70 So. 652 | Ala. | 1916
By this proceeding petitioner (appellant here), a pupil in the school of district No. 68 of Monroe county, seeks to test the validity of a requirement made by the trustees of said school district that she, or some one for her, pay an incidental fee of ten cents per month, to be used in providing fuel for said school, as a condition precedent to her receiving instruction in said school. From the judgment of the court below sustaining a demurrer to the petition, this appeal is prosecuted.
The question is therefore presented whether or not, in the absence of any action on the part of the county board, the district trustees had the authority to fix the assessment of ten cents per month as a reasonable incidental charge for fuel. The dis
Counsel for appellant concede that the authority here questioned exists in a municipal board. While the language of section 1701, Code 1907, dealing with municipal boards, is not at all identical with that as to district trustees, yet by reference
The Supreme Court of Kansas, in Conklin v. School District, 22 Kan. 525 (found in Words and Phrases, vol. 1, p. 972), in speaking of the authority of the district board, charged by daw with the duty of “the care and keeping of the schoolhouse,” said: “ ‘Shall have the care and keeping of the schoolhouse’ not merely authorizes, but requires, the board to preserve and care for the schoolhouse. And this duty is not like that of a janitor, one of personal attention and manual labor, but like that of trustees, one of supervision. They are not personally to sweep and dust and clean, or bring wood and make fires, but to see that it is done, and to that end may employ assistants, and bind the district for their pay. They are not chosen because of their physical strength and dexterity, but because of their good sense and intelligence. * * * Discretion as to these matters must be vested somewhere, and nowhere more appropriately than in the district board.”
While the county board of education is given entire control over the public schools in the counties, except where otherwise provided, and is authorized or directed to make rules and regulations for the government of the schools (section 1715, Code 1907)-, and there is given in a sense, a general supervision over the same, yet in a matter of this kind, where the board has taken no action, and the requirement of the district trustees in no manner contravenes or conflicts with any rule or regulation of said board, there is no solid foundation for an attack upon the validity of the order of the district trustees.
What would be the effect if said requirement was in conflict with some rule or regulation of the county board need not be here determined; but, in the absence of any such conflict or any action by the county board, we are clear to the opinion that the district trustees were acting within their authority in the instant case.
Such being our conclusion, it results that the judgment of the court below will be affirmed.
Affirmed.