162 Iowa 257 | Iowa | 1913
The proceedings attacked by the plaintiff purported to have been had in pursuance of section 2794 of Code Supplement, which is as follows:
■Formation of Independent District. Upon the written petition of any ten voters of a city, town or village of over one hundred residents, to the board of the school corporation in which the portion of the town plat having the largest number of voters is situated, such board shall establish the boundaries of a proposed independent district, including therein all of the city, town or village, and also such contiguous territory as is authorized by a written petition of a majority of the resident electors of the contiguous territory proposed to be included in said district, in not smaller subdivisions than entire forties of land, in the same or any adjoining school corporations, as may best subserve the convenience of the people for school purposes, and shall give the same notices of a meeting as required in other cases, at which meeting all voters upon the territory included within the contemplated independent district shall be allowed to vote by ballot for or against such separate organization. When it is proposed to include territory outside the town, city or village, the voters residing upon such outside territory shall be entitled to vote separately upon the proposition for the formation of such new district, by presenting a petition of at least twenty-five per cent, of the voters residing upon such outside territory, and if a majority of the votes so cast is against including such outside territory then the proposed independent district shall not be formed.
The principal point of attack by plaintiff is that the seventy-one signers of the second petition did not in fact constitute a majority of the voters resident in such contiguous territory; it being averred that such contiguous territory contained more than one hundred and fifty voters. It is the claim of plaintiff, appellant, that because of such fact the school board was without jurisdiction to proceed, and that all subsequent proceedings were therefore void and subject to collateral attack.
We have frequently held in similar cases that the jurisdiction of the board attached by the presentation of the first petition, and that it devolved upon the board to canvass the second petition and to ascertain whether or r . . . not it contained a majority of the voters as ^ provided by the statute. If it erred in its conclusions, its jurisdiction was not thereby defeated. The purpose of the second petition and the canvass
2. Same: appeal. Under the provisions of section 2818 the plaintiff was empowered to appeal from the action of the board to the county superintendent, but it did not avail itself of such privilege. It has frequently been held that . ., . , , T , , this was its appropriate remedy. Independent District v. Board, 25 Iowa, 305; Munn v. District Township, 110 Iowa, 652. That an error of the board in the canvass of the second petition did not defeat its jurisdiction is settled by the following cases: Ryan v. Varga et al., 37 Iowa, 78; West v. Whitaker, 37 Iowa, 598; Baker v. Board, 40 Iowa, 226; Bennett v. Hetherington, 41 Iowa, 142; Oliver v. Monona County, 117 Iowa, 49.