Wilsey v. Cornwall

Root, J.

Certain residents and heads of families of school district Ro. 5, in Walla Walla county, petitioned the county school superintendent to form a new school district *251from a portion of said district 5, designating and describing in said petition the land which they desired to have set aside for such new school district. Upon hearing said petition, the county superintendent of schools made and entered an order whereby he assumed to establish a new school district, which he designated as school district Uo. 73, consisting of less than four sections of land, and about seven hundred acres less than the amount of territory described in the petition. Appellants, being of said petitioners, therer upon appealed to the board of county commissioners of said county, which board, after a hearing, sustained the action of the school superintendent.

Appellants thereupon applied to the superior court in said county for a writ of review, directing the defendants to certify their proceedings to said court for examination. A motion was made to quash this writ, which motion was sustained, upon the ground that said writ had been improvidently issued, and that the affidavit on which the same was based did not state facts sufficient to justify the issuance of the writ. Brom this order and judgment, an appeal is taken to this court.

Appellants maintain that the action of the county school superintendent and board of county commissioners should be reviewed for two reasons: (1) Because the district, which the superintendent attempted to create, consists of less than four sections of land; (2) because neither the superintendent nor the commissioners had jurisdiction to form any district other than the one prayed for in the petition.

As to the first point, the statute invoked does not appear to sustain appellants’ contention. A portion of 3 Bal. Code, § 2277 [Laws 1901, p. 371, § 2], relied on by appellants, reads as follows:

“In forming new districts, or transferring territory from one district to another, or changing boundaries of districts, no school district shall contain less than four sections of *252land, unless said district can support six months’ school per year after such change of territory.”

From, this "it appears, by necessary inference, that a new district may be formed, consisting of less than four sections if said district can support six monthsi of school per year.

Whether or not the district can support that amount of school, is a question for the school superintendent to consider and determine in acting upon the petition. There is nothing in the petition indicating that said district could not support that amount of school. In the absence of a showing to the contrary, it must be assumed that the school superintendent and the board of county commissioners found that said district could support a school for six months during the year. This determination was final.

As to the second proposition, we feel that to uphold if would be to place upon the powers of the county school superintendent a limitation which we do not believe the legislature intended. Ho decision is called to our attention wherein this question has been passed upon by any court. It appears, however, that the question was heretofore submitted to the attorney general of the state and, in an opinion given thereupon, he employs the following language:

“I am of the opinion that the provisions of law are sufficiently broad to allow the school superintendent, after he has heard all the evidence presented by the parties interested, to exercise his judgmnt, within reasonable limits, in the organization of such new districts and the fixing of their boundaries, and that in so doing he may correct any mistakes that may have been made in the description given in the petition, and in a proper case modify the boundaries described therein.” 1 Op'. Atty. Gen. 197.

We think this holding is correct. If, in thus modifying the boundaries of the proposed new district, he acts unwisely or is guilty of an abuse of discretion, the statute provides for an appeal to the board of county commissioners where the error, if it be such, may be corrected; and said statute *253provides that the action, of the commissioners shall he final. 3 Bal. Code, § 2275. This being the case, the court would have no jurisdiction to review the action of said board, unless there appeared to be either a want of jurisdiction, or some action in excess of jurisdiction. In this case we think the action of the board not open to either of these objections. The county school superintendent having had jurisdiction of the subject-matter, and the board of county commissioners, upon appeal, having reviewed his action and approved the same, and not having transcended the limits of its jurisdiction, we think the action of'the trial court in quashing the writ was right. Said order and judgment are therefore affirmed.

Mount, C. J., Hadley, Dunbab, and Cbow, JJ., concur.