209 N.W. 369 | N.D. | 1926
Lead Opinion
This is an appeal from a judgment of the district court of Williams county denying injunctional relief against the defendant board of education of the city of Williston.
The defendant, the board of education of the city of Williston, is a special school district. It has organized and conducts a standardized high school. Defendant, Urness, is its superintendent. For a number of years a large proportion (in 1925-26, 136 out of 353) of the pupils in attendance at the Williston high school have been children not resident within the district. The district had no accommodation for these outside pupils and was so situated financially that it was able to provide facilities to properly accommodate only students resident within its boundaries. However, a plan was adopted under which nonresident pupils attending the high school paid a tuition charge, thus providing funds wherewith the Williston district was enabled to increase its facilities and accommodate them. Preparatory to beginning the school year of 1925-26 the defendant, board of education, computed the cost per pupil of maintaining the high school and ascertained that it was approximately $98 per pupil for a year of thirty-six weeks, considering the whole number of pupils in attendance. Items taken into account in making this computation were teachers' salaries, supplies, janitor service, heat, light, and water. Accordingly the board consistently with the plan theretofore followed by it passed a resolution fixing the tuition of nonresident pupils at $94.
Plaintiff resides near the city of Williston but not within the Williston school district. His minor sons, Kenneth and Norman, attended the Williston high school in the year 1924-25. Under chapter 107, Sess. Laws 1921, the district wherein plaintiff resided paid the statutory tuition charge of $1.50 per week, or $54 for the school year. Plaintiff refused to pay any additional charge. In August 1925, Urness, the superintendent, wrote to all the nonresident pupils who had attended the high school the preceding year inquiring if they desired to attend during the year 1925-26 and requested if they did intend to do so that they notify the school board to that effect prior to the beginning of the school year. No response was made to the letters written to Kenneth and Norman, but on September 7th, 1925, the first day of the school year, they presented themselves at the school for enrolment, one of them as a junior and the other as a senior. They were advised that *239 they could not be enrolled unless payment were made or assurance given that it would be made in the amount as required by the resolution of the board. They refused to make this payment and were not formally enrolled, although they were permitted to remain in the school and participate in the classes pending adjustment of the matter. On September 21st the boys tendered $20 each, or one half of the excess payment of $40 over the amount required to be paid by the district of their residence and demanded that they be enrolled. This tender was refused for the reason that there were no assurances as to the payment of the remainder of such tuition charge, and the boys were denied further school accommodations. Whereupon plaintiff began this action to enjoin the defendants from interfering with and refusing to allow the boys to pursue their course of study in such school and complete the school year therein. Trial was had upon the merits. The court made its findings of fact substantially as above set out and denied the relief prayed, but ordered that the children be permitted to remain in school subject to the final disposition of the case on appeal. Judgment was entered accordingly. The plaintiff perfected this appeal therefrom and the cause is now here for trial de novo.
Plaintiff contends that it appears upon the record that the defendant board of education of the city of Williston had proper and sufficient facilities in the high school as maintained by it to accommodate his children during the year 1925-26; that under the statute, chapter 107, Sess. Laws 1921, while the board has the right to exercise its discretion in determining whether or not it has facilities to enable it to accommodate nonresident pupils, any arbitrary or unreasonable exercise of that discretion is subject to review and correction by the courts, and under the circumstances the refusal to receive plaintiff's children constituted such an abuse of discretion; that if it had not sufficient facilities to accommodate all of the nonresident pupils applying for admission into the high school it showed unfair discrimination by rejecting his children and accepting others who later made application for admission; that the tuition fee is fixed by the statute and the board of education has no authority to increase such charge regardless of the actual expenses it may be under in conducting its high school; that however it may secure the funds required to enable it to organize and conduct such high school, if as conducted it has facilities to accommodate outside *240 children, it must do so for the statutory fee of $54 to be paid by the district of residence. On the other hand, the defendant contends that the exercise of judgment on the part of the board as to whether it has facilities for outside pupils is not subject to review except when arbitrarily exercised; that in the instant case there were no facilities to enable the board to receive outside pupils and the board so determined; that the board was unable to make provision for and to receive outside pupils unless it imposed a tuition charge in approximately the amount of the actual cost per pupil of carrying on the school and therefore such charge was lawfully made; that the same tuition charge was imposed on all outside pupils and by means thereof the board was able to provide such facilities as it had; that there was no discrimination as against the children of the plaintiff.
Plaintiff's cause is bottomed on chapter 107, Sess. Laws 1921. This act provides:
"Sec. 1. . . . The school district board or board of education in any school district having a standardized graded school or standardized high school shall admit to the high school department, whenever the facilities for seating and instruction will warrant, any nonresident pupil who is prepared to enter such high school department; . . .
"Sec. 2. It shall be the duty of any school district not having a full four year high school course . . . to pay the tuition of pupils residing in such district that enter the high school department in any standardized graded school or standardized high school department in the state to complete such part of a full four year high school course . . . as is not offered in the district in which the pupil resides. The school district board or board of education of the district in which the standardized high school is located shall be entitled and is hereby authorized to charge a tuition fee for such nonresident pupil not to exceed one and one half dollars per week for the time such nonresident pupils are in attendance; . . .
