146 Ind. 221 | Ind. | 1896
This action was brought by the relators for a writ of mandate, to require the appellant school trustee to employ a teacher for and to take charge of and maintain a school in schoolhouse No. 1, located in the village of Conroe, in said township.
A demurrer to the complaint and to the alternative writ issued thereon having been overruled, the appellant filed his return to the wrrit in five paragraphs, the first being a general denial and the remaining paragraphs special pleas, setting out a history of the trustee’s action in relation to the school in question. The court sustained, demurrers to the several special paragraphs of answer, whereupon the appellant withdrew his answer in general denial and elected to stand upon the court’s rulings upon the demurrers. Judgment was then entered in accordance with the prayer of the complaint, and the mandate made peremptory.
The facts as recited in the complaint do not differ essentially from those stated in the answer. If, therefore, the action of the court in overruling the demurrer to the complaint was correct, the judgment should be affirmed, otherwise it should be reversed.
It is further alleged, “that the relators have unanimously requested said Kessler, as such trustee, to employ a teacher for said school, but he refused, and still refuses to do so, and assigns as a reason for such refusal that one James Fickle, his immediate predecessor as such school trustee of said township, in the year 1895, after the close of the school year of 1894-5, changed and relocated the site of said schoolhouse No. 1 at another place, about three-fourths or seven-eights of a mile distant from said schoolhouse at Conroe, and had there erected another schoolhouse; but the relators aver that no such change of site or location of said schoolhouse had been made by his predecessor, nor by any predecessor, nor had the location of said schoolhouse been in any way disturbed; that said predecessor had not at any time presented to the county school superintendent of schools a petition, pursuant to the statute, asking to change and re-estab
It is provided in our school law, section 5920, Burns’ R. S. 1894 (4444, R. S. 1881), that “The trustees shall take charge of the educational affairs of their respective townships, towns and cities. They shall employ teachers; establish and locate, conveniently, a • sufficient number of schools for the education of the white children therein; and build, or otherwise provide, suitable houses, furniture, apparatus, and other articles and educational appliances necessary for the thorough organization and efficient management of said schools.”
Appellant contends that, under the foregoing statute, he had full authority, as school trustee of Lauramie township, to do all the acts of which complaint is made by the appellee’s relators; that, by the provisions of said statute, he was sole judge as to the employment of teachers and the location or removal of schools, subject only to appeal to the county superintendent, as provided in section 6028, Burns’ R. S. 1894 (4537, R. S. 1881). Trager, Tr., v. State, ex rel., 21 Ind. 317; Knight, Tr., v. Woods, 129 Ind. 101.
It is true that, under said statute, it was formerly held by this court that, subject to appeal to the county superintendent, the discretion of the school trustee in relation to matters specified in the statute could not be controlled, save only, perhaps, in case of a clear abuse of such discretion. Crist v. Brownsville Tp., 10 Ind. 461; Braden v. McNutt, 114 Ind. 214.
Counsel for appellee, however, earnestly insist that the statute cited, and the decisions of this court in re
Section 1 of said act provides, “That whenever it becomes necessary for the trustee of any township in this State to change and re-establish the site of any school building and remove said building to a new site and location therefor, such trustee shall first present to the county superintendent of schools of the county in which township it is situated, a petition setting forth therein the place and particular point to which it is desired to change and relocate the site of any such building, and to remove the same thereto, together with a brief statement of the purposes and reasons for such proposed change of location of said school building, and upon such petition shall first procure an order from such county superintendent authorizing him to change the site and location of such school building and remove said building to its new site and location: Provided, That said petition shall be signed by said trustee and the majority of the patrons of the school where said building is located, and satisfactory proof shall be made to said county superintendent that the persons signing said petition constitute a majority of the patrons of said school.”
In section 2, provision is made for notice by the trustee to the patrons of the school of his intention to present such petition to the county superintendent.
It is confessed by the demurrer to the complaint that in the attempted change and relocation of the site of school Ro. 1, the trustee proceeded without any regard to the provisions of the foregoing statute. Counsel argue, however, that the statute has application only to cases where it is proposed to remove the school
This, it seems to us, would be a narrow view to take of the purpose and meaning of the act of the legislature. It is certainly a rare circumstance that it should he desired to send a house-mover to change the location of a school building. And why, in such a rare case, it should be judged necessary to have the trustee and a majority of the patrons of the school petition the county superintendent for leave to take the building from one place to another, while in the much more frequent case when it is desired to erect a new building at another place, the trustee should be allowed to proceed at his own discretion, does not seem clear.
But we do not think that the language of the act admits of any such limited interpretation. The undoubted purpose of the legislature was to take away the discretion hitherto exercised by township trustees in so important a matter as the removal and relocation of the site of a school building. The language of the act shows that the intention was to give the majority of the patrons of the school a controlling voice in the removal of their school from the place where it had once been located. The judgment of the trustee and that of the county superintendent must also be united to that of the majority of the school patrons before ¡such removal shall be allowed. The evident purpose of the legislature was that the reasons in favor of removal should be so conclusive that all persons concerned, including a majority of those most interested; namely, the patrons of the school, should unite in
Neither the school trustee by himself, therefore, nor even the trustee and the county superintendent together, on appeal from the former to the latter, have power, without the concurrence of the majority of the patrons of the school, to change the location of a school when once fixed. The legislature saw fit to take this matter from the arbitrary control of the school officers and to restore it to those to whom it originally belonged, the people of the school district itself. For a ease much like the case at bar, and decided under a statute similar to our own, see State, ex rel., v. Marshall, 13 Mont. 136, 32 Pac. 648.
Judgment affirmed.