Case ID: iowa_200/html/0359-01.html
Source: Caselaw Access Project
Author: {"author": "Albert, J.", "license": "Public Domain", "url": "https://static.case.law/"}
Date Created: 2024-08-24T03:29:51.129683

S. H. Thie et al., Appellants, v. Consolidated Independent School District of Mediapolis et al., Appellees.
    APPEAL AND ERROR: Dismissal — Moot Case — Enjoining Executed Act. An appeal from a refusal to enjoin the ereetion of a schoolhouse will be dismissed when it is made to appear that the schoolhouse has already been erected.
    Headnote 1: 4 C. J. p. 584.
    
      Appeal from Des Moines District Court. — Oscar Hale, Judge.
    
      June 25, 1925.
    Action for injunction restraining* defendants from erecting a school building. From the sustaining* of a demurrer to plaintiffs’ petition, plaintiffs appeal.
    
    Dismissed.
    
      Seerley c& Clark and Clark & Byers, for appellants.
    
      La Monte Coivles, for appellees.
   Albert, J.

Plaintiffs aré taxpayers residing* within the confines of the defendant consolidated school district. In their petition in equity they allege that a petition for dissolution of the district had been filed with the proper authorities, and ask that defendants be restrained from erecting a building until after the petition for dissolution has been finally disposed of. This petition was met by a demurrer, which was later sustained by the court; hence this appeal.

This case is one of a series of lawsuits between these same parties, involving* allied questions growing out of an attempt on the part of defendants to build a school building within their district. The first of said cases is Thie v. Consolidated Ind. Sch. Dist., 197 Iowa 344; the second, Thie v. Cordell, 199 Iowa 709.

The argument made by the plaintiffs herein, and their contentions made in the petition filed in this matter, are wholly answered in the ruling made in the last above cited case, and need no further elaboration here. At the outset, however, it is made to appear of record in the case that the schoolhouse over which this contention arose, has been.built, accepted, and paid for, and is now occupied by the defendants. This being true, the ease therefore becomes wholly an acádemic question. We have repeatedly held that we would not decide moot cases, the last ease being McFarland v. McGhee, 199 Iowa 542. — Dismissed.

Faville, C. J., and Evans and Arthur, JJ., concur.