9 S.D. 102 | S.D. | 1896
This is an action on a school district bond for $1,400, issued by school district No. 7, Brookings county. A demurrer was interposed to the complaint by school district No. 7, which was overruled. A demurrer was also interposed by the other nine defendants jointly, on the ground that the complaint did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. This demurrer was sustained, and from the order sustaining it the plaintiff appeals.
The complaint is exceedingly lengthy, but a very brief synopsis will suffice to present the questions to be determined on this appeal. It is alleged that in 1878 school district No. 7 was organized, embracing about 46 government sections; that on February 22, 1879, the territorial legislature passed an act authorizing the district school boards of any school district in the counties of Minnehaha, Brookings Moody and Lake to issue bonds under certain conditions therein specified; that under the authority of that act school district No. 7 issued the bond in suit, for the erection of a school building. It is then alleged that subsequently to the execution and negotiation of said bond the other 9 school districts were organized, each of which took in a portion of the territory of school district No. 7, leaving that district with only about 10 sections, instead of its original 46 sections. The boundaries of these various districts are fully given. Then follows this allegation: “That the defendant school district No. 7 of Brookings county
It is contended by tbe learned counsel for the plaintiff and appellant that, inasmuch as the school districts, other than No.
There seems to be no question as to the legality of the formation of the several school districts made defendants herein, and, as we understand counsel, there is no claim that in the school laws under which these districts were created there was any express provision imposing upon the newly created' districts any liability for the indebtedness of the old Seventh district. In fact, it is alleged, that the old district ‘ ‘remains the same original obligor and maker of said bond, as a municipal corporation, with its territory so diminished by the creation and organization of the other” districts, and has ‘ ‘retained all the lands, territory and taxable property within its corporate limits,” except, etc., and ‘‘that no adjustment, equalization, or apportionment of the said debt * * * has ever been made or had between defendants, or any of them.” While it is not so stated in the complaint in terms, we may safely conclude that the school house, for the erection of which the bond was issued, still remains as a part of the property of district No. 7. As we have seen, without some express legislation imposing a liability upon the new districts, they cannot be held liable at law for the debts of the old district, and certainly there are in this case no equitable grounds alleged for imposing a liability for the debt of the old district upon the new. When the inhabitants of the new districts .ceased to receive benefits from the school building in<the old district, and were compelled to provide -new buildings for themselves, they, in justice, were entitled to be relieved from liabilities incurred by the old district for school buildings no longer of any use to them. As between themselves, therefore, there was no. liability for which the new districts could be held. But it is contended that it is a creditor