27 Minn. 38 | Minn. | 1880
This is a proceeding by information, in the nature of quo warranto, under Gen. St. 1878, c. 63, § 1. It is not the action provided for in chapter 79 of said statutes, and the provisions of that chapter are not per se applicable to it. In the absence of any legislation or controlling considerations to the contrary, it follows that, as respects procedure, it is governed by common-law rules. The rule that the onus probandi is upon the respondent, (High on Ex. Rem. §§ 629, 712, and cases cited; 2 Dillon Mun. Cor. §§ 717, 722; 5 Wait’s Practice, 615; People v. Pease, 30 Barb. 588, 591,) therefore, applies here, and the defendants must prove the existence of the corporate franchise which they are alleged to have usurped, and their title to the offices, with the wrongful claim or usurpation of which they are charged.
At the start it is objected by the respondents that the relator, Probstfield, has actively acquiesced in the exercise of the franchise spoken of, and the respondents’ assumption of title to the offices in question, and in their discharge of the alleged powers and duties of the same, and that he is, therefore, estopped to institute or conduct this proceeding. The answer to this is that it is the attorney general who has instituted and who is conducting the proceeding, as the law officer of the state — the representative, not of the relator, but of the government. It is for him to determine whether the public good requires him to proceed in the matter. If he deems it best to proceed, notwithstanding any conduct of the party at whose instance he moves, if there is any case in which his determination would be overruled, it must certainly be a very extraordinary one, and not such a case as this.
This brings us to the merits. We are first called upon to interpret section 3, article 11, of the constitution of this' state, which reads: “Laws may be passed providing for the organization, for municipal and other town purposes, of any congressional or fractional townships in the several counties in the state: provided, that when a township is divided by
In April, 1879, two of these twelve townships were set off, leaving the town' of Moorhead to consist of the remaining ten. The second important question in the case is whether the statutes permit these ten townships to be formed into one independent school-district? Gen. St.1878, c. 36, § 94, enacts that “any city, town, village, township, or school-district,
If we are right, it follows that section 17, subchapter 1, which enacts that “any school-district hereafter'organized or altered may contain the entire township, * * * or a tract of land six miles square in different townships, ” has no application to the organization of independent school-districts. This is the statutory provision relied upon by the-state, and which is claimed to restrict the area of school-districts organized after its passage to 36 sections of land. In our opinion it does not control section 94. Under that section, a town consisting of several townships, congressional and fractional, may lawfully be formed into a single independent school-district. So far as the question of authority is concerned, it was, therefore, lawful and competent for the town of Moorhead, consisting, as- it did, of ten townships,
These are all the matters which we feel called upon to determine, and the result is that the respondents are entitled to judgment, which will be entered accordingly.