123 Iowa 55 | Iowa | 1904
At the annual meeting of the electors of the school township of Bremer held on the 11th day of March, 1901, a tax of $1,000 was voted for the erection of two schoolhouses on the sites designated on the ballots. The secretary of the township refused to certify.this tax to the board of supervisors, and an action of mandamus was brought to compel him to do so. The action was contested, and on the 29 th day of June, 1901, a judgment was rendered in the case ordering him to certify the tax so voted, which he did on the 15th day of July following. An appeal was taken from that judgment, and we held that it was erroneous, and reversed it, because of the insufficiency of the notice of the meeting. Goerdt v. Trumm, 118 Iowa, 207. Before the action of mandamus was begun, however, a majority of the board of directors of the school township at a special meeting held on the 21st day of March ordered the erection of the two schoolhouses, and directed that bids therefor be invited by publication, which was done by notice published for five weeks. On the 26th of April there was a meeting of the board at which bids ror both houses were received and considered, and the contract for one of them let. The contract for the other was entered into later. One of the houses was begun early in June, and the other between the 1st and the-15th of July. Both were completed and accepted and warrants issued to the builders in the latter part of August, 1901. At the regular September, 1901, meeting of the board of supervisors a tax was levied in accordance with the certification of July 15th. Teachers were employed^ and schools maintained in the new houses from September 1, 1901, to the latter part of May, 1902. This action was begun on the 3d day of December, 1901, and the opinion in Goerdt v. Trumm was filed on the 27th day of October, 1902. The appellants contend that the decision in the Goerdt-Trumm Case is decisive of this, because we there held that the voters present had no power to vote a schoolhouse tax under the notice given. It is undoubtedly true that the tax was not legally voted, and that, if the plaintiffs herein
The parties whose action is complained of seem to have acted in good faith. There was a diversity of opinion in the township as to the advisability of building new schoolhouses, and a decided disagreement as to the notice necessary to vote the tax, and the district court held the notice sufficient, and sustained the action of the voters. The houses were built
A motion to dismiss the appeal as to some of the plaintiffs and a motion to strike the record hook were also submitted with the case. The determination of the case on its merits disposes of the first, and the last is overruled.
We reach the conclusion that the judgment should be and it is AFFIRMED.