193 Ind. 492 | Ind. | 1923
The sufficiency of the facts alleged in the complaint to constitute a cause of action in mandamus is the sole question presented for consideration. A demurrer was sustained to the complaint of relators, as patrons of a certain school, to compel appellees, as the trustee of the township, and as the county superintendent of schools, respectively, to have the school wagon driven to relators’ homes for their children.
The complaint alleged, in substance, that relators lived in an abandoned school district, from which the trustee had undertaken to and was transporting the children of school age to the Walters Brick School, in another district more than two miles away, that the Boyleston Gravel Road was a main thoroughfare that ran west from Frankfort through the school district, past the homes of all the school children in the district except the children of these relators, and that the trustee had established a route for the school wagon along that road, over which it went to the school each morning and back each evening; that a public highway ran north from said road three-fourths of a mile to the home of relator Young, crossing at grade a railroad over which four regular passenger trains and six regular freight trains were run daily, and passing the home of relator Stewart one-half mile north; that it did not connect with any other highway, but ended at Young’s home, forming a eul de sac; that it was in a fit condition
This action was commenced in November, 1920, and the amended complaint was filed on February 8, 1921, so that whatever change, if any, was made in the law by Acts 1921 p. -743, §6423o et seq. Burns’ Supp. 1921, it did not affect the rights of the parties to this suit,
After the time when .a construction was thus given to the act of 1907 that it vested a discretion in the township trustee to determine whether or not the school wagon should be driven down an intersecting road to the homes of persons living less than a mile from the main highway along which it was operated, the law relating to the transportation of pupils had been changed four times before this action was commenced, at intervals of two years or four years, but without changing it in the particulars which had been held to indicate that it was within the discretion of the trustee to require pupils living far from the school on a by-road three-quarters of a mile from the main highway to walk down to the main highway and meet the school wagon. Repeated re-enactments of those features of the law after the Supreme Court had given it a construction must be deemed a legislative adoption of the construction thus given it.
The same rule has been declared by the courts of other states in construing similar statutes. In a case in North Dakota where the relator’s sons, aged from ten to nineteen years, had been required to cross a
And in a case in Ohio, where the father of a thirteen year old girl petitioned for a writ commanding the township board of education to bring the school, wagon to his door, alleging that they required the child to meet it half a mile from her residence at a point where there was no' shelter from cold and storms while waiting for it, the Supreme Court held that the acts complained of were within the discretion of the board as matters of administration, and that its discretion could not be controlled by mandamus. State, ex rel., v. Board of Education (1921), 102 Ohio 446, 132 N. E. 16.
And in Pennsylvania, where the relator and his children lived back on a private lane that connected with a cross road one-half mile from an abandoned schoolhouse that stood beside the main road, and the officers of the school district required the children to walk down to this old schoolhouse and wait there for the wagon, a peremptory writ that had been awarded by the court of common pleas commanding the conveyance to be brought up to where relator’s private lane entered the highway was set aside by the Supreme Court. Commonwealth, ex rel., v. Benton Twp. (1923), 277 Pa. 13, 120 Atl. 661. If there are any authorities holding the contrary, our attention has not been called to them.
The judgment is affirmed.
Townsend, J., absent.