6 N.E.2d 864 | Ill. | 1937
This is a consolidation of two appeals to review two judgments of ouster in quo warranto, entered by the circuit court of Sangamon county against members of the Board of Education of High School District No. 142 and of No. 92, in that county. The cases arise over much involved attempts to organize three high school districts over portions of the same territory. The purported districts involved in these two quo warranto proceedings are district No. 196, known in this record as the Dawson district, residents of which territory are the relators in these proceedings; district No. 142, attacked in one of these quowarranto proceedings, and known in the record as the Riverton district, which lies over the westerly portion of the Dawson district and to the west thereof; and district No. 92, attacked in the other quo warranto proceeding, and known in the record as the Buffalo district, which lies over the easterly portion of the Dawson district, and to the east thereof. Both informations were filed on the same day, were tried together and the appeals are consolidated here. *472
The facts on which the confusion of these districts arises are, with the exception of one issue of fact hereinafter referred to, undisputed. The Riverton district overlaps the west three miles of the Dawson district, its east boundary extending north and south through the center of the village of Dawson. The Buffalo district overlaps the east one mile of the Dawson district. The records of the county superintendent of schools show that a petition for the organization of the Dawson district was filed on May 31, 1934; a like petition of the Riverton district was filed on June 7, 1934, and that of the Buffalo district on July 23, 1934. Elections were called on all these petitions. In all these a majority of the votes cast favored the proposition. Boards of education were elected in all three districts and if these petitions were all proper petitions we have a situation where two community high school districts are imposed on all of the Dawson district but seven sections thereof.
These petitions were filed under section 89a of the School law. (State Bar Stat. 1935, chap. 122, par. 97, p. 2847.) The provisions of that section are as follows: "Upon the receipt of a petition signed by fifty or more legal voters residing in any contiguous and compact territory, whether in the same or different townships, described in the petition, the county superintendent of schools of the county in which the territory or the greater part thereof is situated, shall order an election to be held for the purpose of voting for or against the proposition to establish a community high school, by posting notices for at least ten days in ten of the most public places throughout the said territory, which notices may be substantially in the following form, to-wit," etc.
Counsel for both appellant districts argue that the Dawson petition was not the first filed, but they say that on May 28 a petition for organization of the Riverton district was first received by the county superintendent of schools; that at his request it was taken away to see *473 whether it might not be changed to exclude the village of Dawson, since the east boundary line of the Riverton district went through the center of that village, and that it was brought back on June 7 without change therein. A dispute arises as to whether, under the language of section 89a, the Riverton petition is to be considered as filed or received on May 28 or on June 7. If on the former date, it was filed before the Dawson petition. The records of the office of the county superintendent of schools show, regarding the Riverton petition, "Filed in my office this 7th day of June, 1934." As to the Dawson petition his records show, "Filed 8 A.M. Thursday, May 31, 1934." Both file marks were signed by J. Ed Taylor, county superintendent of schools. Appellants say that the parol evidence offered shows that the county superintendent of schools in fact received the Riverton petition on May 28.
It is a well settled rule that where officials are required to keep a record of the proceedings of their office, such constitutes the only lawful evidence of action taken and cannot be contradicted, added to or supplemented by parol. (People v.Hartquist,
But, say appellants, at the time the Dawson petition was filed there was involved in the circuit court of Sangamon county a former Riverton petition, including territory of the present Dawson district, by which petition another district was attempted to be formed, and the records of which proceedings were in the circuit court on certiorari, to quash such record, and that under section 89b of the School law the county superintendent of schools could not properly receive the Dawson petition. The provision of section 89b is as follows: "No territory involved in any petition, election or proceeding to organize a community high school district and not organized as or included within a community high school district shall be again involved in any petition, election or proceeding to organize a community high school district for a period of at least one year from the date this act takes effect and not oftener than once every two years after the expiration of such one year period." State Bar Stat. 1935, chap. 122, par. 97-(1).
The record pertaining to that petition is as follows: On April 16, 1934, a petition was filed seeking the organization of a community high school district in territory comprising parts of all three of the districts involved here. An election was held on April 28, 1934, resulting in the defeat of the proposition. On May 25, 1935, a petition for certiorari was filed in the circuit court seeking to have the petition of April 16 and the election thereon on April 28 held void and the record thereof quashed. There was a hearing on this certiorari and the cause was continued and not disposed of until September 10, when the record of the petition and the election was quashed. Appellants say that as the first Riverton petition included certain of the Dawson territory, the county superintendent of schools had no authority to receive the Dawson petition. Appellees say *475 that the record having been quashed on certiorari, it is as though there never had been a petition involving the Dawson district.
The effect of the judgment in the certiorari proceeding quashing the record of the petition and election was to render those proceedings a nullity from the beginning, and they were as though they had never been. In Sholty v. Dale Township,
The Dawson petition being valid and first filed, we come then to the question whether the county superintendent of schools had authority to proceed with the elections in the Riverton territory when that petition was filed on June 7, or the Buffalo territory when its petition was filed on July 23, both proposed districts including territory described in the Dawson petition. In People
v. Drennan,
Appellants also raise the question of laches. Appellants of the Buffalo district say that they have elected their officers, organized their district and incurred obligations amounting to $3000 under a contract to pay the common school district of Buffalo for affording high school privileges to students of the community high school district. Appellants, of the Riverton district, make the same complaint and say that they have become obligated to the extent of $2000 for the same purpose. Though all of these three districts completed their organization, none has levied any taxes or constructed or contracted for any buildings. We are of the opinion that this is not a case where laches could be held to run against the people. Mere lapse of time does not estop the people. (People v. Hartquist, supra; People v.Buesinger,
Other questions are raised and argued in the briefs but under the views hereinbefore expressed it is not necessary to consider them further.
The judgments of the circuit court ousting the Buffalo district board and the Riverton district board were right and are affirmed.
Judgments affirmed.