DocketNumber: No. 17564. Reversed and remanded.
Judges: Thompson
Filed Date: 6/16/1926
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Upon the petition of the State's attorney of Jo Daviess county, at the relation of Alden McIntyre, Thomas Morrison and Jacob Gras, leave was granted to file in the circuit court an information in the nature of quo warranto against George W. Keene, J.B. Parker, Lawrence Hunt, J. David Steele and F.B. Cooley, calling upon them to show by what authority they assume to act as members of the board of education of Community High School District No. 124 of Jo Daviess county. The information charged that the district lies in the southwest corner of Jo Daviess county and that it contains approximately sixty-five sections of land; that the high school is conducted in a school building in the village of Hanover; that it is more than twelve miles from the school house to the most remote residence in the district; that Apple river, Big Rush creek and Little Rush creek traverse the district; that along these streams and along the Mississippi river, which is the western boundary of the district, there are ranges of high hills, many of which are very steep; that the roads in the district are ill-kept and that relators live in a part of the district which has direct connection over good roads with other trading points; that the notices for the calling of the election for the establishment of this district were posted in obscure places in the territory, and that many of the persons residing in the eastern part of the district did not know they were in a community high school district for a year or more after it was organized. The information was filed August 17, 1925, and the district was organized October 2, 1920. On December 14, 1925, defendants in error presented a motion, supported by affidavit, to set aside the order granting leave to file the information, on the ground that great public inconvenience and detriment would result if the district were dissolved after it has been permitted to continue for five school years. After a hearing upon this motion it was allowed and the *Page 257 order granting leave to file the information was set aside. This writ of error is prosecuted to review that judgment.
The affidavit in support of the motion to set aside the order granting leave to file the information sets forth that taxes were levied for each of the years 1920 to 1924; that the money thus raised by taxation was expended for the maintenance of a high school in said district in quarters rented in the school building owned and maintained by common school district No. 4 at Hanover; that forty-three boys and girls have graduated from said high school; that various sums of money, aggregating $1206, have been spent for high school equipment and that an additional sum of $500 was to be spent during the school year 1925-26; that teachers have been employed and paid for each of the four school years beginning with September, 1921, and ending May, 1925, and that teachers have been hired for the school year 1925-26. They allege further that the relators, and those who filed affidavits in support of the petition for leave to file the information, had actual knowledge of the organization of the school district at the time it was organized and that they have acquiesced in the maintenance of the school during the five-year period since its organization. In support of the petition for leave to file the information fifty-one persons filed affidavits, and but one of them knew that his land was included in the district in 1929. About three-fourths of them learned that they were within the district in 1923, and the others did not know they were in the district until 1924 or 1925. Many of these affiants had not been in the village of Hanover during the five years and few had been there more than two or three times a year.
On an application for leave to file an information in the nature of quo warranto the court may consider all the circumstances of the case, the position and motives of the relators in having the proceedings instituted, and whether the public interest will be served by allowing the information to be filed. Acquiescence on the part of the public generally *Page 258
will justify a refusal to grant leave to file the information, or to proceed to judgment after the information has been filed, where it appears that great inconvenience and public detriment will result, (People v. Cox,
The judgment is reversed and the cause is remanded to the circuit court of Jo Daviess county for further proceedings.
Reversed and remanded.