77 Ind. App. 611 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1922
Appellant, the father of Amanda Miller, a child over seven and under sixteen years of age, was tried and convicted in the LaGrange Juvenile Court under §17 of the School Attendance Act of 1921, (Acts 1921 p. 337, §6674a et seq. Burns’ Supp. 1921) based on a violation of §5 thereof, which provides: “Unless otherwise provided herein, every child between the ages of seven and sixteen years shall attend public school, or other school taught in the English language which is open to the inspection of local and state attendance and school officers; and such child shall attend such school each year during the entire time the public schools are in session in the school district in which such child resides.” This appeal followed, based on an assignment of error, that the decision of the trial court is contrary to law.
The record contains a special finding of facts, made by the trial court pursuant to §1635 Burns 1914, Acts 1907 p. 22.1. Appellant does not contend that the facts are not correctly or fully found, but insists that they are not sufficient to sustain the judgment against him. We will therefore confine our attention to a consideration of the specific contentions based on such facts. It appears that the public high school of the township in which appellant and his child reside is not located in the elementary school district of their residence. Based on this fact, appellant claims to be exempt from the application of that part of said §5 quoted above, in so far as the attendance of his said child at said high school is concerned. The law does not sustain this claim. Township trustees, under certain conditions, are authorized to establish and maintain high schools, and when so established and maintained they are a part of the public school system, §§6584a-6584c Burns 1914, Acts 1913 p. 331, and §6585 Burns 1914, Acts 1907 p. 616. From a consideration of the sections of the statute cited, it is clear that when such a high school is established, the entire township becomes the school district which it is to serve. It is therefore coextensive with all the elementary school districts of such township. We are of the opinion therefore that when §5, supra, of the School Attendance Act of 1921, supra, provides that “said child shall attend such school each year during the entire time the public schools are in session in the school district in which such child resides,” it does not refer to elementary districts alone, but as to such children; who are within the age limit prescribed, and have been graduated from the elementary schools of such township, that the entire township is the school district intended, where a public high school has been established and is
Appellant has cited Art. 1 §3 of the Constitution of this state, and has devoted a considerable part of his original brief and almost the whole of his reply brief, to a consideration of its application in the instant case, because the special'finding of facts discloses that he holds certain religious convictions. However, he has not presented any constitutional question for determination, and has disavowed any attempt to do so by the use of the following language in his original brief: “We are not
Judgment affirmed.