This is a suit in which the plaintiffs as residents of the Carroll County, Georgia, school district, seek to enjoin the defendant members of the Carroll County Board of Education and its Superintendent from carrying out a plan of consolidation which would result in the closing of the Mt. Zion High School and other schools located in the community in which all plaintiffs reside. Defendants Sims and Fortson are state officials who have functions in connection with the issuance of commissions to the School Board and with the State School Building Authority which would be involved in the construction of a new consolidated high school, if the plan of consolidation is not enjoined.
According to all counsel, this is a local school controversy which has raged for almost 15 years within Carroll County. As a result, it has been the subject of innumerable school board meetings, newspaper editorializing, and considerable bitterness between the opposing factions. The closeness of the matter is indicated by the current 3-2 vote within the county board to effectuate the consolidation plan. It has already been the subject of one suit in the state courts appealed to the State Supreme Court. Boatright v. Brown, member of Carroll County Board of Education, et al,
In order to involve federal jurisdiction, it is necessary to allege a federal constitutional question. In this posture, the present suit seeks to have declared invalid a provision of the Georgia Constitution (Article VIII, Section 5, Par. 1, Code Section 2-6801) and a general statute of the state (Code Section 32-954), dealing with the selection and powers of a local schooí board. Each of these provisions is said to offend the equal protection and due process clauses of the United States Constitution.
As undisputed background adduced at the hearing, the administration of public education in Carroll County is divided into two systems, the county system, present in all of Georgia’s 159 counties, and the Carrollton system, a so-called independent system, of which there are some 36 remaining in Georgia. This dual system arose because certain municipalities in Georgia had strong local
In Carroll County and the other counties where the dual system exists, the county district embraces all territory outside the municipal independent system. Local financial support is obtained through levy of a school tax on property within its boundaries. With certain minor exceptions, occasioned by changes in city-limits, prior bond issues, and the like, no tax for support of the county system is levied on property within the independent district, and vice-versa. However, citizens of both districts pay taxes to the state, which furnishes the primary support to all systems, varying from 60% to 95% under a complicated state formula not at issue here. The Carroll County Board receives 87% of its operating revenues from the state.
The administration of county systems is vested in the County Board of Education by the state constitution.
(1) The present constitutional provision provides:
“2-6801. Paragraph I. Establishment and maintenance; board of education; election, term, etc. — Authority is granted to counties to establish and maintain public schools within their limits. Each county, exclusive of any independent school system now in existence in a county, shall compose one school district and shall be confined to the control and management of a County Board of Education. The Grand Jury of each county shall select from the citizens of their respective counties five freeholders, who shall constitute the County Board of Education. Said members shall be elected for the term of five years * * *. The members of the County Board of Education of such county shall be selected from that portion of the county not embraced within the territory of an independent school district.”
By general statute, the qualifications have been further particularized.
“The grand jury in selecting the members of the county board of education shall not select one of their own number then in session, nor shall they select any two of those selected from the same militia district or locality, nor shall they select any person who resides within the limits of a local school system operated independent of the county board of education, but shall*968 apportion members of the board as far as practicable over the county; they shall elect men of good moral character, who shall have at least a fair knowledge of the elementary branches of an English education and be favorable to the common school system. Whenever a member of the board of education moves his residence into a militia district where another member of the board resides, or into a district or municipality that has an independent local school system, the member changing his residence shall immediately cease to be on the board and the vacancy shall be filled as required by law. Notwithstanding the foregoing provisions to the contrary, a county may provide by local law that two or more members of the board of education may be selected from the same militia district.” Georgia Code 32-903.
As can be seen, the law prohibits the selection of a resident of a local independent district on the County Board. On the other hand, such residents can and do serve as members of the county Grand Jury and, as such, participate in the choice of members of the County School Board. Such is the case in Carroll County and on this factual basis the Grand Jury selection is attacked as unconstitutional by the petitioners here.
(2) Once in office, the County Board has broad powers in the administration of its schools, subject to state and federal requirements. Vast population shifts, improved transportation, economy in operation, and the proved high-quality of larger schools has necessitated the rearrangement and consolidation of individual schools within each county. Such changes have caused conflict and disagreement in many communities and the problem presented here exists, to a greater or less degree, in practically every Georgia county. In connection with such matters, the legislature has vested broad discretion in the County Boards, subject only to an appeal to the State Board.
“The board of education of any county or independent school system is hereby authorized and empowered, if, in their opinion, the welfare of the schools of the county or independent school system and the best interests of the pupils require, to reorganize the pupils require, to reorganize the schools within their jurisdiction and to determine and fix the number of grades to be taught at each school in their respective systems.” Georgia Code Section 32-954.10
Plaintiffs contend that such provision is unconstitutional in that it makes no provision for notice or hearing to the residents involved.
