29 Conn. Supp. 397 | Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas | 1971
The plaintiffs are school children who attend public schools in the town of Hamden and their parents. The defendants are the board of education of the town of Hamden and the state board of education. The complaint in this action seeks to obtain temporary and permanent injunctions against the use of a printed curriculum by the state board of education in authorizing, and the Hamden board of education in teaching, a course entitled “Health Education.” It is a course which requires compulsory attendance and includes, in addition to physical education, a comprehensive and planned sequential study of “reproduction,” “hygiene,” “sex education,” “family life” and “growth.” It has been prepared as a planned guide for use of teachers in instruction of school children of differing age and grade levels from kindergarten through grade twelve, which marks completion of high school studies. The course is outlined in a detailed curriculum containing 325 pages. The title of the curriculum is, “A Guide for the Teaching of Health, Kindergarten-Grade 12,” and is dated November, 1968. The “Guide” is in evidence as a plaintiffs’ exhibit and has been in use in the Hamden public schools for approximately two full school years. The curriculum follows in sequential manner the teaching of the following nine main concepts: (1) Growth and Development, (2) Public Health, (3) Family Living and Sex Education, (4) Safety and First Aid, (5) Health Maintenance, (6) Consumer Education, (7) Alcohol, Narcotics, Tobacco, (8) Nutrition, (9) Disease.
In a complaint containing four all-inclusive counts, the plaintiff s allege, among other claims that certain statutes of the state which regulate its educational
The complaint raises complicated and sensitive issues of fact and law. Approximately eight weeks were consumed in trial and argument, and the transcript of the trial contains more than 3300 pages. In addition, numerous and voluminous exhibits were introduced in evidence and the court viewed films which were offered by the plaintiffs and which have been in use in teaching the curriculum. The record is replete with conflicting testimony of individual lay witnesses as well as with eonflictng expert opinions and printed evidence in the exhibits. Substantial and in some instances new questions of interpretation and construction of statutory and constitutional provisions are raised by the pleadings and the evidence. These questions concern the duties, obligations, rights and interests of the respective parties, as well as the extent of the authority of the town of Hamden and the state of Connecticut in authorizing and teaching a compulsory course in health education. Counsel have recognized the complexities of the issues and the necessity of further inquiry by them into the evidence and the applicable law. For the latter reasons they have requested until October 26, 1971, for the preparation and filing of the final brief by the plaintiffs on the issues relating to the merits of the plaintiffs’ prayers for permanent in
The parties, through counsel, made oral arguments to the court on the application for temporary injunctions. Counsel for the plaintiffs and the defendants had agreed to file briefs relating to the temporary applications. The defendants have supplemented their oral arguments with written briefs. The plaintiffs have not. The parties have directed their oral and written arguments separately to each of the four counts of the complaint. The court, in like manner, has considered each count as it appears in the complaint and has limited itself only to a consideration of the record in its present state, without final briefs, and solely to the plaintiffs’ claims for temporary injunctions.
Count 1 alleges that the state board of education has failed to comply with the statutory requirements of § 10-15 of the General Statutes. The plaintiffs claim that the last sentence of the statute mandates that courses in “health instruction” and “physical education” shall be prepared by the secretary of the state board of education and that they must then be approved by the state board before they may be taught in local school systems. The plaintiffs claim that these requirements were not satisfied and that the failure to meet these requirements renders the Hamden curriculum unauthorized and illegal. Section 10-15 is quoted in full as follows: “Sec. 10-15. TOWNS TO MAINTAIN SCHOOLS. PRESCRIBED COURSES OF STUDY. Public schools including kindergartens shall be maintained in each town for at least one hundred eighty days of actual school sessions during each year. The state board of education may authorize
When, as required by § 1-1 of the General Statutes, § 10-15 is read “according to the commonly approved usage of the language,” the court finds no ambiguity or uncertainty in § 10-15. See Hurlbut v. Lemelin, 155 Conn. 68, 73; State v. Springer, 149 Conn. 244. A reading of the fourth sentence of the statute, without other considerations, clearly indicates on its face and without condition that local public schools are required to teach, among other courses listed, courses in “hygiene” and “physical
The court is unable to agree with or to accept the plaintiffs’ interpretation of the statute as the basis for finding illegality or granting injunctive relief. The use of the word “shall” in the last sentence of § 10-15 may be construed to permit discretion and to mean “may.” Wentz’s Appeal, 76 Conn. 405, 409; Staples v. Bridgeport, 75 Conn. 509. The United States Supreme Court has repeatedly stated a blunt rule of statutory construction: “The cardinal principle of statutory construction is to save and not to destroy.” National Labor Relations Board v. Jones & LaugMin Steel Corporation, 301 U.S. 1, 30; Champlin Refining Co. v. Corporation Commission, 286 U.S. 210, 234. Legislative intent is not to be found in an isolated sentence, but the enactment must be examined in its entirety and its parts reconciled and made operative so far as possible. Garbaty v. Norwalk Jewish Center, Inc., 148 Conn. 376, 382. “Courts must assume that the legislature intended a reasonable and rational result and must, when possible, construe statutes accordingly.” Masone v. Zoning Board, 148 Conn. 551, 556.
