SWAN LAKE CONSOLIDATED SCHOOL DISTRICT, appellant, v. CONSOLIDATED SCHOOL DISTRICT OF DOLLIVER et al., appellees.
No. 48197.
Supreme Court of Iowa
MAY 5, 1953.
REHEARING DENIED SEPTEMBER 25, 1953.
244 Iowa 1269 | 58 N.W.2d 349
We are convinced the plea of guilty as made by the appellant in open court, as well as his reaffirmance of his confession in open court, justified the trial court in accepting the plea and the imposition of the sentence entered.
We find no basis for reversal and the cause is affirmed.—Affirmed.
All JUSTICES concur.
Wm. O. Anderson, of Estherville, for appellees.
THOMPSON, J.—On September 26, 1951, plaintiff filed its petition in equity against the defendant, Consolidated School District of Dolliver, and certain others who are made parties only because of their official positions. The controversy is between the plaintiff and the Dolliver district, which will be referred to as the defendant.
Plaintiff‘s petition alleged that it is an independent consolidated school district, organized and existing under the provisions of
The material parts of defendant‘s answer are that it admits the three sections were a part of plaintiff-district, but says they are now a part of defendant‘s territory; admits the formation of plaintiff and defendant, and their existence, under the provisions of
On April 8, 1952, at a pretrial conference, it was stipulated that it should be considered “plaintiff has, on this day, filed an additional petition in quo warranto, including all the statutory allegations and including the allegations of fact as set forth in the original petition herein. It shall be considered that such allegations are admitted by the defendant to the same extent as admissions are made in his original answer herein and as amplified by this pretrial procedure. In addition, it shall be considered that the defendant school district further pleads that the action in quo warranto is barred by the provisions of Code section
The case was submitted on the pleadings and the record as made at the pretrial conference. It is apparent that there are law questions only. On May 10, 1952, the trial court entered its decree dismissing each of plaintiff‘s petitions. The court found in its conclusions of law that defendant should have proceeded under
I. We have recently held definitely in Cook v. Consolidated School District of Truro, 240 Iowa 744, 38 N.W.2d 265, under identical facts, that the provisions of
The defendant-appellee does not seriously contend that the Truro case does not hold flatly against it upon the procedural question it adopted in incorporating the three additional sections, but it asserts that the holding of this case is wrong and asks that we overrule it. The principles involved are so thoroughly analyzed and so cogently expressed by Justice Bliss in the Truro case that any restatement of them would be an idle gesture, and an attempt to improve upon them would be inappropriate. It may be proper, however, to point out that we are here dealing with consolidated districts.
We have said, in several cases preceding the Truro case, that adding new territory to a present consolidated district makes a new consolidated district. In Arnold v. Consolidated Independent School District, 173 Iowa 199, 155 N.W. 278, the right of a district once consolidated to take in further territory and so to make a new consolidation was at issue. This court said, at page 200 of 173 Iowa, that the issue was “whether * * * there can be a further consolidation in said territory * * * bringing in additional territory and thus forming a new consolidated school district.” (Italics ours.) It appeared that after the first consolidation, completed in May 1914, under the provisions of section 2794-a, Code Supplement of 1913 (now forming a part of
In State ex rel. Kirchgatter v. Thompson, 190 Iowa 1160, 1166, 181 N.W. 434, 437, we said: “In Arnold v. Consolidated Ind. Sch. Dist., 173 Iowa 199 [155 N.W. 278], we held that a school district consolidated under the provisions of the statute might again avail itself of the same provisions of the law, and effect a further or second consolidation. There can be no doubt of the right of a consolidated district to reconsolidate and enlarge its territory, provided that the proceedings are in accordance with the statute.” (Italics ours.)
In State ex rel. Stinman v. Spellman, 191 Iowa 1181, 1183, 1184, 183 N.W. 577, is this: “Whenever it is proposed to include an area of 16 sections or more, section 2794-a [now part of
In the case of Arnold v. Consolidated Independent School District, supra, it is held that a consolidated independent school district may be included with other territory to organize a new district under the provisions of section 2794-a.