In their answer and motion to dismiss, the Carroll County Board and Superintendent assert that such provisions are not unconstitutional, that a hearing was held, though not required (Defenses No. I, 2, 3, 4); that the claims are res judicata because of the state proceedings (Defense No. 5); that plaintiffs have not exhausted their administrative remedies by appeal to the state board (Defense No. 6); and that the court should stay this action on account of the pending state cases (Defense No. 7).
There is considerable merit to some of the special defenses.
However, in order to preclude any misconception on the part of disgruntled school patrons in the remaining 195 school districts of the state as to the legal situation in connection with school consolidation and reorganization questions, we prefer to go to the heart of the matter on the two provisions attacked.
(1) The Constitutional provisions providing for Grand Jury selection presents no insurmountable federal difficulty. The power to select school board members resides in the state and the people within the state. School boards are political subdivisions of the state. By adoption of the Constitution of 1945, the people have decided that the members of the respective county school boards are to be chosen by the members of the grand jury, composed of “the most experienced, intelligent, and upright persons,” in each county.
agents through popular vote of the people. Fortson v. Morris,
(2) The thrust of plaintiff’s complaint against Code Section 32-954 is based on a claimed property right of school patrons in the location and maintenance of the particular schools involved. Thus the petition alleges that the refusal of the defendants to grant “a hearing before said Board of Education on the action of the named defendants in adopting a reorganization resolution — without notice or opportunity for a hearing in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution and the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution — deprives the petitioners of their property right to have their children attend Mt. Zion and Temple High Schools and Roopville and Whitesburg Elementary Schools.” (Par. 2). In essence, then, the plaintiffs contend that they have a property right in maintaining such schools in a status quo, which cannot be taken away without due process, including notice and hearing. This is not a claim that no school at all is provided, or that a particular group is being discriminated against by reason of race, or that public funds are being improperly expended, but simply an insistence that a property right exists in the maintenance of a certain school in a certain location.
We perceive no such property right. While the Fourteenth Amendment prevents State interference with vested property rights save by due process of law and “property is more than the mere thing which a person owns”, it is clear that such property rights are personal and not public. City of Birmingham v. Monk,
The composition of school districts, the location, size, curriculum, and management of public schools are legislative matters and no property right exists therein.
Accordingly, the motion to dismiss as to the Carroll county defendants is granted. Likewise, the special motions to dismiss on behalf of defendants Sims and Fortson, are granted.
It is so ordered.
Notes
. Each of said defendants filed special motions to dismiss. Their presence in the suit would be necessary if plaintiffs prevail and, for that reason, ruling was reserved at the trial pending consideration of the merits.
. Article VIII, Section 7, par. 1 — Code § 2-7001.
. Article VIII, Section 5, piar. 1 — Code 2-6801. See also Georgia Code Section 32-1101.
. Article VIII, Section 6, par. 1 — Code ' 2-6901.
. See Code Section 32-1002.
. The Carroll County School District itself went on a popular election basis for its Board members in 1952 and returned to the Grand Jury selection in 1958 by referendum of the people.
. The county Grand Jury is also the vehicle in Georgia for election of certain Justices of the Peace in the militia districts, nomination of voting registrars, appointment of members of Boards of Health, Welfare, etc.
. 2 Records of Constitutional Commission 1943-4, pp. 71-75.
. Code Section 32-414.
. Although not specifically attacked here, Code Section 32-915 further provides: “The board of education of any county shall have the right, if, in their opinion, tlie welfare of the schools of the county and the best interests of the pupils require, to consolidate two or more schools into one school, to be located by said board at a place convenient to the pupils attending the same, the schoolhouse to be located as near the center of the district or districts as practicable.” See also: Bramlett v. Callaway,
. For example, no appeal was taken to the State Board as provided by Code 32-414 and, on accepted constitutional grounds, the Georgia courts have con
Further, there is no dispute that the consolidation resolution was first adopted by the County Board on January 4, 1966, that a large well-attended emotional hearing was held on January 29, 1966, following which the resolution was readopted on February 1, 1966. Later, apparently to satisfy the State School Building Authority, a further resolution designating signatories on behalf of the Board, was adopted on September 17, 1966. These proceedings leave considerable basis to conclude on factual grounds that there was ample notice and opportunity to be heard afforded all residents of Carroll County. Also, a hearing could be obtained under the appellate procedures to the State Board.
There is no question that the “class” represented here is the same “class” as that involved in the state cases, though the listed plaintiffs vary slightly. As such, the doctrine of res judicata could apply to the present complaint, though we make no finding in connection with this special defense either.
. See Code Section 59-201.
. Compare Gray v. Sanders,
. Employment rights are personal and involve due process as was the case of the discharged school superintendent in Guy v. Nelson,
. State courts have reached the same conclusion when the statute granting the school board power in such matters contains no jurisdictional requirement of notice. Typical is Town of Adams v. Callahan (1941),
