49 Ind. App. 302 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1911
This was a suit for injunction brought by appellants to restrain appellees TIeise, Shirley and Carter, constituting the school board of the town of Orleans, and also the board in its corporate capacity, and others, from issuing a series of bonds to assist in erecting a schoolhouse, also to enjoin them from applying the proceeds of said bonds in erecting said school building, and also to forbid them from contracting for the erection of said building.
The complaint is in three paragraphs. There was an appearance by all the defendants when Shirley was substituted for one of the original defendants, Hollowell, whose term of office had expired. Appellees filed a motion to strike out parts of the several paragraphs, which motion was sustained. Demurrers were filed, and sustained, to each paragraph of the complaint. Appellants excepted to these rulings of the court, and refused to plead further, judgment was then rendered against them, and from that judgment this appeal is prosecuted.
The complaint proceeds on the theory that the town of Orleans had, at the time the complaint was filed, a population of 1,250 persons, according to the last United States census, and that the board of school trustees of said town were proceeding to issue and sell bonds for the purpose of
The act of 1903, supra, is a general act applicable to the school boards of all cities incorporated under the general iaws of the State and to the school boards of all incorporated towns. This act contained no provision requiring a school board to file any petition or obtain any order or resolution of the common council of a city or the board of trustees of a town before proceeding to issue and sell bonds.
The two acts of 1907, supra, are both special, one of them applying to all cities or incorporated towns having a population of less than five thousand inhabitants, and the other applying to all incorporated towns having a population of not more than two thousand inhabitants. Both of these acts contain provisions in reference to the filing of a petition by
The act of 1909, supra, amerids §1 of the act of 1903, supra. Such act of 1909 applies to all cities of Indiana except cities of the first and second class, and to all incorporated towns in the 'State. The provisions of this section are practically the same as those of said §1 of the act of 1903, except that the provisions of said act of 1903, in reference to submitting the question of incurring the school debt to the electors of the city or town, in case the debt proposed to be incurred exceeds three-fourths of one per cent, is omitted from the amended section. The amended' section contains no provision for a petition to the common council of a city or the board of trustees of a town, or for any resolution of such common council or town board authorizing the sale of bonds or other evidence of indebtedness.
Section one of the act of 1909, supra, is not general in its provisions. It excepts from its operation cities of the first and second class, and this fact would indicate that no further exceptions were intended.
In the ease of Coe v. City of Meriden (1877), 45 Conn. 155, the supreme court of that state was called upon to construe the following statute: “Any person aggrieved by the appraisal of damages in laying out any highway, or in making any improvement or public work in any city (except Bridgeport) or borough, or by the assessment of benefits therefor, may appeal from such appraisal or assessment to any judge of the Superior Court, .within thirty days after public notice shall be given of such appraisal or assessment,” etc. The court said: “It appears in this case that at the time the statute was passed the charter of the city of Meriden provided that appeals of the character of the present one should be taken to the superior court in the county of New Haven; and it is claimed that the charter, having been made with particular reference to the city of Meriden, was not repealed or modified in respect to such appeals by the statute in question, on the principle that particular statutes are not repealed by subsequent general statutes unless so expressed in definite terms, but are to be regarded as excepted from their operation. The reason of the rule is, that where the attention of the legislature has been called to a particular subject,' and a special provision has been made regarding it, it cannot be supposed that they intended to repeal it, when subsequently enacting a general statute in relation to the same subject. It is reasonable to presume that the special provision was not in the mind of the legislature when the general enactment was passed, and that therefore no express exception yas made. But the principle
Section 1 of the act of 1909, supra, is definite and partic
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.