delivered the opinion of the court:
Plaintiff Matthew Connelly, a 15-year-old hearing-impaired child with resultant learning disabilities, brought an action by his parents, James and Laureen Connelly, against Wesley E Gibbs and Niles Township High School District 219, for damages and for a permanent mandatory injunction requiring that he be enrolled as a resident in the free schools of District 219. The trial court denied defendants’ motion for judgment on the pleadings and severed the issue of residency for the purpose of trial, the parties stipulating that should residency be determined in favor of plaintiff, defendants had an independent legal duty to provide him with an appropriate education.
A hearing commenced on August 6, 1981, during which the court assessed the issue of residency as “blurred and complicated” by plaintiffs’ ownership and dual occupancy of both a condominium in Skokie and a family residence in Chicago. Nonetheless, the court found Matthew to be a resident of Skokie and issued a permanent mandatory injunction requiring District 219 to provide him with a free and appropriate public special education. Defendants appeal the court’s determination of residency and granting of injunctive relief, as well as its earlier denial of their motion for judgment on the pleadings. We disagree with the trial court’s findings with respect to residency and reverse on that issue alone.
The following undisputed facts were adduced at the hearing: James and Laureen Connelly had been married for 24 years and had never been separated or divorced. They had four children besides Matthew: one son who was then living away at school, another who was married and living in San Francisco, a daughter attending college who had left home and moved in with a girlfriend one week before the hearing, and a fourth son who was planning to attend college and live in a dormitory as of the following September. The Connellys own a four-bedroom home located at 6750 North Ionia in Chicago (hereinafter
In June of 1980 Matthew had graduated from the Alexander Graham Bell Elementary School in the Chicago School District, where he had been attending a program for hearing-impaired students, and was designated by that District for placement at Whitney Young High School, a magnet school with a hearing-impaired department serving approximately 250 children from the entire city of Chicago. The Connellys were particularly concerned with the lack of vocational training at the Chicago school, however, and decided in June of 1980 that they would not send Matthew to Whitney Young. Rather, pursuant to a recommendation by the Siegel Institute of Michael Reese Hospital, the Connellys petitioned High School District 214 in Arlington Heights for Matthew’s admission on a tuition basis to a regional hearing-impaired program conducted at John Hersey High School (Hersey). The Hersey program is operated by District 214 under a contract with the Low Incidence Cooperative Agreement (LICA), a joint agreement of 48 elementary and high school districts in the north and northwest suburbs of Chciago. Under the agreement, District 214 pays the cost of operating the program subject to reimbursement on a tuition basis by each of the school districts belonging to LICA that have students in the program. Defendant District 219 is also a member of LICA and any eligible hearing-impaired child who is a resident of District 219 is entitled to attend the hearing-impaired program at Hersey at no cost to them, to be paid for by the School District. The Connellys’ petition for admission to Hersey was ultimately denied at a staff conference held on September 18, 1980.
Although the Connellys did not inform anyone at LICA or District 214 at the September 18 staff conference or prior thereto that they had signed a contract to purchase a condominium in Skokie in August 1980, they did indicate to at least one staff member who was present that they had more or less expected Matthew’s rejection. This expectation was further evidenced by the fact that Mrs. Connelly went that same day to Niles West High School in District 219 to enroll Matthew as a resident there, requesting his placement in the program at Hersey as soon as possible. Mrs. Connelly informed the District that they were purchasing a home within its boundaries. Pursuant to this information, Matthew was scheduled to commence a program at Hersey on November 3, 1980; however, Matthew did not begin school on that date because defendants had received information that the Connelly family had not, in fact, moved to Skokie. Defendants were so notified by Louise Wilson, an employee of District 214 and teaching consultant
On November 3, the Connellys met with Rita Stewart of District 219 to discuss the question of their residency. At that time, Mr. Connelly produced his Skokie phone bill, an insurance policy on the condominium and a Skokie voter’s registration card. The Connellys explained to Stewart that they wanted the best education available for Matthew, which they did not feel was possible in their present district. In response to Stewart’s questioning as to why they had not moved the entire family into District 219, the Connellys responded that, due to the currently depressed housing market, it seemed unadvisable to try to sell the Chicago residence at that time, and also that they felt it would be unfair to their other children to uproot them from their home and friends. The Connellys were told that the matter would be taken “under advisement.” They allege that no further investigation was in fact undertaken by defendants before plaintiffs instituted the present action.
In addition to the facts thus stated, it was established at the hearing that during the summer of 1980, while their petition for tuition placement in District 214 was still pending, the Connellys began looking for a house to purchase in the suburbs of Lincolnwood, Skokie and Morton Grove, all of which fall within District 219, and in Arlington Heights. The Connellys looked at eight to 12 houses with two or three bedrooms, all in the $150,000 range. The Connellys never made an offer to purchase a single-family house, however, and although they had two appraisals on their Chicago residence, they never went so far as to list that house for sale with a broker because they felt the appraised value was below what it should be. Nor did they at any time consider renting a house which would accommodate the entire family, because, as Mr. Connelly testified, it did not suit their personal lifestyle.
Having rejected the idea of selling the Chicago residence and purchasing a new single-family residence, the Connellys began looking at one-bedroom condominiums in the same area and in August 1980, after
In addition to utility bills and an insurance policy on the Skokie condominium and his voter registration card, Mr. Connelly produced a vehicle registration sticker, library card and income tax returns, all indicating the Skokie address. The Connellys also showed evidence of membership in the condominium association, had attended at least one semi-annual association meeting and Mr. Connelly had participated in some cooperative painting of the common areas. Mrs. Connelly, on the other hand, remained registered to vote in Chicago and had voted there in the most recent elections. The Connelly family also owned two cars which were registered to the Chicago address. The Connellys introduced the testimony of a neighbor at the condominium who had seen Mr. Connelly and Matthew approximately 40 times over the preceding 11-month period and had seen Mrs. Connelly there four or five times. The witness did not recall seeing Matthew separately on any of those occasions.
The general rule in Illinois is that the residence of parents is the residence of their children. (Ashley v. Board of Education (1916),
Based on the physical exhibits and testimony, the trial court con-eluded
Our courts have long held intent to be the critical question in determining residence, and in determining intent a person’s acts are to be given more weight than his declarations. (Miller v. Police Board (1976),
In light of the rationale set forth in Miller, we conclude that the trial court’s finding that James, Laureen and Matthew Connelly were permanent residents of Skokie was against the manifest weight of the evidence. There is no question but that at the time the Connellys purchased the four-room condominium in Skokie they did not intend that their entire family, or even those remaining at home, would reside there, as such would have been physically impossible. In fact, from the time the Connellys took possession up until the date of hearing,
The sole question before us, therefore, is whether plaintiffs can establish a second residence in another district, so long as they offer any justification other than education for the temporary residence, and thereby gain a tuition-free education in the second district.
Plaintiffs seek to rely on a line of residency cases which stand for the proposition that a child’s right to attend school is not limited to the place of his parents’ residence or of legal domicile, as long as the child is not residing in the new district solely for the purpose of attending school there (Ashley v. Board of Education (1916),
In addition to their acknowledged desire to provide Matthew with a quality program which included vocational training, plaintiffs testified as to several other reasons which, they claim, precipitated their purchase of the Skokie condominium. These justifications, which were accepted by the trial court, included their desire to help Matthew
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the circuit court of Cook County is reversed and the cause is remanded with directions to dissolve the permanent mandatory injunction and to dismiss the suit with prejudice.
Reversed and remanded with directions.
GOLDBERG and CAMPBELL, JJ., concur.
