60 Me. 332 | Me. | 1872
If obstinate persistency on the part of a small numerical majority of the voters in a school district, in locating and building the district school-house where it pleased themselves, in defiance of repeated decisions of the statute appellate tribunal, and of the provisions of law, and in total disregard of the wishes and rights of a minority, embracing nearly half the legal voters of the district, would make a good case for this respondent, he ought to prevail.
The facts appear to be in brief as follows: The old school-house in the district having been burned, at a meeting held March 28, 1867, the district, under an appropriate article in the warrant, voted, eighteen to fourteen, to locate ‘ on the spot occupied by the old one,’ and the clerk recorded the vote, specifying the location for which the minority voted. The records further show, that upon an appeal claimed by three of the minority, under the provisions of R. S. of 1857, c. 11, § 27, the selectmen of the town, after due notice, on the 13th of April, 1867, unanimously decided in favor of the spot selected by the minority, and located the schoolhouse there, and certified their decision to the clerk of the district the same day; and,’on the 23d of May, duly laid out a lot for that purpose, and filed their location, with the boundaries and admeas
But, pending these proceedings, the majority of the district, who favored the old location, procured a meeting of the district on the 8th of April, 1863, at which the district again voted, twenty to fifteen, to locate the school-house on the old lot, the minority adhering to the location made by the selectmen at their request the year preceding. Regardless of the decision of the selectmen and of the proceedings still pending, the majority went on, at this meeting, and voted to build the house and complete it by the first of December ensuing, and to raise $600 therefor, and chose a building committee to superintend the expenditure. The clerk of the district certified the vote to raise the $600 to the assessors of the town; and, to prevent its being collected and paid out, ten taxable inhabitants of the district brought the process now before us, claiming, that, under these circumstances, the district had no legal right to raise money by taxation to build a school-house on that lot, and that if collected and paid out for that purpose, it would be devoted to an illegal purpose, within the mischief intended to be prevented by R. S. of 1864, c. 239. A temporary injunction was ordered, and the question is, shall it be made perpetual ?
If it is material, and parol evidence is admissible to prove it,
This respondent has never filed any answer or plea in this case, but the parties interested, intervening in his name, resist any order making the injunction perpetual on the following grounds :
1. Because, they say, the temporary injunction ordered in vacation (Sept. 16, 1868) ceased to be operative, inasmuch as there was no motion to make it permanent before the end of the next term, by virtue of R. S. of 1857, c. 77, § 10. But the docket entries show, that at every term, up to and including the August term, 1869, there was a special entry, that the injunction should be continued to the end of the next term, and the time of taking testimony was extended to same time ; and that, thereafterwards, the entry was at each term ‘ continued as before,’ until the last April term, when the case was marked ‘Law on statement of facts to be agreed upon.’ Apparently, by consent of counsel, the report of evidence before us was substituted for the statement of
2. It is argued, that because the general power to build schoolhouses and to raise money for that purpose is given by statute to school districts, it follows that this money was not proposed to be raised for an illegal purpose, and, therefore, this process cannot be maintained, and the case of Johnson v. Thorndike, 56 Maine, 37, is cited. That was a correct and wholesome decision, and if the case fell within the principle there enunciated, we should be spared the trouble of further examination.
But when an appeal has been taken from the action of a school district in selecting a site for their school-house, and another lot has been designated by the municipal officers of the town, in pursuance of the power conferred upon them by the statute, the district no longer has the legal right to determine where the schoolhouse shall be located by anything short of a two-thirds vote,, or to raise money for the erection of a school-house upon any other lot, than the one thus designated by the appellate tribunal; and. money raised or paid for the erection of a school-house upon any other lot,, must be considered as raised and paid for an illegal purpose; for the statute is express, that, when the decision of the municipal, officers shall have been recorded, ‘ the district shall proceed, to- erect or remove the school-house, as if determined by a sufficient majority of the voters present at said meeting.’ Until the location thus, designated has been changed by the verdict of a jury, or by the removal of the objections entertained by the minority in the district, it is not competent for them to evade the duty thus imposed,, or to raise money for the erection of a school-house upon a lot not designated by ‘ a sufficient majority of the voters present’ at the-
The answer must be in the negative.
3. But it is suggested, that until after the reception of parol evidence of the application to the agent, and the ordering of the mandamus to the clerk of the district, there was no record evidence that the meeting of March 28, 1867, was a legal meeting, and, therefore, the appeal from its decision, and the decision of the municipal officers in favor of the location, voted for by the minority, were invalid. Not so. .If the fact of the application and subsequent legal proceedings existed,, and the meeting was actually regularly called and notified, its proceedings were valid. The clerk’s dereliction and the failure to record the application and warrant, might make the proof more difficult, but it did not invalidate the doings of the meeting. Certainly as among themselves the voters of the district must be held cognizant of the facts. That parol evidence is admissible to supply the deficiency, was expressly decided in Soper v. Livermore, 28 Maine, 202. It is not in the power of the clerk of a school district to destroy the effect of the action of his district, by failing or refusing to, record the proper pa
4. Again it is claimed that the record does not now show that the meeting of March 28,186T, was a legal meeting, because it is not directly stated, in the return of the warrant, that the meetinghouse and Crosby Reed’s shop, the two public and conspicuous places where the copies of the warrant and notice were posted, were within the district. And again we ask, what was the fact ? If the places where the warrant and notice were posted are within the district, and the voters had, in point of fact, the precise notice which the statute requires, there would seem to be little wisdom or propriety in overturning the doings of the meeting on account of such an omission in the record. And other records in the case (among them the return upon the warrant for the meeting of April 8, 1868, at which the district voted to raise the money) show, that those places were within the district, and were the usual places to post notifications of district meetings when there was no schoolhouse.
We see no good reason why this injunction, which has been so long continued, should not be made perpetual.
But as there seems to have been no cause for the long delay in bringing this matter to a hearing, we think the plaintiffs should tax no costs after December term, 1869, except for copies of the case, and the clerk’s fee for entry upon the law docket, and certificate of decision.
Decree accordingly. Injunction made perpetual.