The United States Supreme Court, in Brown v. Board of Education, 347 U.S. 483, 493, stated: “Compulsory school attendance laws and the great expenditures for education both demonstrate our recognition of the importance of education to our democratic society.” Compulsory education has been known to exist in this country from the year 1642.
Count 2 alleges that § 10-220 is unconstitutional and violative of article third of the constitution of Connecticut, which vests legislative, power in the General Assembly, and of the fourteenth amendment to the constitution of the United States, which guarantees due process and equal protection of the laws to all citizens of the state. The plaintiffs have claimed in this count, but have failed by citation of authority or otherwise to satisfy the court, that there exists either an unlawful delegation of legislative power to the Hamden board of education or that § 10-220 lacks adequate standards for implementation of the health course by the local board of education. Sections 10-220 and 10-221 provide for implementation by local judgments to meet local needs and are discussed under the court’s consideration of count 1.
Since attendance in the courses is compulsory as to all students enrolled in the public schools in Ham-den, without discrimination, there appears to be no proof of lack of either equal protection or due
There appears in the record no legally sufficient evidence to support the further claim, as alleged in this and subsequent counts, that “irreparable harm” has or “will result to the mental and physical well-being of said children,” who are parties plaintiff, or to any of them from compulsory attendance at instruction in the curriculum. In the absence of a clear showing of unconstitutionality by the plaintiffs, the court is bound by the presumptions of regularity in the performance of public duties and of the validity and constitutionality of § 10-220, the legislation which is in question. Amsel v. Brooks, 141 Conn. 288, 294; State v. Miller, 126 Conn. 373, 377.
The court is unable to concur that any provision of article third of the constitution of Connecticut prohibits delegation of educational supervision to a local board of education, or that it requires that standards be fixed by the state in the area of public school education beyond meeting the state’s educational interests which are stated in § 10-4a. This section reads as follows: “Sec. 10-4a. educational INTERESTS OF STATE IDENTIFIED. For purposes of sections 10-4,10-4b and 10-220, the educational interests of the state shall include, but not be limited to, the concern of the state (1) that each child shall have for the period prescribed in the general statutes equal opportunity to receive a suitable program of educational experiences; (2) that each school district shall finance at a reasonable level an educational program designed to achieve this end; and (3) that the mandates in the general statutes pertaining to education within the jurisdiction of the state board of education be implemented.”
The court finds no basis for injunctive relief in the allegations of this count.
Count 3 alleges that the town of Hamden is using public funds in violation of constitutional religious guarantees to teach a religious philosophy through employment of the curriculum in its public schools and, further, that it is infringing upon the right to the free exercise of religion by requiring attendance at classes wherein instruction and information are received which are contrary to the plaintiffs’ religious beliefs. Such practice is claimed by the plaintiffs to be in violation of article first, § 3, of the Connecticut constitution and of the first and fourteenth amendments to the constitution of the United States.
From presiding at the trial and from the evidence, this court recognizes that the allegations of this count represent a principal motivation for the bringing of this action. The plaintiffs in this count allege a violation of both the prohibition of establishment of religion clause of the federal constitution and the right to freedom of exercise of religion clauses of the federal and Connecticut constitutions. The fourteenth amendment renders the state legislature as incompetent as Congress to enact laws respecting an establishment of religion or prohibiting the free exercise thereof.
“The constitutional inhibition of legislation on the subject of religion has a double aspect. On the one
The principal objection to the curriculum was heard -at trial from parents of the Catholic religious faith. The basis for their opposition was, in part, that their religious beliefs imposed upon parents the primary obligations for education of their children and that, in the area of sexual education particularly, papal encyclicals and Vatican II directed parents to instruct their children in the home in sexual matters. The limits and basis of the parents’ claimed privilege in this area are not clearly defined, either in the allegations of count 3 or from the evidence. The record discloses open and express ob
The plaintiffs claim in this count that the practice of teaching the curriculum denies to them the religious freedoms guaranteed by the first amendment and that therefore the curriculum, as well as the statutory authority under which it is taught, is unconstitutional and void. The burden undertaken by the plaintiffs by making such claims is made greater than if the plaintiffs had claimed that individual rights were being invaded and that individually they seek exemption from the curriculum or some other specific form of alternative relief. The plaintiffs, few in number, have elected, instead, to undertake a sweeping constitutional indictment against the validity of a statewide educational, statutory authority. In adopting this course of action, the plaintiffs have lessened the weight to be given to their individual interests in balancing such interests against the interests of the public and the state. The few in this case attempt to invalidate courses of studies which presently are being attended by and authorized for the majority of the many who comprise the Hamden and state student body. No claim is made by the plaintiffs that this action is a class action on behalf
Several components of the free exercise balancing test to be considered by a court have been well stated as follows: “A thoroughgoing balancing test would measure three elements of the competing governmental interest: first, the importance of the secular value underlying the governmental regulation; second, the degree of proximity and necessity that the chosen regulatory means bears to the underlying value; and third, the impact that an exemption for religious reasons would have on the overfall regulatory program. This assessment of the state’s interest would then have to be balanced against the claim for religious liberty, which would require calculation of two factors: first, the sincerity and importance of the religious practice for which special protection is claimed; and second, the degree to which governmental regulation interferes with that practice.” Giannella, “Religious Liberty, Non-establishment, and Doctrinal Development. Part 1. The Religious Liberty Guarantee,” 80 Harv. L. Rev. 1381, 1390. This court recognizes the problems in employing the foregoing three factors in the absence of fixed rules of law.