The effect of the foregoing authorities is that a presently consolidated district may take in additional territory, and when it does so a new consolidated district is formed. Logic and reason also sustain this view. It follows, of course, that the only legal method for organizing the new consolidated district is that prescribed by
It should not be necessary to labor the point further, or at all. The Truro case opinion was filed on June 14, 1949. It was concurred in by all the Justices then comprising the court. Justice Bliss, the writer of the opinion, and six Justices who concurred are still members of this court. The opinion is quite evidently the result of the most painstaking analysis and research. It
Under such circumstances this interpretation became the settled law of the state. It should remain settled unless it appears clearly that the result is not in accord with logic and precedent, and that mischief will result therefrom. No sufficient reason why it should unanimously have been held sound less than four years ago and now be found to be unsound has been advanced. It is true the law should not be, and is not, static; it should grow and develop with economic, political and cultural conditions which surround it. This, however, does not mean that it should not generally be definite and settled. The rule of stare decisis has its basis in something stronger than the thought that the courts should follow hidebound precedent without regard to justice or equity. It derives from the consideration that when the courts have fully and fairly considered a proposition and have decided it, only the most pressing reasons should require, or in fact even permit, an opposite holding. Lawyers and clients have a right to know what the law is, and to order their affairs accordingly. Some cynic has said that “consistency is the vice of little minds.” If we now accede to the urging of the defendant here and overrule the Truro case, we will surely have demonstrated that we are free from any such taint.
Cook v. Consolidated School District of Truro, supra, is consistent with and follows all of our previous holdings, except for Chambers v. Housel, 211 Iowa 314, 233 N.W. 502, which is in part distinguished, and in part held unsound. The Truro case had established the law of Iowa more than two years before the election was held in the case at bar. The learned trial court, after referring to the Chambers case and the fact that the defendant Dolliver district had followed the procedure outlined by
The Truro case covers twenty-seven pages of Volume 240 of the Iowa Reports. It discusses all questions raised on the present appeal, analyzes the statutes and traces their history, and answers all arguments for a contrary holding. All judges then sitting concurred without reservation. There is no indication of any dissenting thought. It appears to be, as indeed it must have been, the thoroughly considered judgment of this court. Since then, in the short time that has elapsed, no statutes have been changed, no new ones added, no old ones repealed. It seems to be peculiarly a case upon which the bar and any others interested were entitled to rely as fixing the law upon intricate and difficult legal propositions. We think it should be adhered to.
II. It is evident that so far as the proposition discussed in Division I is concerned, and if that were the only question in the case, the plaintiff would be entitled to prevail. But the trial court held plaintiff‘s action in equity would not lie, and that its quo warranto petition was filed too late. That quo warranto is the exclusive remedy for testing the legality of the organization of a school corporation is well settled. Cook v. Consolidated School District of Truro, supra; Nelson v. Consolidated Independent School District of Troy Mills, 181 Iowa 424, 164 N.W. 874. The plaintiff does not dispute this, but it says that it is not so testing. It concedes the legal organization of the defendant-district; but with one important exception. It does not concede the legal organization of the new district as made by the consolidation of the three sections in dispute with the former Dolliver district. It seems evident that its equitable action seeks to challenge the legal organization of the new district. It has no case in equity if the new district is legally organized. It must show the illegality of the new organization before it can be entitled to the relief asked. Plaintiff here finds itself ground between the upper and nether millstones. It contends,
III. Following Code section
“No action shall be brought questioning the legality of the organization of any school district in this state after the exercise of the franchises and privileges of a district for the term of six months.”
Section 274.4 .“Every school corporation shall, for the purpose of section 274.4, be deemed duly organized and to have commenced the exercise of its franchises and privileges when the president of the board of directors has been elected; and the record book of such corporation duly certified by the acting secretary thereof, showing such election and the time thereof, shall be prima-facie evidence of such facts.”
Section 274.5 .
It will be noted that the election, under the provisions of
The question of the sufficiency of proof to sustain the trial court‘s finding that the quo warranto action was barred is more difficult. There is no testimony or documentary evidence of the election of a president of the board of directors, which
It is plaintiff‘s contention that it is not challenging the organization of defendant as it stood before it attempted to consolidate with the new territory, but only the acts of the old corporation in asserting jurisdiction over the area which it claims to have added by what plaintiff thinks is illegal process. But we think it was the intention of the legislature to require such challenges to be made in the time specified in
SMITH, C. J., and BLISS, GARFIELD and LARSON, JJ., concur.
