148 Minn. 321 | Minn. | 1921
In March, 1920, a majority of the legal voters of school district Number 43, which includes the village of Clarkfield, in Yellow Medicine county, acting under G. S. 1913, § 2677, petitioned the county board of said county, that said district be enlarged by including within its limits, all of school districts Numbers 33, 60, 87 and 88; also three sections (34, 35, 36) of district Number 26; one quarter section of district Number 28; one quarter section of district Number 29; all of district Number 85, except one quarter section.
A hearing was had and the board ordered that district Number 43 be enlarged in accordance with the prayer of said petition except that one quarter section of district 33 covered by the petition was ordered attached to district 26; the quarter section in district 85 which was omitted from the petition was ordered attached to district 29.
Appellant, a resident and taxpayer of district 88, appealed to the district court. On the trial his counsel made an offer of proof which may be summarized as follows:
District Number 88 contains 5% sections of land inhabited by 13 families and 22 children of school age; the school house is adequate, well-equipped and conducted and conveniently 'located; competent teachers have been employed and school maintained for 7 months in the year and a high average of scholarship maintained; every voter and taxpayer of the district is against the petition; taxes are already heavy and will be increased to a point thought to be unbearable; it is necessary in this district to keep some of the older pupils out of school in spring and fall and by reason thereof such pupils will be unable to keep up with their classes in the consolidated district; many of the roads in this district are in poor condition, and, for a time in spring, impassable for vehicle traffic; some of the homes are remote from the highways and children from such homes would be exposed to the inclemency of weather while
The offer of proof of facts bearing especially on the other districts involved is similar, and adds nothing to the foregoing except in the case of district 26. As to that district the. showing is that the present district contains 8% sections, 21 families and 11 school children. The order of the county board leaves it with 6 sections, 14 families and seven school children.
The court sustained an objection to the offered proof and ordered judgment sustaining the action of the county board. This appeal is from an order denying a motion for a new trial.
The petition asked for the annexation of all of district 85, except one quarter and made no request as to the disposition of that quarter. The order annexed that quarter to district 29.
The contention is that the county board had no right to change the boundary of any district except as prayed for in the petition. The language of the statute answers this contention. It , is that the board may “proceed to enlarge the said school district as asked for in the petition, and to fix the boundaries thereof, and all of the remaining school districts thereby affected, attaching to or detaching contiguous territory to
This- language gives ample authority for all the changes in boundaries that were made. The board, in the exercise of “their judgment” in fixing boundaries, is not limited to the alterations suggested in the petition.
It was held in Hall v. Board of Co. Commrs. of Chippewa County, 140 Minn. 133, 167 N. W. 358, and in Kramer v. County of Renville, 141 Minn. 300, 170 N. W. 216, citing former decisions, that the county board, in determining the propriety of enlarging -a school district, exercises a discretion that is legislative, not judicial, and that, on appeal to the district court, the determination of the board is not reviewed as a judicial decision but as legislative action, and that the inquiry on appeal is whether the determination of the county board was based upon an erroneous theory of law or was arbitrary or fraudulent or oppressive, or in unreasonable disregard of the best interests of the territory affected. In Kramer v. County of Renville, supra, a decision of the -trial court vacating the order of the county board was reversed. While the conclusions drawn from the facts were stated in somewhat different language, the proof of facts was substantially the same as the proof offered in this case
We find nothing in the offered proof that would distinguish this case from the Hall and Kramer cases. We are of the opinion that the offered proof was insufficient to sustain a decision vacating the order of the county board, and that there was no error in rejecting it.
Appellant argues with much force that the order of. the county hoard in reducing district 26 from 8% sections to 6 sections would justify a finding that the order was not for the best interests of that district. It will be observed, however, that district 26 is still a half section larger than district 88 and appellant’s case rests on the proposition that district 88 is aggrieved by a change.
Order affirmed.