150 Pa. 220 | Pa. | 1892
Opinion by
The duties and powers of school directors are defined and regulated by the Act of May 8, 1854, and its supplements. Their important duties are two in number. One is “ to establish a sufficient number of common schools for the education of every individual between the ages of six and twenty-one years, in their respective districts, who may apply for admission.” The other, as defined by the Act of 1854, is “ To cause suitable lots of ground to he procured and suitable buildings to be erected, purchased, or rented, for schoolhouses,” in which the common schools may be conducted. To provide them with the means necessary to enable them to perform these duties they are clothed by law with the power to levy and collect two distinct taxes. One of these is styled a school tax, the other a special or building tax. The school tax must be large enough so that, “together with such additional sums as the district may be entitled to receive out of the state appropriations and from other sources, it shall be sufficient to keep the schools of the district in operation not less than four or more than ten months in the year.” The special or building tax must be levied and used to provide “ suitable buildings ” for use as schoolhouses, and cannot be lawfully diverted to any
In the case at bar it appears that the directors of Emporium School District found four hundred and nine persons applying for admission to their school. Their schoolhouse furnished accommodation for only three hundred and thirty. What should they do to provide for the eighty persons whom
The decree of the court below is reversed and the injunction dissolved. The costs of this appeal to be paid by the appellee.