Since the third count challenges statutory authority, the constitutional validity of the legislation under which the school system is administered must
In Tilton v. Richardson, 403 U.S. 672, the United States Supreme Court held that the religious clauses of the first amendment were not violated by public grants to certain Connecticut church-related colleges and universities for construction of buildings and facilities to be used exclusively for secular educational purposes. The court found that the purposes of the use of the public funds were religiously neutral and that there was no violation of the plaintiffs’ rights under the establishment or free exercise clauses of the first amendment. Although compulsory payment of taxes in part financed the grants, the plaintiffs were unable to identify any coercion directed at the practice or exercise of their religious beliefs which would relieve them from the duty to pay taxes. Under our democratic system, citizens of every religious conviction are required to pay taxes. Walz v. Tax Commission, supra.
The governmental and public interests of the state in its educational system are of a kind and weight sufficient to relieve it from claims of violations of the first amendment solely on the ground that its wholly •secular purposes could possibly clash with a religious belief of the plaintiffs in one or more areas of the curriculum. Unfair or unreasonable burdens do not appear which would or could violate the plaintiffs’ religious guarantees.
If the compulsory education law is to withstand the plaintiffs’ challenge, it must be either because the statutory authority in question does not interfere with a constitutional freedom to act in accordance with their sincere religious beliefs or because the burden on the free exercise of the plaintiffs’ religious beliefs is justified by a “compelling state interest in the regulation of a subject within the
It must be made clear that it is not the function of this court to evaluate a religious belief for ecclesiastical purposes. School District v. Schempp, 374 U.S. 203; State v. Yoder, 49 Wis. 2d 430. Also irrelevant is this court’s opinion of the validity, reasonableness or merits of one’s religious beliefs. State v. Yoder, supra.
This case primarily questions the right of the parents to regulate the education of their children in public schools as the parents’ religious beliefs dictate, as against the justification of the state for regulating public education in a manner which might in some respects conflict with those beliefs. To permit such interference in the public school system by parents under the circumstances of this case could, unjustifiably, only tend to render a well-regulated public school system vulnerable to fragmentation whenever sincere, conscientious religious conflict is claimed. Cantwell v. Connecticut, 310 U.S. 296, 303, indicates quite clearly that this was not the intent of the guarantees under the first amendment, and that the state’s interests must also be weighed and the public protected.
The courts have repeatedly held that unconstitutionality based on alleged violations of the religious clauses of the first amendment must be decided on the facts as they appear in each particular case. A study of the cases offers no clear and specific guide
The plaintiffs have failed to establish their rights to temporary injunctions based on the allegations of this count.
Count 4 alleges a constitutional violation of the plaintiffs’ right of privacy as a result of teaching “sex education” and “family life and growth” as part of the curriculum. The only evidence offered by the plaintiffs reflected their fear of disclosures by a child in the curriculum classroom discussions of private family activities or conversations which have taken place in the home. Disclosures of this nature are not constitutionally protected and do not constitute an unlawful invasion of privacy under the fourth amendment to the federal constitution, which prohibits “unreasonable searches and seizures,” nor under any other law known to the court. Injunctive relief is not warranted. Griswold v. Connecticut, 381 U.S. 479, 486; Travers v. Paton, 261 F. Sup. 110, 112.
With respect to one’s right to a temporary injunction, it must be emphasized that a temporary in
The court, further, is unable to find that irreparable harm has or will result to the plaintiffs by its failure to grant the injunctions, or that the respective rights and interests of the plaintiffs will be prejudiced in any manner by the denial of the injunctions. See Olcott v. Pendleton, 128 Conn. 292.
The United States Supreme Court has stated: “Judicial interposition in the operation of the public school system of the Nation raises problems requiring care and restraint. . . . By and large, public education in our Nation is committed to the control of state and local authorities. Courts do not and cannot intervene in the resolution of conflicts
The court reasserts that in this decision it has considered only the plaintiffs’ rights to temporary injunctions. In arriving at its final decision on the merits, the court will fully consider the briefs of respective counsel, and the further claims of fact and law expected to be made in such briefs by the parties.
For the foregoing reasons, the prayers for temporary injunctions are denied.