This is a proceeding by injunction to restrain the collection of a school tax for school dis trict number 5, township 54, ranges 15 and 16, in Randolph county, on the ground that said school district was never legally organized, and that there is, in fact, no such school district. Notice was given that the petition would be presented to the Randolph circuit court on the twenty-ninth of March, 1884. Defendant appeared and the cause was submitted to the court on. the petition, and the bill was dismissed and final judgment rendered against plaintiff for costs, from which he prosecutes his appeal to this court.
It appears from complainant’s bill that =on the twelfth of March, 1880, a petition was presented to the school directors of district number 4, township 54, range 16, saying that the petitioner’s wished to form a new district out of territory to be taken from school district number 4, township 54, range 16, and from school district number 2, township 54, range 15. This petition set forth with particularity the territory to be taken 'from said districts numbered 4 and 2; on the reception of the petition said directors had notices of election for’said purpose posted as required by law, in exact conformity with said petition, the boundaries of the contemplated new district being described in said notices exactly as in the petition; that the boundaries as described in said petition and notices embraced one hundred and sixty-four acres of land of plaintiff on which he then resided and now resides, and that one McCrary also owned and now owns two hundred and sixteen acres of land within said boundaries. It also appears that, at the annual meeting of said school district number 4, held in April, 1880, when the proposition to form a new district came up to be acted upon, an amendment was made, changing. *687the proposed boundaries without any further notice to plaintiff, who was not present at said meeting, so as to include only his dwelling house and seven acres of his land in the proposed new district, leaving his barn, stables and one hundred and fifty-seven acres of his land in district number 4, and so as to include only fifty acres of said McCrary’s land in the proposed district, leaving the rest of his farm, one hundred and sixty-six acres, in said district number 4; that the original proposition, as thus amended, was voted upon and declared adopted, and •said new district organized. It further appears that plaintiff paid the school taxes thereafter assessed against him for said new district (but paid the same, as alleged, under protest) till the institution of this suit in 1884.
It is contended by counsel that under sections 7023 and 7031, Revised Statutes, the voters, when assembled at the annual meeting, were confined to the proposition of creating the new district out of the exact territory, as described in the petition and notices, and that, as they did not do so, but changed the boundary in the particulars above stated, the whole proceeding is void. According to the petition and notices it was proposed to include one hundred and sixty-four acres of the plaintiff’s land in the new district; according to the change or amendment made, all of the land was not included, but only seven acres of it, and it is the change thus made upon which the above contention is based. Conceding, for the purposes of this case, without determining the question, that the change thus made was irregular and in excess of the powers conferred, the question still remains whether, under the facts of the case, a court of equity should interpose its injunctive and restraining process. The proceedings to establish this new district occurred in April, 1880; this suit, assailing its validity, was brought in 1884. In the meantime the new district was, in fact, organized, and has remained so organized, unchallenged by plaintiff, except so far as his protest *688when paying school taxes assessed against him may be regarded as challenging it. In view of these facts, and the further fact that, during an interval of four years, the de facto existence of the district was recognized and parties interested have adapted themselves to the changed condition of things, presumably for school purposes, and incurring expenses necessarily incidental to - conducting a school, we are fully justified in affirming the judgment of the circuit court on the ground, if on no other, that plaintiff, by his laches, has allowed a condition of things to exist for four years which would make it inequitable to grant the relief prayed for. Landrum v. Union Bank, 63 Mo. 48; Kitchen v. Railroad, 69 Mo. 224; Bradshaw v. Yates, 67 Mo. 221.
Judgment affirmed,
in which all concur, except Brace, J., absent.