THE SCHOOL DISTRICT OF OAKLAND v. THE SCHOOL DISTRICT OF JOPLIN, Appellant.
Division Two
March 11, 1937
102 S. W. (2d) 909
779
The judgment is affirmed. Cooley and Bohling, CC., concur.
PER CURIAM: - The foregoing opinion by WESTHUES, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court. All the judges concur.
John W. Scott and Haywood Scott for appellant.
Irwin & Bushman for School District of the City of Jefferson.
The case is submitted on an agreed stipulation of facts; and clearing away the underbrush, the contested issues presented revolve around the question: Does real property purchased from public funds held by and conveyed by general warranty deed to a town school district of less than nine square miles in area become the property of a city school district upon the extension of the boundaries of the latter so as to embrace the territory within which said property of the former is situate?
The School District of Oakland, having two hundred or more children of school age, was organized into a town school district in 1913 (
The School District of Joplin is a city school district organized under said Article 4.
The School District of Oakland maintained two school buildings - one in the eastern and the other in the western portion of said district. The property here involved is the school site and building maintained in Section 36 aforesaid, the westward portion of said district. On June 11, 1929, the city of Joplin extended its corporate boundaries to include said Section 36. See State ex inf. Mallett ex rel. Womack v. Joplin, 332 Mo. 1193, 62 S. W. (2d) 393, decided June 12, 1933, upholding said extension of said corporate boundaries.
The School District of Oakland had issued bonds in the amount of $10,000, of which amount $5,000 was outstanding at the time of the extension of said corporate limits of Joplin, said indebtedness having been reduced to $4,000, principal amount, at the time of trial.
I.
But, asserting said
II. Of the statutes. Chapter 57, supra, relates to “Schools.” Article 4 thereof (Mo. Stat. Ann., p. 7164) relates to “City, Town and Consolidated Schools.”
III. Of the common law. There are two lines of authority (56 C. J. 269, sec. 113; 24 R. C. L. 566, sec. 10). One, sustaining the position taken by plaintiff, is to the effect that when only a part of the territory of an original school district is annexed to another school district, as between said districts, the title to real property devoted to public purposes by the original district within the detached territory remains the property of the original district. The other, sustaining the position taken by defendant, holds such property, as between said districts, becomes the property of the annexing district - the district within the boundaries of which it is located. The leading cases sustaining the respective contentions are City of Winona v. School District (1889), 40 Minn. 13, 41 N. W. 539, 3 L. R. A. 46, 12 Am. St. Rep. 687, and Pass School District v. Hollywood City School District (1909), 156 Cal. 416, 105 Pac. 122, 26 L. R. A. (N. S.) 485. Counsel appear to have exhausted the authorities on the issue.
After a review of the authorities we are of opinion the legal as well as the practical solution of the issue, when viewed in its larger aspect as a matter of state rather than local concern and as a matter concerning the preservation of the rights and liberties of the people through the education of the youth of the State rather than the momentary financial advantage to accrue to a portion of the inhabitants of a comparatively small territorial district of the State, sustains the position taken by defendant.
The Winona case states (40 Minn. l. c. 19, 20) the expressions in the cases therein considered sustaining defendant‘s contention “are not only pure obiter, but the question is not discussed; no reason is assigned and no authority (in point) cited in its support. . . .” Let us examine the cases relied upon in support of the rule announced in the Winona case. (The italics within the quotations are ours.) It states (40 Minn. l. c. 18): ”Whittier v. Sanborn (1854), 38 Me. 32. is directly in point.” The rule stated in the Whittier case and relied upon in the Winona case is credited in the Whittier case (38 Me. l. c. 34) to School District No. 1 v. Richardson (1839), 23 Pick. (40 Mass.) 62, 68, which statement in the Richardson case is acknowledged to be obiter in the Winona case (40 Minn. l. c. 17) and considered questionable obiter in dicta found in School District No. 6 v. Tapley (1861), 83 Mass. 49, 51. If the Whittier case is directly in point, it is based on admitted obiter. If (the Whittier case) involved the right of one upon whose land a school house had been erected by permission to maintain trespass quare clausum for an unauthorized removal of the school house, and, in upholding the rights of a private citizen in his private property, the court held plaintiff entitled to nominal damages. Windham v. Portland (1808), 4 Mass. 384, 389; Hampshire County v. Franklin County (1819), 16 Mass. 75, 86; and Medford v. Pratt (1826), 4 Pick. (21 Mass.) 221, 226, as stated in the Winona case (40 Minn. l. c. 17) did not involve realty situate in the detached ter-
Other cases cited by plaintiff: Heizer v. Yohn (1871), 37 Ind. 415, Reckert v. City of Peru (1878), 60 Ind. 473, were considered distinguished on the facts and not followed in School Town of Leesburgh v. Plain School Township (1882), 86 Ind. 582, 585, which case held that the school district of a town, upon incorporation, succeeds as newly created statutory trustee to the management and control of a school building theretofore erected and maintained by the township upon lands embraced within the corporate boundaries of said town. However, Board of School Commissioners of Indianapolis v. Center Township (1896), 143 Ind. 391, 398, 42 N. E. 808, 810, states the distinguishment in the Leesburgh case “was practically a mild way of overruling those cases.” The Indianapolis case applied Indiana statutory law; but the contention by the township that the statute was retrospective and void as to vested rights rendered necessary, a determination whether or not the township held vested rights in property devoted to school purposes. After reviewing the earlier Indiana cases, the court ruled (143 Ind. l. c. 400): “According to the established doctrine of these cases, the school corporation of the city of Indianapolis, by annexation of the territory, became the successor in the title and right to control and use the school buildings for the benefit of the common schools of said city.” The Indianapolis case was followed in Maumee School Township v. School Town of Shirley (1902), 159 Ind. 423, 426, 65 N. E. 285, 286 (which plaintiff concedes sustains defendant), and City of Jeffersonville v. Jeffersonville School Township (1921), 77 Ind. App. 32, 130 N. E. 879. Board of Educa-
