172 Ind. 502 | Ind. | 1909
The relator is'seeking by mandamus to compel appellant, as trustee of Lawrence school township, to transport relator’s child, who is of school age, to and from the public school. In his verified petition for the writ, which forms a part of the alternative writ, besides formal averments, among many other things, he alleges that he is the father of Esther Smith, who is over the age of six years, and resides with him in school district No. 7; that in 1907, the daily average of pupils in attendance at the school held in said district being less than fifteen, the defendant, as trustee of the school township, discontinued said school and transferred the pupils of said district to another school in said township located in Oaklandon; that the relator and his child reside three and one-half miles from the Oaklandon school; that the defendant, as such trustee, has provided for the conveyance of the children from said abandoned district to Oaklandon, and has established a fixed route of travel for the carrying vehicle in going to and returning from said school; that the relator’s child is free from infectious diseases, and is entitled to be transported to and from the Oaklandon school to which she has been transferred as aforesaid, but the defendant has refused, and still refuses, to allow said
Appellant’s demurrer to the alternative writ for insufficiency of facts was overruled. Whereupon he filed a return to the writ which, among other things, admits his official character, the abandonment of the school in district No. 7, the transfer of the pupils, including the relator’s child, to the Oaklandon school, as averred in the petition, and then alleges, in substance, that school district No. 7 is one and one-half miles wide, east and west, and two and one-half miles in length, north and south, and the Oaklandon school is situate northeast and adjoining said district; that a highway, partly graveled, runs north and south through said district, about the center thereof, and no school patron lives at a greater distance than three-fourths of a mile from such highway, and with the exception of three families such patrons reside from three hundred yards to five-eighths of a mile therefrom; that before the commencement of the current school year the defendant designated and established a route to be traveled by the township wagon, commencing at the south line of said school district No. 7, and going thence northwesterly over said central highway to the north boundary line of the district, thus passing within a convenient distance of all the pupils of the district, no one being obliged to travel more than five-eighths of a mile to reach the road over which the township wagon passed; that other east and west highways cross said central road and furnish the children living on either side of said central road easy and convenient ways by which to reach the wagon on said central road; that in establishing said route the defendant designated points
The relator’s motion to quash the return for insufficient facts was sustained, and, appellant refusing to plead further, a judgment for a peremptory writ of mandate was entered against him.
Section 6423, supra, reads as follows: “It shall be the duty of the township trustees to provide for the education of such pupils as are affected by such or any former discontinuance in other schools, and they shall provide and maintain means of transportation for all such pupils as live at a greater distance than two miles, and for all pupils between the ages of six and twelve that live less than two miles and more than one mile from the schools to which they may be transferred as a result of such discontinuance. Such transportation shall be in comfortable and safe conveyances. The drivers of such conveyances shall furnish the teams therefor, and shall use every care for the safety of the children under their charge, and shall maintain discipline in such conveyances. Restrictions as to the use of public highways shall not apply to such conveyances. The expenses necessitated by the carrying into effect the provisions of this act shall be paid from the special school fund.”
We cannot believe that the General Assembly intended that school children, of districts abandoned under the provisions of the statute, should be relieved of effort and incident exposure in going to and returning from school; or, in other words, that it was intended to furnish children in such
We must bear in mind that we are dealing with facts as they exist in Marion county, within a few miles of the State capital, where the school district is small and the school revenues abundant. But the law that controls these facts must likewise be applied to and control the facts in communities of the State where the population is sparse, districts large, aud revenues more limited.
The eloquence of counsel for appellee, with respect to the fact that this is an age of progress in the development of educational facilities and in the conservation of health, is appreciated, but we are unable to acknowledge that there is reason or authority for bestowing special benefits and favors on a particular class of children.
We think this return to the alternative writ was sufficient, and that the peremptory writ should have been denied.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded, with instruction to overrule appellee’s motion to quash appellant’s return to the alternative writ, and for further proceeding in accordance with this opinion.