120 So. 832 | Miss. | 1929
Also with the petition to the board of supervisors there was filed a written instrument, the consent of the county superintendent of education of Calhoun county to have such territory added to the Cole Creek consolidated school, recommending a site for the school building when such territory should be so added.
The appellants appeared first and offered oral objections to the granting of the petition to add the territory in Grenada county to the consolidated school district in Calhoun county, and the board overruled such objections orally. Thereupon the appellants procured an attorney and filed a written statement of objections, offering proof to sustain such objections. The board declined to hear such proof and passed an order granting the petition to add the territory in Grenada county to the Cole Creek consolidated school district in Calhoun county. The objections in writing filed, as above state, were, first, that the Cole Creek consolidated school district had never been legally created, and was not a legal school district, and did not embrace the territory required by law in order to add same to said school district; second, because there had not been filed with the board the proper records whereupon it could adjudicate this cause; third, because *69 there was no valid outstanding indebtedness against said Cole Creek consolidated school district; fourth, because the schoolhouse had never been legally established, fixed, and located in the district as provided by law, and also because said Cole Creek consolidated school district is not a valid school district and has heretofore been actually abandoned as such and the school property taken charge of by private parties, and also because the territory sought to be added to said school district has been so arranged as to leave out of a school district all of the objectors except Gray, and that they were without school facilities thereunder, and also because the petition had never been presented to or acted on by the school board, superintendent of education, or other authority of said county of Grenada.
The cause was appealed to the circuit court and the objections incorporated in a bill of exceptions. The circuit judge affirmed the board of supervisors, adding the territory proposed to the Cole Creek consolidated school district.
From the above statement of facts, it appears that there had not been created a line consolidated school district, but that Calhoun county had created a consolidated school district west of the boundary between Grenada and Calhoun counties. Section 114 of chapter 283, Laws 1924 (School Code) provides that: "If the territory of a proposed consolidated school lies in two or more counties the county superintendents of all counties affected shall agree as to approximately the extent of the territory, location of school house and other matters of vital importance and report to their respective school boards. The school boards of each county shall act with reference to its own territory and report to the other counties affected," etc.
In the case of Board of Supervisors of Marshall County v.Brown,
In Williams v. Lee,
Appellee relies upon the case of James et al. v. Board ofSupervisors of Wilkinson County (Miss.),
Reversed, and judgment here.