299 N.W. 178 | Neb. | 1941
This action was begun8in. the district court for Richardson county. Its object is to enjoin the levy and collection of taxes for School District No. 52 in said county, for the year 1940 and subsequent years, upon the north half of section 19, township 1 north, range 18, east of the 6th P. M., in said county of Richardson. The plaintiffs, four in number, are the owners of said half section of land. The defendants are School District No. 52 of Richardson county, R. W. Daggett, county clerk and county assessor of said county, V. H. Shier, county treasurer of said county, and Emmett Gleason, precinct assessor of Rulo precinct in said county. From a decree granting to plaintiffs the relief prayed, the defendants have perfected an appeal to this court.
The petition of the plaintiffs alleges the official capacities of the various defendants, and alleges that the defendant School District No. 52 and School District No. 91 in said county were both organized in the year 1877. The petition further alleges the ownership of said half section of land in the plaintiffs, and that said land.was included in said School District No. 91 at the time of its organization in the year 1877, and has never been removed therefrom. It is further alleged that in the year 1889 the defendants, and their predecessors in office, wrongfully placed said real estate upon the assessment roll of the defendant School' District No. 52, and that from such year 1889 to the present time such real estate has been wrongfully and continuously so placed upon the assessment roll of the defendant School District No. 52 for tax purposes. The answer of the defendant school district admits the official capacity of the defendants, respectively, denies that said real estate is in said School District No. 91, alleges that said real estate is in the defendant school district, and pleads that, on account of the action of the plaintiffs, and their predecessors in title, in accepting the benefits of the defendant school district for so long a number of years, the plaintiffs are estopped to deny that said real estate is within the defendant school district.
Section 79-308, Comp. St. 1929, provides as follows:
“Every school district shall, in all cases, be presumed to have been legally organized when it shall have exercised the franchises and privileges of a district for the term of one year.”
The position taken by the plaintiffs is, first, that the land involved was once a part of School District 91, second, that under the section of the statute above quoted such District
The presumption of regular organization raised by the section of our statute above quoted does not extend to the territorial boundaries of a school district. Chicago, B. & Q. R. Co. v. Cass County, 51 Neb. 369, 70 N. W. 955. The question of whether or not either of the two school districts involved herein was regularly organized is not involved in this case.
The plaintiffs are the ones who allege that their half section of land is not included within the boundaries of the defendant school district. The question of whether or not this land is within the defendant district is a question of fact. The burden of proof as to such issue of fact in this collateral proceeding is upon the plaintiffs. Chicago, B. & Q. R. Co. v. Cass County, supra; 56 C. J. 252.
Under the pleadings and the evidence in this case, the rule to the effect that, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, the law presumes official acts of public officers in a collateral attack thereon to have been done rightly, and with authority, and that in such collateral attack acts done which presuppose the existence of other acts to make them legally operative are presumptive proof of the latter, has special applicability. Such rule will be found discussed in the following cases: Tierney v. Cornell, 3 Neb. 267; Bissell v. Fletcher, 27 Neb. 582, 43 N. W. 350; 22 C. J. 130; Bank of the United States v. Dandridge, 12 Wheat. 64, 6 L. Ed. 552. From the presumption raised by this rule, it may be said that the plaintiffs’ land was in School District No. 91 prior to the year 1889, in the absence of evidence to the contrary. The same rule of presumption, however, presumes a regular and lawful transfer to defendant district prior to the tax levy in the year 1889, as well as that such land has been kept in the defendant district from the time of such transfer to the present date. There is no evidence to refute this presumption. The plaintiffs have failed to maintain their burden of proof. The position taken by the plaintiffs is untenable.
For reasons above stated, the decree of the trial court is reversed, with instructions to dismiss the plaintiffs’ petition.
Reversed.