Livesay v. Whitney

SMITH, P. J.

The plaintiff, J. S. Livesay, sues as one of the directors of School District No. 4, township fifty, range thirty-one, Jackson county, and also as a taxpayer of said district in connection with other taxpaying plaintiffs herein of said district, to restrain the defendants, who constitute a majority of said board, *478from removing the sehoolhouse of the district from its present location. Ait the annual meeting April 2, 1901, of the school district named, the following motion, as shown by the records of the meeting, was made, viz: “Moved and seconded to move the sehoolhouse onto the southeast corner of J. B. Whitney’s place. First ballot showed twelve for and five against said motion. Declared carried.”

At a meeting of the board of directors held April 10, 1902, a petition was presented requesting the board “to call a special school meeting in the district for the purpose of determining by ballot the rate to be levied upon $100 assessed valuation necessary to purchase grounds for a sehoolhouse site to which said schoolhouse has been removed by vote of this district at its regular April election, 1901.” It was moved that, “the petition be not granted because the purposes specified in the petition are not authorized by law,” which motion was carried. On September 5, 1903, at a meeting of the board a vote was taken and carried “on moving the sehoolhouse from where it is now situated to the site formerly selected at an annual meeting.”

The defendants introduced evidence tending to show the location for the proposed sehoolhouse site as understood by all the voters at the school election in 1901, and also a deed from J. B. Whitney and wife conveying one acre of ground for a sehoolhouse site at the said place. The money paid for the land was raised by private subscription.

It is claimed that the. vote at the April election, 1901, to “move the sehoolhouse onto the southeast corner of J. B. Whitney’s place” was not a vote to change the sehoolhouse site. But it seems to us that substantially it was. It was just as effectual as to say that the location of the sehoolhouse site would be changed to said place. When the house would be moved, the site would be changed.

It is also objected that the site was not sufficiently *479designated. We think it was sufficiently so as to enable the board of directors to locate it. That was all that was necessary. Moore v. State, 9 Kans. App. 489.

Under the school law of the State, subdivision 11, section 9750, Eevised Statutes 1899, school districts are authorized to change the location of the schoolhouse site when the same for any cause is deemed necessary. In the very nature o‘f things there could be no levy of taxes to raise funds for a new schoolhouse until it was first determined to change the existing site. But it is contended that as it was shown that no new building was to be erected but the one then in existence was to be removed to the new site, there would arise no necessity for an additional levy of taxes for the erection of a new building. But it was contemplated that a levy should be made to pay for the new site. But the board refused to levy taxes for that purpose, whereupon the citizens of the district by private subscription raised the necessary funds and procured a deed to the new site.

Subdivision 9 of said section 9750, Eevised Statutes, provides that the qualified voters of the district shall determine the rate to be levied necessary to purchase a site, erect a schoolhouse and furnish the same, as provided by section 9778 of said statute. Under section 9739, supra, the district was authorized to take and hold the land donated to it for a schoolhouse site.

It is admitted that the district had no building fund'. And plaintiff charges that defendants are contemplating, without authority of law, to use incidental funds of the district to move said schoolhouse to. the new site.

The statute creates three separate funds, viz: the teachers; the incidental or contingent; and the building fund.' As we understand it, all moneys raised for general school purposes are apportioned between the teachers and the incidental fund. And all money raised for building purposes constitutes the third fund'. The district clerk is not authorized to draw upon any par*480ticular fund for a purpose other than that for which the fund is apportioned. The incidental expense fund was created with the idea that in carrying on the schools there would arise a necessity for funds for purposes other than providing school sites and schoolhouses and the employment of teachers. The Legislature in providing a fund for incidental expenses had in mind such as would be incurred in carrying on the schools; for instance, for fuel, water, or things of that kind. It certainly did not have in contemplation such an extraordinary expense as the moving of a schoolhouse. The moving of a schoolhouse to another site and placing it on a foundation is in a sense the erection of a school building, and the expense attending the operation should be paid out of the building fund. There being no such fund provided, the directors had no authority to move the house to the new site, consequently the injunction was properly issued.

Affirmed.

All concur.

ON MOTION TO MODIFY JUDGMENT.

Now at this day the court having fully considered\ appellant’s motion to modify the opinion, doth' consider' and adjudge that the injunction as to the teachers and incidental fund be and the same is hereby affirmed, but the injunction in other respects is set aside and held for naught.

It is therefore considered by the court that said motion to modify be thus sustained.