"Sec. 3. (Provides for the presentation and collection of claims for tuition.)
"Sec. 4. All acts or parts of acts in so far as they conflict herewith are hereby repealed."
His contention is (1) that under § 1 thereof the defendant board has no option but is required to receive his children if the facilities *241 for seating and instruction will warrant; and (2) that under section 2 of the statute the board is authorized and permitted to make a charge for tuition of not to exceed one and one half dollars per week per pupil, and any greater charge is unlawful and cannot be exacted.
This statute, however, must be considered as a whole and so considered it seems plain that the legislature intended the limitation of the tuition charge to one and one half dollars per week per pupil to apply only in those cases where facilities in the way of seating and instruction in high schools as conducted warrant the admission of outside pupils. The Constitution, §§ 147 and 148, requires the establishment and maintenance by the state of a uniform system of free public schools, but this requirement is satisfied by provision for the creation of school districts and for a uniform system of schools in those districts. See 24 R.C.L. 559 et seq.; 35 Cyc. 998 et seq. The constitutional requirement surely does not contemplate that school facilities provided in any district by means of taxes imposed therein shall be available to pupils from other districts without charge. To hold that it does would require that the constitutional guaranty of uniformity of taxation be disregarded. See High School Dist. v. Lancaster County,
Plaintiff insists that the exclusion of his children resulted in an unfair discrimination against them; that even though the defendant *243
board might charge a tuition fee of $94, nevertheless, that charge must be imposed upon all nonresident pupils alike. We think that the plaintiff is right in his contention that all nonresident pupils must be treated alike and the board may not arbitrarily enroll some and exclude others. People v. Moore,
Plaintiff further contends that in fact his children were received and enrolled as pupils in the defendant's high school on the 7th day of September, 1925, although they were not so noted in the school records; that they were assigned to classes and received instruction; that under the provisions of § 1251 (subd. 11), Comp. Laws 1913, the defendant board having so received and enrolled them they could not thereafter be refused the privileges of the high school. It appears that when the boys presented themselves on the 7th day of September, they were advised that they could not be enrolled unless the tuition, as required, was paid. They were not formally enrolled but were permitted to remain in the school pending adjustment of the differences between plaintiff and the school board. They and the plaintiff knew what the position of the board was with respect to the matter. Plaintiff cannot, under the circumstances, say that they were enrolled and that the subsequent denial of school privileges by the defendants when he refused to comply with its requirement worked any injustice or hardship upon the children. *244 There was no expulsion. The board was simply enforcing a regulation which it had properly passed and of which the children as well as the plaintiff had notice.
The judgment of the district court must be affirmed.
CHRISTIANSON, Ch. J., and BURKE and JOHNSON, JJ., concur.
Concurrence Opinion
As I read chapter 107 of the Laws of 1921, it seems to bespeak a legislative purpose to offer to pupils ready for a high school course, which is not available in the districts where they reside, an opportunity to obtain high school advantages at the expense of their own districts and without the burden of an added tuition charge, provided they can find facilities available. The title of the act indicates a plan to require standardized high schools receiving state aid to receive such pupils at the stated tuition fee payable by their districts, but there is nothing in the act which purports to impose the burden upon the schools which receive state aid, and it is, of course, open to serious question whether the legislature may impose upon the taxpayers of a district the duty of furnishing high school facilities for nonresident pupils at a loss. In view, however, of the apparent purpose to furnish nonresident pupils high school advantages without cost to themselves but to their local districts, where a school may be found with facilities for furnishing instruction, I doubt the correctness of a construction of chapter 107 which permits the school board to provide additional facilities by private subscription or by an added tuition and to limit the enjoyment of those facilities to the subscribers or to those willing and able to pay the added tuition. Such a practice, in my opinion, militates against that equality of advantage which is the apparent purpose of chapter 107 of the Laws of 1921. Furthermore, it may produce unequal results from the standpoint of the district in which pupils reside who desire to take advantage of high school facilities not to be had locally, in that, while the district is equally obligated to pay the tuition charge in favor of each pupil desiring to take advantage of nonresident high school privileges, it in fact may be called upon to pay the prescribed tuition only for those who are able to afford to pay a substantial amount in addition. Thus, a parent unable to afford the added charge may, nevertheless, as a taxpayer, be compelled *245 to contribute to the district tuition obligation, not for the equal benefit of all pupils in the district qualified to pursue high school work, but for those who are both qualified and able to meet the added charges. Of course, it is realized that no system can secure absolute equality of advantage. There is no way to make up for the varying degrees of inclination and ability, but in the matter of furnishing facilities results of the character indicated are to be avoided so far as possible in a system of free public schools.
While doubting the correctness of a construction of the statutes that permits any public school board to administer the school under its charge in the manner stated, after the fashion of private schools, I am not prepared to say that the legislature has so clearly defined the duty of school boards to make their added facilities equally available, regardless of the manner in which they have been enabled to furnish them, that they should be compelled to receive the pupils in question. I therefore concur in the affirmance of the judgment.