7 S.D. 272 | S.D. | 1895
This appeal is from a judgment against school directors awarding a peremptory writ of mandamus upon the return of an alternative writ, with the requirements of which defendants had failed to comply, and by which they were required, as such officers, to purchase a certain school house site within the district, to receive bids for the removal of a certain school house thereto, and to enter into a conformable contract with the lowest bidder, in accordance with a vote of the electors previously taken at a special meeting, allegedin the affidavit to have been called pursuant to notice, and in compliance with a petition signed by seven resident voters of said district. To the alternative writ, and the affidavit upon which the same was issued, defendants in their official capacity filed a demurrer or motion to quash, upon the following grounds: “First, The plaintiff has not legal capacity to maintain this proceeding. Second. There is a defect of parties plaintiff, in this: that the state of South Dakota is not made a party plaintiff. Third. There is a defect of parties defendant, in that the district school board of school district No. 29 of Brookings county, a municipal corporation, should have been made a party defendant, and is a necessary party defendant; and in this: that the chairman of said board is a necessary and proper party defendant. Fourth. That said writ does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, nor to justify the court in issuing a peremptory writ of mandamus.”
Respondent's counsel have moved this court to require appellants to execute and file herein an undertaking as required in section 5219 of the Compiled Laws, and to- strike from the record what has been denominated a “bill of exceptions,” upon the ground that the same is immaterial, irrelevant, and contradictory of the record made in the trial court, in that no demurrer was filed therein to the alternative writ of mandamus; but as we have concluded that the case must be reversed, an undertaking would be
It appears, from the affidavit upon which the application was based,. that the relator, a legal voter and taxpayer of said district, has four children of school age entitled to school privileges therein; that the schoolhouse in question, to which he .must send his children, if at all, as presently located, is three miles from his place of residence, an I that said children are thereby deprived of school privileges; that if the schoolhouse were removed to the location described in said affidavit, and designated by the voters of said district as the site to which the same should be re
It is alleged that plaintiff is the chairman of the school board in question, and that defendants constitute a majority thereof, and, as it clearly appears that plaintiff is willing and anxious to act in accordance with the mandate of the court, he is not an indispensable party defendant. Smith v. Lawrence, supra.
To the objection “that said alternative writ does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, nor to justify the court in issuing a peremptory writ of mandamus,” we will now direct our attention. Counsel for appellants maintain that it is> neither alleged in the affidavit nor alternative writ, nor does it in any manner appe'ar, that a demand had been made upon the defendants, or either of them, to perform the acts required by the alternative writ; but, if it were the well defined and imperative official duty of the defendants to perform such acts unconditionally, no personal demand is necessary. The law is continually demanding, and the failure to perform constitutes a refusal. Smith v. Lawrence, supra, Merrill, Mand. 257. Under section 3 of chapter 4, Laws 1893, at page 116, the clerk of the school district board, having under its control but one school, is required, when requested by a majority of the board to call a special meeting at any time, by giving writ, ten notice to each member of the board; and, when there are not more than three schools, five legal voters may petition the clerk to call a special meeting of the voters at any time, and it shall be the duty of the clerk to post, at least ten days prior to the time of meeting, in three of the conspicuous places in the district, a notice of such meeting, giving the date, hour and object thereof; and in a