Nutter v. Trustees of School District
Nutter v. Trustees of School District
Opinion of the Court
This was an action of debt commenced before a justice of the peace. It was brought in the name of “ The trustees of school district number four, in congressional township number 12, range two west,” against Benjamin Nutter. The object of the suit, as is shown by the statement of the cause of action, was to recover the sum of 10 dollars and 93 cents, as a tax assessed in that district against the defendant. The only plea is the general issue, Judgment by the justice for the plaintiffs. The defendant appealed to the Circuit Court. Judgment by the Circuit Court, without a jury, for the plaintiffs.
The principal subject of inquiry to which our attention has been called in this cause is, whether the district number four was legally established? We shall decide this question, without stopping to inquire 'whether the defendant has, strictly, a right to raise it in this action or not. The following are the facts relative to this part of the cause:—
The township trustees, in the first place, divided the township into nine districts. Some of the districts, of which number eight was one, elected their officers. Afterwards, all the districts except number eight, which is the one in which the. defendant resided, petitioned for a new division of the township. The township trustees, accordingly, made a.new division of the township, and reduced the number of districts to five. The old district number eight had two miles attached to it on the north, and was designated as number four. Trustees for this district number four were appointed, under the statute of 1833, by the clerk of the township trustees.
The defendant contends that district number eight in which he resides, and which is now included within district number four, has been changed without authority, and that therefore the tax assessed against him by district number four is illegal. This objection to the tax is not well founded. The statute
The evidence respecting the organization of district number four, the assessment of the tax against the defendant, and the demand on him for the same, is set out in the record, and is sufficient, so far as proof of those facts is concerned, to authorise the judgment in favour of the plaintiffs.
The question whether the plaintiffs are a corporation does not arise in this cause. Their capacity to sue in the name they have assumed, is admitted by the plea of the general issue. Guaga Iron Company v. Dawson, in this Court, November term, 1836
The judgment is affirmed with costs. To be certified, &c.
Ante, 202. In N. York, the law on the subject is now as follows: “In suits brought by a corporation created by or under any statute of this state, it shall not be necessary to prove on the trial of the cause, the existence of such corporation, unless the defendant shall have pleaded in abatement or in bar, that, the plaintifls are not a corporation.” 2 Rev. Stat. N. Y. p. 458.
Reference
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- Nutter v. The Trustees of School District, &c.
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