187 N.W. 620 | S.D. | 1922
Lead Opinion
Section 7492, Revised Code 1919, provides that appeals may be taken to the circuit court from decisions of school boards relative to school matters.
Plaintiffs, who are appellants here, appeal from “the decision and action” of the board of education of respondent district. Thei notice of appeal recites the act of the ’board as follows:
“The decision * * * wherein said board adopted a certain report of the teachers’ committee of said board * * * discharging these appellants and each of them as teachers in the * * * schools maintained by said * * * district.”
As required by statute, the clerk of the school board transmitted to the clerk of the court a certified copy of the record of the proceedings of the board and all original papers filed in his office in such matter, including the notice of appeal. In the record thus transmitted was a copy of the report of the teachers’ committee referred to in the notice of appeal. Respondent moved for an order dismissing the appeal, which was granted by the trial court. From this order plaintiffs appeal to this court. The report of the teachers’ committee referred to in the notice of appeal and contained in the record, recites that—
“On October 14th the resignations of Miss Mabel Anderson and Miss Eva Downs were received and accepted by the commit*330 tee. Miss Eva Thompson and Miss Alice Grape were secured by the committee to fill the vacancies.”
The action of the board is recited as follows:
“Moved, the report of the teachers’ committee be accepted. Seconded, and unanimously carried.”
In Kaehler v. Halpin, 59 Wis. 40, 17 N. W. 868, it is said:
“All the defendants having a like interest in these questions, we think it very clear that they not only may join in an appeal from the order, but that the better practice is to require them to do so, if they desire to appeal at all. * * * If the parties appealing*334 are jointly interested in the questions decided in the action, they ought to appeal jointly. It is a saving of time and expense to permit them to do so, and we know of no rule of law which prevents them from doing so.”
To the same effect is In re Cal. Mutual Life Insurance Co., 81 Cal. 364, 22 Pac. 869.
We are of the view that the order of the trial court must be reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings in accordance with law.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting.) The notice of appeal to the circuit court from the alleged action of the board of defendant district recited that it was from “the decision * * * wherein said board * * * adopted a report of the teachers’ committee of said board * * * discharging these appellants and each of them as teachers,” etc. Such purported appeal came to the circuit court on the record certified by the clerk of the 'board. No claim is made that such certified record is in any respect incorrect. It is the record for the appeal to the circuit court, and such court was' ■bound to treat it as a verity. It states that the board adopted the report of the teachers’ committee, and that such report read that:
“The resignations of Miss Mabel Anderson and Miss Eva Downs were received and accepted by the committee.”
In Ontjes v. Thomas, 184 N. W. 795, we said:
“But the record herein discloses that the trial court never made any order refusing to vacate the judgment. * * * Let us suppose that the notice of appeal set forth only that the appeal was from an order refusing to vacate a judgment, and that, as a matter of fact, no such order had been made. Would such a notice of appeal confer jurisdiction on this court, other than jurisdiction to dismiss the purported appeal? Clearly not. A notice of appeal cannot confer * * * jurisdiction to review something having no existence. * * * This court could not acquire jurisdiction to review something having no existence merely because a party erroneously asserted that it did exist.”
If an order approving a report discharging plaintiffs was in fact made, the plaintiffs, under the express provisions of statute, could have procured an order requiring the clerk to certify a true
If the plaintiffs never did resign, they might have given notice of appeal from the order of the hoard purporting to accept a purported resignation, and upon that appeal given to the circuit court jurisdiction to determine whether or not they did resign. A finding that they did not resign would have given plaintiffs all the relief they would he entitled to or all they needed, as defendant could not claim that plaintiffs had been discharged.