St. Lawrence Ind. Sch. Dist. v. Board of Educ. of St. Lawrence
Decision Date | 06 April 1931 |
Docket Number | 6642 |
Citation | 58 S.D. 287,235 N.W. 697 |
Parties | ST. LAWRENCE INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT, Appellants, v. BOARD OF EDUCATION OF ST. LAWRENCE, Respondents. |
Court | South Dakota Supreme Court |
BOARD OF EDUCATION OF ST. LAWRENCE, Respondents. South Dakota Supreme Court Appeal from Circuit Court, Hand County, SD Hon. Alva E. Taylor, Judge. #6642—Reversed M. Harry O’Brien, Highmore, SD Attorney for Appellants. Harlan J. Bushfield, Miller, SD Attorney for Respondents. Opinion filed Apr 6, 1931
This proceeding was instituted under the provisions of chapter 175, Laws of 1923. A petition with 88 signatures thereon was filed with the clerk of courts of Hand county asking that certain descriptions of land therein mentioned be formed and organized as a common school district from territory embraced within the independent school district of St. Lawrence. The petitioners constituted a majority of the electors and real property owners of the territory proposed to be organized into a common school district. An order was entered by the circuit court fixing a time and place for a hearing on the petition, and notice thereof was given as required by statute.
On the day of the hearing on the petition, there was filed in the office of the clerk of courts a withdrawal petition signed by 28 persons, who had signed, and were qualified to sign, the original petition, stating that “we, the undersigned electors and real estate owners in that portion of the Independent School District of St. Lawrence, which is proposed to be separated from such Independent School District, do hereby withdraw our names from such petition and refuse to support such separation movement, and we do hereby instruct the circuit court of Hand County, South Dakota, to strike our names from such petition, that we may not be considered as signers thereon when such petition is presented to this Court.” If these persons had the legal right to withdraw their names, the number of petitioners was reduced below that required by law for the formation of a common school district from territory within an independent district.
The question presented for decision is whether or not the petitioners could withdraw their names from the petition prior to and including the day fixed for hearing on the petition so as to leave the petition with a less number of petitioners than that required by statute and divest the circuit court of jurisdiction to order the formation and organization of a common school district. The contention of counsel for the appellants is that, when jurisdiction is conferred upon a circuit court by the filing of a legal petition, the right to withdraw names ceases. On the other hand, it is insisted by respondents that the right of withdrawal exists until final action has been had upon a petition.
Section 1 of chapter 175, Laws of 1923, in part reads as follows:
The court, upon a proper application being made, is required under this statute to fix a time and place for hearing. This preliminary determination, however, does not involve a finding by the court that the petition is signed by a majority of the electors and real property owners of the proposed district. The sufficiency of the petition in this respect is for judicial determination at the hearing thereon.
The right of petitioners to withdraw their names from a petition was considered by this court in State ex rel. Andrews v. Boyden, 15 Ann. Cas. 1122. It appears in this case that the board of county commissioners had not only received the petition, but had acted upon it to the extent of determining that it was signed by a majority of the legal voters of the county. Thereafter, and before an order was entered to submit the question of the removal of the county seat at the next general election, a remonstrance signed by persons who were originally petitioners for the removal of the county seat was filed with the county board, and, if such remonstrance were effective, the petitioners were reduced to a less number than a majority of the legal voters in the county. This court held that, until final action was taken by the entry of an order granting the petition, names could be withdrawn, and that an application for a writ of mandamus to compel the board of county commissioners to call an election to vote upon a change of the county seat was properly denied.
A signer of a petition cannot withdraw his name from a petition after the same has been properly filed and after the time for filing a new petition has expired. This rule was recognized by this court in State ex rel. Ketterling v. Gregory et al., 26 S.D. 13, 127 N.W. 733, Ann. Cas. 1913A, 40. In view of the differences in statutes, the rule announced in State ex rel. Ketterling v. Gregory, supra, has no application to the instant case.
The Supreme Court of Kentucky, in Davis v. Henderson et al., 127 Ky. 13, 104 S.W. 1009, 1010, assigns the following reason for the application of the rule that a signer of a petition has a right to withdraw until final action thereon:
The Supreme Court of Illinois in the case of Littell v. Board of Sup’rs of Vermilion County, 198 Ill. 205, 80, in discussing the right of a petitioner to withdraw, says:
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