The Wares School District and the Jewell School District of Warren County were by order of the board of education of that county consolidated into the Jewell Consolidated School District. Trustees for said consolidated district were duly elected and commissioned, and are serving as such. The only schoolh'ouse located in this consolidated district is one located in the territory, formerly embraced in the Wares School District. This schoolhouse is a one-story two-room building, located about 6 miles from Jewell, and is not in the center of the consolidated district, being within 2-1/2 miles of the side of the district opposite Jewell. The board of education of Warren County has made provision for the transportation of about two thirds of the children of the Jewell Consolidated School District to the school in the Mayfield Consolidated School District in Hancock County. Said board of education is paying for the transportation of said children to said Mayfield school from the funds in its hands appropriated to the Jewell Consolidated School District, and is paying out of the funds in its hands to the school authorities of Hancock County for their tuition. The trustees of the Jewell Consolidated School District agreed to this arrangement.
In the year 1931 the Mayfield school opened on September 1. The school at Wares was not then open, and did not open until September 28, 1931; and no provision was made for the education of approximately one third of the children of the Jewell Consolidated School District between September 1 and September 28, 1931. From the vicinity of the Wares school all high-school pupils above the seventh grade have, with the consent of the trustees of said district, been transported to the high school at Warrenton since August 31, 1931. One school bus is operated to Mayfield, and it carried in 1930 an average daily load of 55 children, and at times as many as 73. The foregoing arrangement has been followed for three years by the board of education of Warren County and the trustees of said consolidated school district. The trustees of said consolidated district and the board of education of said county arranged for a bus to transport the remaining children of the district who are not attending the Mayfield school to the Wares school, commencing September 28, when that school opened, and two teachers have been employed by said trustees to teach in that school. The average number of pupils taught at Wares school during 1930-31 was 36, and at times there were as many as 49.
A survey of the various statutes providing for the transportation of pupils to and from public schools in the counties and paying for such transportation out of the school funds will throw light
But this case comes under other provisions of the laws of this State. Former^, when a common school was located near a county line, children from an adjoining county might, by the consent of the county board of education of the respective counties, be permitted to attend the school. Code of 1895, § 1378. By an act of the legislature passed in 1903, that section of the Political Code of 1895 was so amended as to provide, that, “when a common school is located near a county line, children from an adjoining county shall be permitted to attend the school.” Acts 1903, p. 33. The law upon this subject is now found in section 111 of the code of school laws. Acts 1919, pp. 288, 331; 8 Park’s Code, § 1437 (kk). Under said law, “when a common school is located near a county line, children from an adjoining county shall be permitted to attend” such school, if they reside nearer to such' school, or said school is more accessible to their residence than any public school in the county of their residence. Under the above law, arrangement for their attendance is under the authority and direction of the superintendents of the respective county boards of education, and “provision shall be made for such children just as for others.” Under the above section of the code of school laws, children residing in the Jewell Consolidated School District and nearer to the Mayfield consolidated school than to any school in the district of their residence in Warren County had just as much right to attend the Mayfield school as children living in the Mayfield Consolidated School District in Hancock County; and under the last provision of said section of the code of school laws, it was competent for the board of education of Warren County, the superintendent of schools of that county, and the trustees of the Jewell Consolidated School
In McKenzie v. Board of Education, 158 Ga. 892 (124 S. E. 721), there is nothing to the contrary of what we hold in this ease. At the time that decision was rendered the trustees of a school district could not furnish transportation for school children to and from school; but this could only be done by the board of education under section 93 of the code of school laws. This section was so amended by the act of August 20, 1927 (Acts 1927, p. 174), as to confer upon local district trustees the right to furnish such transportation and pay for the same out of the proper school funds. In Douglas v. Board of Education, 164 Ga. 271 (138 S. E. 226), the court was dealing with the refusal of the county board of education to furnish transportation and pay therefor from the school funds. It was not dealing with the furnishing of such transportation and the payment therefor from such funds. In that case it was simply ruled that the refusal to furnish transportation was not an abuse of the discretion vested in the county board of education to furnish or not to furnish such transportation. That decision is not authority for the proposition that the county board of education could not furnish such transportation if they had deemed it best for the interests of the school. So we are of the opinion that the trial judge erred in enjoining the defendants from furnishing transportation to the children who resided in Warren County and were properly attending the county-line school in Hancock County.
Judgment reversed.