159 Ind. 423 | Ind. | 1902
— In 1894, Maumee school township caused to be built on lands owned by it for school purposes a schoolhouse costing $3,500. Afterward, on April 8, 1897; the town of Shirley City was incorporated under the general law of this State. The boundaries of the town at the time it was laid out and incorporated included this school lot and building. A board of trustees for the school town of Shirley City having been duly elected and qualified, it claimed the possession and control of this school property. The trustees of Maumee school township denied the right of the board to such possession and control on the ground that the school township, on March 3, 1899, was indebted for the buildings constructed on the said lot to the amount of $1,104.66; that by virtue of the provisions of an act of the legislature passed March 3, 1899 (Acts 1899, p. 376, §5997a Burns 1901), the school city was made liable for said debt, and the possession of the said school lot and building was given to the school township until it should be fully paid. The appellee contends that this is not the'proper construction or legal effect of the said act, and insists that, if it is, the act is retrospective, devests vested rights, and, therefore, is unconstitutional and void.
It is entirely clear, as we think, that the act of March 3, 1899, supra, does not apply to the circumstances of this
This statute operated .on cities and towns which, previously to the passage of the act, had annexed territory on which school property was situated, or which should annex such territory subsequently to the passage of the act. It applied, also, to'those cities and towns which should be incorporated after March 3, 1899, in which territory annexed by them, or included within their corporate limits, there was, or should be, the property of any school township used by such school township for school purposes.
In construing a statute, its words must be interpreted according to their plain and ordinary sense. The term “annex” means to add or unite to something already existing; to subjoin; to affix; as, to unite a province to a kingdom, a codicil to a will, a condition to a grant. In Black’s Law Dictionary, the word “annexation” is thus defined: “The act of attaching, adding, joining, or uniting one thing to another; generally spoken of the connection of a smaller or subordinate tiling with a larger or principal thing.
The statute, as we have observed, also extended to “any town hereafter incorporated,” i. e., incorporated after the passage of the act of March 3,-1899. But the town of Shirley City was incorporated April 8, 1897, or nearly two years before the act was passed. It being evident that "the act of March 3, 1899, does not apply here, we are not required to determine the question of its constitutionality.
In this State public school property is held in trust for school purposes for the use of the public by the persons or corporations authorized, for*the time being, to control the same. The person or corporation so holding the property is merely an agent or trustee for the State, or its inhabitants, and is liable at any time to be displaced, removed, or superseded by an act of the legislature, or by a change in the situation of the property by virtue of existing laws.
Prior to the enactment of the statute of March 3, 1899, supra, it had been declared by this court in numerous cases
It follows that when the town of Shirley City was incorporated, and a board of school trustees for the school city was elected and qualified, the school property within the corporate limits of the town, previously controlled and managed by Maumee school township, passed, by operation of law, to the control and management of the school board of the town, notwithstanding the fact that said Maumee school toAvnship owed a debt for the purchase of the lot or the construction of the school buildings. At' the time of the incorporation of the town of Shirley City, no law of this State made the payment of a debt owing by the school township for school property a condition' of the transfer of such property by operation of law to .the school city in which it was situated. Board, etc., v. Center Tp., supra.