Plaintiff admits the following cases sustain defendant‘s position: Pass School District v. Hollywood City School District (1909), 156 Cal. 416, 419, 105 Pac. 122, 123, 26 L. R. A. (N. S.) 485; Board of Education of Fulton County v. Board of Education of College Park (1918), 147 Ga. 776, 779, 95 S. E. 648, 685 (3); Maumee School Township v. School Town of Shirley City (1902), 159 Ind. 423, 426, 65 N. E. 285, 286; Consolidated School District No. 1, Alfalfa County, v. School District No. 24, Alfalfa County (1912), 33 Okla. 320, 322, 125 Pac. 729, 730; Prescott v. Lennox (1898), 100 Tenn. 591, 592, 47 S. W. 181. The following cases bear on the issue to a greater or less extent and sustain or tend to sustain defendant‘s position: Lynn v. Nahant, supra; School Town of Leesburgh v. Plain School Township, supra; Board of School Commissioners v. Center Township, supra; Jeffersonville v. Jeffersonville School Township, supra; City of Wellington v. Wellington Township, supra; Board of Education of Jefferson County v. Board of Education of Louisville (1918), 182 Ky. 544, 545, 206 S. W. 869 (2); Board of Education of Barker District v. Board of Education of Valley District (1887), 30 W. Va. 424, 431, 434, 4 S. E. 640, 643, 645; North Hempstead v. Hempstead (1828), 2 Wend. (N. Y.) 109, 135; Jefferson Township Rural School District v. Hoover (1920), 13 Ohio App. 346, 348. These cases proceed upon the theory the beneficial ownership of the fee of school (or other governmental) property acquired from public funds is vested in the State; that the State has created agencies or mandatories, designated in Missouri school districts, has constituted them public corporations, vested in and imposed upon them enumerated powers and duties to be exercised within their respective territorial boundaries, and, for the efficient discharge of such powers and duties, has made them trustees of said public property for the benefit of the cestui que trust, the public, charged with the powers conferred and duties imposed by statute, and upon a lawful change of their boundaries, such as we have in the instant case, a new or different statutory trustee is substituted for the former statutory trustee. The situation is somewhat analogous to a principal having several agents, say A and B, within whose respective territories are located property of the principal purchased by funds derived from the business transacted within the respective territory and by funds advanced by the principal. Should the principal determine it would be advantageous to extend the territory of A so as to embrace territory of B within which property of the principal is located, in the absence of some obligation imposed on A by the
Additional comment and discussion of authorities may be found in the cases cited, notably the Pass School District, the Board of Education of Fulton County, the Board of Education of Jefferson County, the Consolidated School District No. 1, Alfalfa County, the Prescott, the Wellington, and the Board of Commissioners of the city of Indianapolis cases, supra, supporting defendant‘s position.
An examination of the authorities reveals that among the factors entering into a determination of the issue are: The grant under which the property is held; the nature of the use made of the property, i. e., whether or not the authorized use is essentially for the original agency as a whole; and whether the property is considered held in the exercise of some governmental function or as private property. The Winona case in reality harks back to statements in Massachusetts cases wherein the property involved was considered private property. That this is the foundation of the ruling in the Winona case is evidenced by the statement (40 Minn. l. c. 20, 21): “. . . Upon reason and principle we cannot see why any distinction should be made as to property, which on change of boundaries falls within the limits of another municipality, or why the title should not, like that of all other property, remain unaffected by the change.” Therein lies the distinction - the distinction between a private and a governmental interest. In Missouri the property of school districts acquired from public funds is the property of the State, not the private property of the school district in which it may be located, and the school district is a statutory trustee for the discharge of a governmental function entrusted to the State by our Constitution.
The statutes relating to the schools of the State embrace a comprehensive scheme whereby the General Assembly has provided for the establishment and maintenance of free public schools. The general terms and specific provisions found therein preclude the construction that they apply only to conditions existing at the time of their enactment, unless the context of a given statute indicates such a legislative intent. The duties imposed and the powers conferred upon school districts and their officials are essentially permanent and continuing
Plaintiff states it is morally wrong to permit defendant to seize plaintiff‘s property without paying for it. On the other hand, to rule with plaintiff would have a similar effect on that portion of defendant school district annexed by defendant. But, we have ruled the property involved is public property of the State, not the property of plaintiff or defendant. The General Assembly, as is within its power, has undertaken to provide protection for school districts in plaintiff‘s situation. Under the provisions of
The judgment is reversed. Cooley and Westhues, CC., concur.
PER CURIAM: - The foregoing opinion by BOHLING, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court. All the judges concur.
FRANK HOELZEL v. CHICAGO, ROCK ISLAND & PACIFIC RAILWAY COMPANY, a Corporation, and ARTHUR J. WILLIAMS, Appellants.
102 S. W. (2d) 577
Division One
March 17, 1937
