School District No. 45 v. School District No. 8, 119 Ark. 149 (1915)

June 7, 1915 · Arkansas Supreme Court
119 Ark. 149

School District No. 45 v. School District No. 8.

Opinion delivered June 7, 1915.

School districts — dismemberment—majority petition. — Property can not (be .taken from one school district and added to another, under Kirby's Digest, .§ 7544, except upon a petition of a majority of all the electors residing upon the territory of the districts to toe divided.

Appeal from Hot Spring Circuit Court; W. H. Evans, Judge;

reversed.

E. II. Vance, Jr., for .appellant.

The petition did not contain a majority of all the electors of the district, to be “divided.” Kirby’s Dig., *150§ 7544; Acts, 1891, p. 194. District No. 8 was not divided, ■and it took a majority of the electors of District No. 8 to give the court jurisdiction. 54 Ark. 134; 105 Ark. 47; 102 Ark. 401.

J. C. Boss, for appellee.

The circuit court followed the statute. Kir’bv’s Dig., § 7544; 54 Ark. 134.

McCulloch, C. J.

This is a controversy over the change of the boundary line between two adjoining' school districts in Hot Spring County transferring about three sections of land from District No. 45 and attaching the same to District No. 8. The proceedings were inaugurated on the petition of electors which constituted .a majority of the aggregate number of electors of both districts, but iall of the petitioners save one resided in Dis-, trict No. 8. There were only two voters residing upon the disputed territory sought to be transferred from one district to the other, and one of them signed the petition, being the only elector in District No. 45 Who signed. The county court refused to grant the prayer of the petition, but on appeal to the circuit court the prayer was granted and judgment was rendered .changing the boundaries of the districts so .as to transfer the disputed territory to District No. 8.

The decision of the case involved a construction of the statute on this .subject, which reads as follows: ‘ ‘ The county court shall have the right to form new school districts or change 'the boundaries thereof upon a petition of a majority of -all the electors residing upon the territory of the districts to ibe divided.” Kirby’s Digest, § 7544.

On both sides of the controversy, the case of Hudspeth v. Wallis, 54 Ark. 134, is cited, with the contention that it is decisive of this case, but we do not find that it has any bearing on the question now involved. In that case, the petitioners were .attempting to form a new school district out of territory taken from four old districts, and the contention of those opposing the formation of the district was that the statute required a petition of a majority of the electors of each district to be divided, *151but the court held 'that the statute meant that there must he a majority of the aggregate number of electors of all the 'districts to he 'divided. The court, in deciding that case, literally followed the language of the statute.

Now, it will he observed, from the narrative of the facts that District No. 45 is the only one to he divided. The 'disputed 'territory is to he added to District No. 8, hut that 'district is not to he divided. So, if we follow the language of the statute literally, it leads necessarily to the conclusion 'that a petition of a majority of the electors of District No. 45, which is the one to he divided, is required, .and that the number of electors in District No. 8 is not to he taken into account at all in determining the requisite number of petitioners who could authorize the county court to make the change. .Counsel for appellee treat the statute as providing that a petition of a majority of each of the districts to he affected is required, hut .that calls for a substitution of the word “affected” for the word used in the statute — a word having an altogether different meaning. It may be argued also that this construction of the statute gives no voice at .all to the electors of 'the district to which the territory is to he attached, 'but the 'answer to that is that they can he heard in the county court, where there is a discretion vested to determine whether, even though the statutory requisites have heen complied with, it is for the best interests of the districts for the change to he made. The county court is not bound 'to. grant the petition merely because the prerequisites ¡are complied with, but that court or the circuit court on appeal may exercise a 'discretion in regard to making the change. Hale v. Brown, 70 Ark. 471; Stephens v. School District, 104 Ark. 145; Carpenter v. Leatherman, 117 Ark. 531, 176 S. W. 113.

The court has no authority, however, to make the change unless the statute has been complied with by a presentation of a petition signed by a majority of the electors of the district or districts to be divided. The petition in this case did not come up to the requirements of the statute, and therefore the circuit court erred in granting the prayer thereof.

*152The judgment is therefore reversed, and the canse is remanded with directions 'to the circuit court to enter a judgment denying the prayer of the petition, as was done by 'the county court of Hot Spring County.