HAYS, J., concurs specially, and OLIVER, WENNERSTRUM and MULRONEY, JJ., join.
HAYS, J. (specially concurring)—While I agree with the result reached in the majority opinion, I cannot agree with the legal principle announced therein.
Fundamentally, this appeal presents but one proposition, a legal one. The question is: Where an existing independent consolidated school district desires to extend the limits of, or add territory to, such district, as provided for in
As stated in the majority opinion, the trial court reluctantly followed our recent decision in Cook v. Consolidated School District of Truro, 240 Iowa 744, 38 N.W.2d 265, wherein such a rule is pronounced. Counsel for appellee, in brief and argument, strenuously insist that such decision is not sound and ask for a reconsideration of the question involved. True, as stated in the majority opinion, all members of the court, as now constituted, who were members of the court at the time of the Truro decision, concurred therein, including myself. True, as stated therein, this court recognizes and adopts the rule of “stare decisis“, and we should ignore that rule only after very careful consideration of all factors involved. As stated in Helvering v. Hallock, 309 U. S. 106, 119, 60 S. Ct. 444, 451, 84 L. Ed. 604, 125 A. L. R. 1368, 1375:
“We recognize that stare decisis embodies an important social policy. It represents an element of continuity in law, and is rooted in the psychologic need to satisfy reasonable expectations. But stare decisis is a principle of policy and not a mechanical formula of adherence to the latest decision, however recent and questionable, when such adherence involves collision with a prior doctrine more embracing in its scope, intrinsically sounder, and verified by experience.”
I think the Truro decision is unsound, and even at the expense of demonstrating that I am free of the taint that “consistency is the vice of little minds“, I think the Truro case should be reappraised.
At page 752 of 240 Iowa, page 269 of 38 N.W.2d, it is said: “It was the conclusion of the able trial court that in the enlargement or extension of an existing or old school district by a vote of the electors, whether the district be an independent city, town, or village school corporation, the inevitable result with either type of school was the formation of a new school corporation, and that the proper statutory steps for forming or establishing a school corporation by vote of the electors should be followed.” At page 753 of 240 Iowa, page 270 of 38 N.W.2d, it is further stated: “The conclusion of the trial court is sound and the grounds on which it is based are reasonable and logical.” In a nutshell—the annexation of territory by an existing school corporation of necessity creates a new school corporation. If this premise be sound, then the Truro decision is sound, as is also the majority opinion in the instant case for, admittedly, only by following
“The act of attaching, adding, joining, or uniting one thing to another; generally spoken of the connection of a smaller or subordinate thing with a larger or principal thing. ***. So the incorporation of newly-acquired territory into the national domain, as an integral part thereof, is called ‘annexation‘, as in the case of the addition of Texas to the United States.”
Surely it cannot be contended that the annexation of Texas to the United States constituted the formation or organization of a new United States. In Independent School District v. Jones, 142 Iowa 8, 120 N.W. 315, it is said that to extend boundaries refers to changing boundaries of existing districts and not to their creation. See also Whitmire v. Cass, 213 S. C. 230, 49 S.E.2d 1; Middlesex & S. Traction Co. v. Metlar, 70 N. J. L. 98, 56 A. 142.
While some of the cases cited by the majority opinion, as well as herein, do not concern consolidated districts, they all deal with annexation of territory and hold
In my judgment, while
As to quo warranto being the exclusive remedy for raising the question at issue here—The majority opinion deems the issue to be the questioning of the legal corporate status of the appellee. I deem the issue to be whether the appellee is exercising powers not conferred by law. Both questions are recognized under
“The allegations of the petition are clearly within the purview of the quoted provisions of the statute, by averring that the defendant, by the making of the several kinds of insurance, has been and is still offending against the laws of the state. If thus offending, it must certainly be exercising powers not conferred by law.”
The status of the appellant to bring the action is not questioned in the district court nor in the majority opinion and I assume that this issue was taken care of at the pretrial conference. See State v. Winneshiek Co-Op. Burial Assn., 234 Iowa 1196, 15 N.W.2d 367. I agree that quo warranto rather than equity proceedings is the proper remedy.
I would affirm the judgment of the trial court on the theory that the procedure adopted by appellee was proper and that the annexation was perfected.
OLIVER, WENNERSTRUM and MULRONEY, JJ., join in this special concurrence.
