Cleveland Village School District No. 118 v. Zion
Cleveland Village School District No. 118 v. Zion
Opinion of the Court
This suit was brought, originally, by The Cleveland Village School District No. 118 of Cass county, and Brown, Laffoon, Edelen, Job, Noyes and Corey, Directors, and P. R. Brown, Treasurer thereof, against defendant, Zion, to recover certain funds alleged to have come into his hands as Township Trustee and Treasurer of Glen Wild School District, a common school district heretofore existing but disorganized in 1903 by the incorporation of the north two-thirds of its territory into the Cleveland Village School District and the south! one-third of said territory into the West Line School District.
The petition was in two counts, the first of which, after alleging the official positions of all the persons above named, the existence of Glen Wild School District and the later disorganization thereof by the incorporation of two-thirds of its territory into the Cleveland Village School District and the rest into the West Line District, further alleged that at the time of said disorganization said Zion, as said township trustee and treasurer, had in his hands funds belonging to said disorganized district amounting to the sum of $183.46. Said first count further alleged that “under the statutes made and provided” the said funds in the hands of said Zion were to be divided to said districts according to the number of children of school age that were transferred to each of the districts that absorbed the territory of the disorganized district; that there were twenty-five children transferred to the Cleveland District and seven to the West Line District whereby the former became entitled to twenty-five-thirty-seconds of said funds and the latter to seven-thirty-seconds thereof; and that the said Cleveland District was entitled to $143.46 and said West Line District to $40.21. (This, it will be observed, is twenty-
The second count of the petition alleged that in a proceeding in the county court of Cass county, at the April term, 1908, wherein the Cleveland District was plaintiff and the West Line District and said Zion were defendants, a judgment was rendered findirtg that the Treasury of the Cleveland District was entitled to receive $143.46 and the custodian of the fund of the West Line District was entitled to receive $40.21 and ordering that said Zion honor warrants for said amounts respectively due said districts; that said judgment in favor of plaintiff for $143.46 is a final judgment and remains unpaid; wherefore judgment is asked for said suin, etc.
Defendant herein offered a demurrer to the petition. Plaintiff thereupon amended said petition by striking out all of the plaintiffs, except the Cleveland Village School District. After this, the court upon consideration of the demurrer overruled it and' defendant elected to stand thereon, Thereupon, the court heard plaintiff’s evidence and found the issues for plaintiff upon the first count of the petition and found that the defendant was indebted to plaintiff in the sum of $143.55 (which is twenty cents more than the petition asked), with six per cent, from April 30, 1908, making an aggregate of $207.58 for which judgment was rendered. Thereupon defendant appealed.
The judgment having been rendered on the first count of the petition, the second count need not be specially considered, and it would not have been mentioned except for the fact that it is necessary in order to understand the references herein to the order and judgment of the county court, and also because, from the recitals in the judgment herein appealed from, it seems that the circuit court accepted the county court judgment as fixing and determining the plain
The main contention raised hy the demurrer is .that the circuit court is without jurisdiction to entertain this suit because the law has provided a method whereby the funds and property of the absorbed district may be divided between the new districts and that method should be followed. Section 10839, Revised Statutes 1909, provides that, upon the formation of a new district, the 'districts affected shall agree upon a division of the property on hand and upon the sum to be paid to the new district, and section 10840 provides that if they fail to agree, either of the districts may appeal to the County Superintendent of Schools who shall appoint a Board of Arbitrators, consisting of four persons, to ascertain and- determine the amounts due. Where the statute provides a method of procedure by which the school districts may adjust their differences, that method must be followed. [Rice v. McClelland, 58 Mo. 116; School Dist. v. Sims, 186 S. W. 4; District 6 v. District 5 of Henry county, 18 Mo. App. 266.] If it be said that sections 10839 and 10840, being found in the chapter on country common school districts, does not apply to a village, district, the answer is-that the disorganized district and also the West Line District were such districts and the sections do not by their terms exclude- a village district when that happens to be the new distrct that is formed.
It may perhaps very well be that if the Cleveland Village School District had absorbed all of the Glen Wild District, then the former would be entitled to sue for and recover the property belonging to the latter, as successor to all its rights and liabilities. [Abler v. School District of St. Joseph, 141 Mo. App. 189, 197.]. As said in District v. District, 18 Mo. App. 272, “ Where a corporation goes entirely out of existence, by annexation to or merger in another corporation, if no arrangements be made respecting the property and liabilities of the defunct corpor
But it is said the other' district was a party to the proceeding in the county court, and that tribunal adjudged the amount of the share going to such other
Again money collected by taxation for school purposes cannot be diverted from one fund to another. Certainly money in the teacher’s fund cannot be transferred to and used in the incidental fund. There is nothing in either the petition or judgment showing to what fund the money belongs or to what fund it should go when paid to plaintiff. If the division is made between the two districts as- provided by sections 10839 and 10840 the matters as to the various funds will be fully known and the money can be properly distributed.
The judgment is reversed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.