149 Iowa 480 | Iowa | 1910
Prior to the institution of the proceedings, the sufficiency of which is called in question in this action, there -was an independent school district of Stock-port which included the territory of the town of Stockport (containing more than two hundred and fifty inhabitants) and contiguous territory which had been taken from the school townships of Union and Cedar in Yan Burén County, the dividing line between those two civil townships running north and south through the town of Stockport itself. The original independent district of ^ Stockport was not contiguous to any independent district, but was surrounded by subdistricts of the two school townships above named.
In January, 1910, two petitions were presented to the hoard of directors of the independent district, one of them signed by the residents- of the town, the other by residents of contiguous territory, asking that the board call a meeting of the electors resident within a proposed new independent district including all the territory of the original independent district and other adjacent territory, all of it within subdistricts of the townships above named, for the purpose of having it determined by the vote whether a new independent school district should be established. The number of signers in each case was sufficient under the statutory provision relied upon, hereafter to be quoted, and the board authorized the holding of an election at which there was a sufficient number of votes cast, favorable to the proposition, of voters resident within the corporate limits of the town and of voters resident in the contiguous territory proposed to be included in the new independent district, to authorize its establishment and the board thereupon declared such new district to be lawfully created and ordered a meeting of the electors resident within the newly created district to bo had for the election of a board of directors. Such board was duly chosen and the members thereof are made defendants in this action: The question now presented is whether the proceedings for the establish
The proceedings called in question were had in reliance upon the provisions of Code, section 2794, which with a slight amendment was in force at the time these proceedings were instituted as section 2794 of the Code Supplement of 1907, unless said, section was by implication repealed by chapter 141, Acts of the Thirty-First General Assembly, which is incorporated in the Code Supplement as section 2794a. These two sections of the Code Supplement read as follows:
Section 2794. 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 g majority of the votes so cast is against including such outside territory, then the proposed independent district shall not be formed.
Section 2794a. When a written description describing the boundaries of contiguous territory containing not less than sixteen government sections within- one or more counties is signed by one-third of the electors residing in such*484 territory and approved by the county superintendent, of one county, and by the superintendents of each, if more than one county, and by the state superintendent if the county superintendents do not agree, and filed with the board of school corporations in which the proportion of the proposed district having the largest number of voters is situated, requesting the establishment of a consolidated independent district, it shall be the duty of the said board within ten days, to call an election in the proposed consolidated independent district for which they shall give the same notice as required in sections twenty-seven hundred and forty-six of the Code and twenty-seven hundred and fifty of the supplement to the Code, at which meeting all voters residing in the proposed independent district shall be allowed to vote by ballot for or against such separate organization. If a majority of the votes cast at such election shall be in favor of such independent organization, the organization of the proposed corporation shall be completed by the selection of a board of directors as provided in section twenty-seven hundred and ninety-five of the Code, said board to organize on the first day of July following unless that day falls on Sunday, in which case on the day following. All taxes previously certified shall be void as far as the property within the limits of the consolidated independent district is concerned, and all taxes necessary for the new corporation shall be certified and levied as provided in section twenty-seven hundred and ninety-six of the Code, but no school corporation from which territory is taken shall, after the change, contain less than four government sections, which territory shall be contiguous and so situated as to form a suitable corporation. When it is proposed to include in such district a town, city or village, the voters residing upon the territory outside of the town, city or village 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 the majority of the votes so cast is against including such outside territory, then the proposed independent district shall not be formed.
We find no reason for holding that the organization of defendant district was not legal and proper, and the decree of the lower court is therefore affirmed.