51 Kan. 792 | Kan. | 1893
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The application to prohibit the issuance of $85,000 of 4-per-cent. 20-year bonds by the board of education of the city of Topeka, recently made to the district court of Shawnee county, after a full hearing, was denied. That judgment, until reversed, modified, or suspended, is conclusive; but it appears that the bonds about to be issued have been sold to the commissioners of the state school fund, and it is important that their legality be settled by this court. In view of the lengthy opinion handed down by the learned trial judge in the case disposed of in the district court of Shawnee county, it is unnecessary to refer to all of the objections presented against the issuance of the bonds. An election was held in the city of Topeka on March 7, 1893, for the purpose of voting on a proposition to purchase a site and erect a high-school building, not to exceed $85,000. On March 10, 1893, at 8 o’clock p. m., the city council met for the purpose of canvassing the returns of the election, but no quorum being present, the council adjourned without day. On March 15, 1893, in accordance with a call of the mayor of the city of Topeka, at the request of the board of education of the city, the city council again convened, at 7:30
“The legislature shall encourage the promotion of intellectual, moral, scientific and agricultural improvement, by establishing a uniform system of common schools, and schools of a higher grade, embracing normal, preparatory, collegiate, and university departments.”
The board of education of the city of Topeka has established a course of instruction in the common or public schools of the city, subdivided into 12 years or grades. The first four years or grades in the course of instruction are kept and maintained in 21 buildings, and are known as the “primary department;” the fifth and sixth years or grades are taught in 16 buildings, and are known as the “intermediate department;” the seventh and eighth years or grades are in six buildings, known as the “grammar-school department.” The scholars in the ninth, tenth, eleventh and twelfth years or grades assemble in a building known as the “high school,”
“That in each and every school district shall be taught orthography, reading, writing, English grammar, geography, and arithmetic, and such other branches as may be determined by the district board: Provided, That the instructions given in the several branches taught shall be in the English language.”
In the last case it was remarked that
“The board of education of the city of Topeka has power to select its own officers, to make its rules and regulations, to establish a high school whenever in its opinion the educational interests of the city demand the same, and to exercise sole control over the public schools and school property of the city.”
(See Board of Education of Cincinnati v. Minor, 23 Ohio St. 211; McCormick v. Burt, 95 Ill. 263; Stuart v. School District, 30 Mich. 69; High School v. County of Clayton, 9 Iowa, 177.)
In the statute of 1876, entitled “An act for the regulation and support of common schools,” it is expressly provided “that the board of education shall have power to establish a high school whenever in their opinion the educational interests of the city demand the same.” (Laws of 1876, ch. 122, art. 10, § 4.) In that act, although the title refers to “common schools,” the legislature includes “high schools” as a part of the “uniform system of common schools.”
It was remarked in the opinion in Koester v. Comm’rs of Atchison Co., 44 Kas. 141, by Strang, C., that the high schools authorized by chapter 147, Laws of 1886, “are schools of a higher grade than district or common schools,” and it is insisted that that decision is conclusive against the power of a board of education of a city of the first class from organizing a high-scbool department as a part of the common or public schools of a city. The county high school, permitted to be established under that statute by every county having a population of over 6,000 inhabitants, may be considered “schools of a higher grade than district or common schools.” But the decision in that case was not rendered solely upon the ground that such a school is of a higher grade. It was determined in the case that, if it were a school of a higher grade, it was especially authorized by the constitution of the state; but if it were not so, then that the constitution did not forbid the es
As there was no quorum of the city council on March 10, 1893, when it met for the purpose of canvassing the returns of the election, the council might have adjourned to some subsequent time to complete the canvass; but as it adjourned without day, and without performing any of its duties, the mayor had authority to call a meeting of the council, and that body, in the performance of its duty, notwithstanding its former adjournment, had the power to canvass the returns and declare the result.
The peremptory writ of mandamus will be issued as prayed for. The judgment will carry costs.