Richards v. Raymond

92 Ill. 612 | Ill. | 1879

Mr. Justice Craig

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was a bill in equity, to enjoin the collection of a tax levied to sustain a high school established in township 31, range 3, in LaSalle county, under the provisions of section 35 of the School law, (Rev. Stat. of 1874, p. 957,) which is as follows:

“ Upon petition of fifty voters of any school township, filed with the township treasurer at least fifteen days preceding a regular election of trustees, it shall be the duty of said treasurer to notify the voters of the township that an election for and against a high school will be held at the next ensuing election of trustees, and the ballots to such effect shall be received and canvassed at such election; and if a majority of the voters at such election shaill be found to be in favor of a high school it shall be the duty of the trustees of the township to establish at some central point, most convenient for a majority of the pupils of the township, a high school for the education of the more advanced pupils.”

The sole ground relied upon to enjoin the collection of the tax is, that this section of the statute is unconstitutional,—that it is in conflict with section 1 of article 8 of the present constitution, which provides that the General Assembly shall provide a thorough and efficient system of free schools whereby all children of the State may receive a good common school education. This provision of the constitution was doubtless intended as a limitation upon the power Lof the legislature to provide for the maintenance of free schools by local taxation of a different character from that named in the section. In other words, under the section of the constitution the legislature has the power to enact laws under which a thorough and efficient system of free schools may be established and maintained by local taxation, in which all the children of the State may receive a good common school education, but to go farther than this, the legislature would seem to be powerless. We can not perceive what other purpose was designed by the section of the constitution. It could not have been intended as a grant of power to the legislature, for the reason that the legislature has the power to enact any and all laws proper for the government or welfare of the people of the State not prohibited by the constitution of the United States or of this State. It is not the mission of a constitution of a State to confer power upon the law-making department of the State, but to limit and restrain the power which it possesses independent of constitutions. We are, therefore, satisfied, as the section of the constitution could not have been designed as a grant of power, it was intended as a limitation upon the power of the General Assembly.

But, conceding that the section of the constitution referred to is a limitation upon the power of the legislature, it by no means follows that the section of the statute in question is in conflict with the constitution.

It has been well said that the question, whether a law is void for repugnancy to the constitution, is at all times a question of delicacy, which ought seldom if ever to be decided in the affirmative in a doubtful case. Potter’s Dwarris on Stat. 65. The same principle was announced in The People v. Marshall, 1 Gilm. 672, where it was held that it was well settled by the highest tribunals of the nation that it is seldom if ever in a doubtful case, or upon slight implication, that the court should declare the legislature to have transcended its authority. The opposition between the law and the constitution must be clear and strong in the judgment of the court, otherwise it can not pronounce the law to be void. With these well recognized principles in view, can the statute be held to be in conflict with the spirit of the constitution ?

The act in question provides that the school trustees of a township, where the legal voters of the township have decided in favor of the proposition at an election held for that purpose, shall establish a high school in the township for the education of the more .advanced pupils. A school of this character is certainly a free school, within the meaning of the constitution. That free schools may be graded and classified so that scholars that may be more advanced in their studies may not be hindered or delayed in the progress of their studies by others less advanced, would seem to be within the spirit of the constitution, that contemplates the creation of a thorough and efficient system of free schools. That one school may be denominated a high school, and another in the same township a district school, can not affect the question in the least.

But the argument is that the school established is not a common school or a school where the children of the State may receive a good common school education, and hence inhibited by the constitution. No definition of a common school is given or specified in the constitution, nor does that instrument declare what course of studies shall constitute a common school education. How can it be said that a high school is prohibited by the constitution and not included within the definition of a common school? The phrase, “a common school education” is one not easily defined. One might say that a student instructed in reading, writing, geography, English grammar and arithmetic had received a common school education, while another who had more enlarged notions on the subject might insist that history, natural philosophy and algebra should be included. It would thus be almost impossible to find two persons who would in all respects agree in regard to what constituted a common school education.

Indeed, it is a part of the history of the State when the constitution was framed, that there was a great want of uniformity in the course of study prescribed and taught in the common schools of the State. In the larger and more wealthy counties the free schools were well graded and the course of instruction of a high order, while in the thinly settled and poorer counties the old district system was still retained and the course of instruction prescribed was of a lower order.

At the time of the adoption of the constitution there was a wide difference of opinion in different parts of the State, as to what constitutes a common school education, and we apprehend that a constitution which would have impaired in any degree the free high school system in existence in many portions of the State, would not have received the approval of the voters of the State. But, however that may be, while the constitution has not defined what a good common school education is, and has failed to prescribe a limit, it is no part of the duty of the courts of the State to declare by judicial construction what particular branches of study shall constitute a common school education. That may be and doubtless'is a proper question for the determination of the legislature, and as a law has been enacted by it which does not appear to violate the constitution if is not the province of the courts to interfere.

But it is insisted that the directors of the school have, in the course of study adopted, provided for teaching the higher branches, such as are taught in the various colleges of the country. If the directors of the. high school have established a course of study not authorized by law, doubtless there is a remedy in favor of those interested in the school, but that fact affords no ground for relief here.

It is conceded that the proceedings under which the school was established were regular. If the law was constitutional, then the levy and collection of a tax to maintain the school was proper, although the course of study prescribed was different from that contemplated by law.

The judgment of the Appellate Court will be affirmed.

Judgment affirmed.