delivered the opinion of the court:
Aрpellees by their next friend filed a bill to enjoin appellants, school directors of district No. 14, in township 12, in Christian county, from еnforcing an order or resolution theretofore adopted by that board excluding appellees from the benefits of the public school conducted in the district. The circuit court granted the prayer of the bill and entered a pеrmanent injunction in accordance therewith, and appellants bring the cause here for review.
There is praсtically no dispute as to the facts. Appellees are residents in the Kemmerer Orphans’ Home. The home is situated on a tract of land of 420 acres lying within said district and is about a mile from the school building. It was instituted under the provisions of the will of Philip B. Kemmerer, who devised the land for that purpose. The orphanage is conducted as a home for orphan childrеn, its principal use being to afford a home for such children until permanent homes are found for them, although a number of appellees have lived in the home since 1918 and 1919. The school district is organized under the general law and conducts whаt is known as a one-room country school. The seating capacity of the school building is thirty-seven. The total enrollment for the year in which the .bill was filed was forty pupils, including the children from the orphanage. The average attendancе was twenty-seven pupils. It appears that at no time were the entire forty pupils present. In October, 1922, the directоrs of this school adopted a resolution reciting that the orphanage was sending children to the school without paying tuition therefor; that it was paying no taxes on the land used for purposes of such home, and that there was danger of thе children of the tax-payers of the district being deprived of the full benefit of the education contemplated by law. Thе resolution directed that the teacher be instructed not to receive any of the children from the orphanage as pupils. As a result of this resolution the teacher was instructed a few months thereafter to decline to receivе the children, and the bill in this case was filed.
The sole question involved in the case is whether or not the children from this orphanage are entitled, under the law, to attend the school in this district. That question is definitely and conclusively decided in Ashley v. Board of Education,
Much of the brief and argument of counsel for appellants is devoted to the proposition that these children shоuld not be permitted to attend this school because of the exemption from taxation of the 420 acres of land оwned by the orphanage, it being contended that this land was illegally exempted from taxation. Whether or not this be so is entirеly beside the issue here. That question is of no importance in the question in this case, which concerns only the right of these сhildren to attend the school. If these lands are illegally exempted the ldw affords ample means for requiring their taxatiоn. We do not pass upon that matter for the reason that it is not in the case.
It is argued that it puts an unfair burden on this district to permit these children to attend school when they pay no taxes. It appears from the record, however, that the distriсt has been receiving moneys from the State distributive fund based on the census of the school children of the district under the age of twenty-one, and that this census included the children in this orphanage, so that the share of the district in that fund was increased by thеir residence in the district. The record also shows that while the limit of taxation for school purposes in this district is $1380 per yeаr, yet the total expenditure in 1921 was $1065.37 and for 1922 $927.04. It is also shown by the record that this district has an accumulation in loanable funds amоunting to $11,600, from which it received $778.65 as interest in the year 1921 and $549.25 in 1922, while its income from taxes and the distributive fund of the State in 1922 amounted to between $1500 and $1600. It is evident from these figures that it is not a serious imposition on this district to require that the children of the orphanage attend School there.
The court did not err in granting the prayer of the bill, and the decree will be affirmed. „ „
Decree affirmed.
