School district number five lay immediately north of and adjoining school district number six. The two districts voted upon a proposition to change their boundaries by taking out of the northeast corner of district six a mile square of its territory and giving it to district five. Number five voted for, and number six against the proposed change. The matter then went to the county commissioner, who decided to change the dividing line between the districts, by taking from number six and adding to number five, a strip two and a half miles long, from east to west, and varying in width from north to south from one-fourth to a half a mile. Thus, it is seen the commissioner assumed the
I. The power and authority of the county commissioner is derived from section 7023, Revised Statutes. The proposition to make the specified change having been voted upon in the several districts to be affected, such change shall be at once accomplished, if all of said ■districts vote in favor of it, “but if a part of the districts affected vote in favor of, and a part against, such change, the matter shall be referred to the county commissioner for final decision, who shall proceed to inform himself as to the necessity of the proposed change, and .and his decision thereon shall be final.” That the de
II. Then will mandamus lie against the county clerk to compel him to assess the school taxes of said district six, agreeably to the said estimates against the taxable property therein, according to the old, and legal limits of said district? I answer, yes, upon the express, .and, as I think, conclusive authority of State ex rel. v. Byers, 67 Mo. 706, opinion by Judge Henry. The peremptory writ should have issued; hence the judgment must be reversed and the cause remanded.