board of directors of the School Township of Beaver, asking the formation of a consolidated independent school district, to include territory (describing it) consisting of not less than sixteen sections of land, according to government survey, and lying partly in the civil township of Beaver and partly in the civil township of Spring Valley, Dallas County, Iowa. Acting upon this petition, the board of directors ordered that an election be called, to be held at the village of Gardiner, within the proposed consolidated
It will be observed that, while the petition is framed in a single count, the cause of action stated has a double aspect, in that it first denies the validity and legal organization of the consolidated district of Gardiner, and, as a necessary consequence, challenges the validity of all the official acts and proceedings of the officers and board of directors of such district; and it also challenges the selection of the schoolhouse site upon objections which, if well taken, do not necessarily involve the district’s legal existence. There is much in the record to justify the thought, if not the conclusion, that the real bone of contention in the case is the location of the schoolhouse, and that, except for the conflict of opinion on this point, the attack upon the validity of the proceedings for the creation and organization of the district would not have been made. We shall, however, consider both propositions as being properly before us.
Counsel for appellant also concedes, in argument, that this court has decided adversely to the proposition that the organization of a consolidated district is invalidated because it leaves one or more subdistricts with a territory less than four government sections in extent; and the point so made is to be considered abandoned.
It follows that, for the purposes of this case, the creation and organization of the district are to be treated as valid.
“Such meetings shall be held at any place within the civil township in which the corporation is situated.”
As is familiarly understood by the people of this state, a civil township may be organized into a school township made up wholly of subdistricts, or wholly of independent districts, or in part of subdistricts and in part of independent districts, or it may include part or all of one or more consolidated districts which are, in effect, enlarged independent districts. , Subdistricts are not corporations, and have no governing board except that of the school township of which they are part; but independent districts and consolidated districts are corporations, each having its own board of directors. It follows that, when the statute above quoted speaks of school corporations “within a civil township,” reference is had to the independent districts and consolidated districts the territory of which is located in such township; and when it provides that the directors of a school corporation may meet anywhere in the civil township in which the corporation is situated, it is not open to reasonable question that this privilege is intended for the
The case made by the appellants is without sufficient proof of facts entitling them to’ equitable relief, and the decree of the district court dismissing their bill is; — Affirmed.