106 So. 820 | Miss. | 1926
The testimony offered at the trial was not noted by a stenographer, but the substance thereof is preserved in a bill of exceptions approved and signed by the trial judge, and from this bill of exceptions it appears that the Jackson county school board met in regular session on the 6th day of June, 1925, and adopted and entered on the minutes of said board the following order:
"The following schools were ordered discontinued because there were less than forty-five children therein respectively, as required by law: Americus, Robinson, Lilly Orchard, Bonnie, Dead Lake, Steede, with recommendation that they be transported to larger schools."
On the 14th day of September, 1925, the defendant, the county superintendent of education, changed the order appearing on the minutes of the school board so as to cause it to read as follows:
"The following school districts were ordered abolished on motion duly seconded and passed, because there were less than forty-five children therein, respectively: Americus, Robinson, Lilly Orchard, Bonnie, Dead Lake, Steede."
The order passed by the county school board did not attempt to abolish the Steede school district, but simply ordered that the school in that district be discontinued. The unauthorized act of the defendant in changing the order was a mere spoliation, and could not have the effect of changing the order from one attempting to discontinue this school to one abolishing the district. The county school board has not attempted to abolish this school district, and the county superintendent of education has no authority to do so. The question then recurs as to whether or not a county school board may discontinue the school in a regularly established and existing district. *591
Section 205 of the Constitution of 1890 provides that "a public school shall be maintained in each school district in the county at least four months during each scholastic year," while section 91 of chapter 283, Laws of 1924, requires that the schools be kept in continuous session four months, and as much longer as the school fund of the scholastic year will maintain them. Section 39 of said chapter 283, Laws of 1924, also requires that at least one public school shall be maintained in each school district, but authorizes the superintendent to discontinue any school when the average attendance shall be less than five for any month. Under this constitutional mandate and the various statutes herein referred to, it is clear that the county school board cannot discontinue all schools in an established and existing district. Neither does the fact that there were less than forty-five educable children in the Steede school district authorize the school board to discontinue the school in that district. While it is true that section 39 of chapter 283, Laws of 1924, provides that a regular school district shall not be established which contains less than forty-five educable children of the race for which the district is established, "except where too great distance or impassable obstructions would debar children from school privileges, in which cases the board may, in its discretion, establish a regular district containing not less than fifteen educable children," the admissions of the pleadings in the case at bar bring the Steede school district within the exception. Children living eight or ten miles from any public school, and not on any road over which they could be transported at public expense, would be very effectually deprived of public school privileges, and the school board was without authority to discontinue the school so long as the district was in existence and the children residing therein were not furnished other available public school privileges.
Section 38 of chapter 283, Laws of 1924, provides that the county superintendent shall be president of the school *592 board, and that he shall convene the board annually not later than June 15th, to define the boundaries of the school districts of the county outside of the separate school districts, or to make alterations therein, and to designate the location of the schoolhouse in each district if not already located, while section 39 of said chapter 283 provides that separate districts shall be made for the schools of the white and colored races, and the districts for each race shall embrace the whole territory of the county outside the separate school districts.
Conceding that the authority conferred on the school board to define the boundaries of the school districts, and to make alterations therein, by necessary implication confers the authority to abolish districts by so altering the boundaries as to combine two or more districts, still the boundaries of the districts of the county cannot be so defined or altered as to leave any part of the territory of a county outside of a school district, and in defining the boundaries, the districts must be arranged with due regard to impassable obstructions which would debar children from school privileges, and must be so arranged as to place all children within a reasonable distance of the schoolhouse, as required by section 39 of chapter 283 of the Laws of 1924.
That mandamus is a proper remedy to require a superintendent of education to contract with a teacher who possesses all the necessary qualifications, and who has been regularly and legally selected by the trustees of the school district, as the teacher of a public school for the scholastic year then beginning, is established by the cases of Brown v. Owen,
Reversed and judgment here.