WRIGHT, Member of State Board of Education, et al. v. ABSALOM et al.
24378
Supreme Court of Georgia
JANUARY 2, 1968
REHEARING DENIED JANUARY 18, 1968
224 Ga. 6 | 159 S.E.2d 413
Arthur K. Bolton, Attorney General, Harold N. Hill, Jr., Alfred L. Evans, Jr., Assistant Attorneys General, for appellants.
Bloch, Hall, Groover & Hawkins, Denmark Groover, Charles J. Bloch, Ellsworth Hall, Jr., for appellees.
ALMAND, Presiding Justice. Mrs. Lilyan Absalom and two other individuals, as school lunchroom managers in the common schools of the State of Georgia, and the Georgia School Food Service Association, Inc., in a two-count petition brought an action against the State Board of Education, State School Superintendent and State Auditor, seeking to obtain a declaration that the funds appropriated for school lunch purposes, including salary supplements, by the General Assembly of Georgia could constitutionally be expended for said purpose, and to obtain an award of damages as well as equitable relief for themselves and others similarly situated.
In their petition the plaintiffs alleged: That the State Board of Education and the State Department of Education have prescribed standards for each school which operates under the School Food Service Program, and it is necessary that each such school have a trained lunchroom manager; that “the General Appropriations Act for the biennium 1965-1967 appropriated to the State Board of Education-Department of Education sums of money, to wit, $400,000, for the purpose of providing a salary supplement for school lunchroom managers“; that the State Board of Education pursuant to authority granted to it authorized the expenditure of the appropriated funds on the basis
The prayers of the plaintiffs’ petition were that the State Board of Education and State School Superintendent be enjoined from refusing to allocate funds available for salary supplements to the purpose for which they were appropriated and from failing to take action to prevent the lapse of these funds prior to the end of the fiscal year, that the State Auditor be enjoined from ordering said funds lapsed, that the plaintiffs and others similarly situated have a declaration of their rights as to the funds duly appropriated by the General Assembly for school lunch purposes and as to additional salary supplements which they may earn and that the plaintiffs have a judgment for the sum of the accrued salary supplements to which they are entitled.
The defendants admitted substantially all of the factual allegations of the petition and generally denied only those allegations asserting or incidental to the plaintiffs’ contention that the expenditure of State tax funds in support of the school lunch program is an expenditure of said tax funds “for educational purposes” within the meaning of
The case came on for trial before the Superior Court of Colquitt County without the intervention of a jury, and after hearing and considering the evidence and the argument of counsel, the court ordered: “That the expenditure of funds derived from taxation over the whole State for the school lunch program is an expenditure for educational purposes within the meaning of Article VII, Section II, Paragraph I of the Constitution of the State of Georgia of 1945 (
The appeal is from this order and presents a single issue for consideration. The sole question for our determination is whether or not the expenditure of funds derived from taxation over the whole State for the support of the school lunch program is an expenditure “for educational purposes” within the meaning of
Where a constitutional provision expressly provides that funds derived from taxes levied and collected may be used only for particular purposes, such funds cannot be utilized for or diverted to any other purpose. 85 CJS 646, Taxation, § 1057 (b). The authority to expend tax funds is generally broad, but it does not extend to the appropriation of public moneys beyond those purposes which are expressly enumerated by the Constitution. Brown v. Martin, 162 Ga. 172, 174 (132 SE 896); Humber v. Dixon, 147 Ga. 480 (2) (94 SE 565). The object of an expenditure may be a very worthy cause and highly beneficial to the general public, but this will not suffice where the constitutional authorization for such expenditure is lacking. Atlanta Chamber of Commerce v. McRae, 174 Ga. 590, 595 (163 SE 701).
This court has specifically stated that the words “educational purposes” are to be given the broadest significance (Worth v. Board of Education, 177 Ga. 166, 175 (170 SE 77)), and we are in full accord with such a construction to allow educators the greatest possible leeway in providing an adequate education for the children of our State. However, we are faced here with the determination of whether or not the scope of “for educational purposes” can be expanded to include the feeding of children in the public schools.
In Murphy v. Constitution Indem. Co., 172 Ga. 378, 379, 380 (157 SE 471), this court rejected the contention that a county board could expend moneys to afford the protection of workmen‘s compensation insurance to school employees. In that case the plaintiff made the following argument: “That since the board of education is given power and authority to ‘make all arrangements necessary to the efficient operation of the schools, and further is given authority and power to provide means of transportation for pupils and teachers to and from schools,’ this language would include the furnishing of workmen‘s compensation insurance or liability for personal injuries to a bus driver engaged in transporting pupils to and from a consolidated school.” This court in rejecting this contention said: “The power to expend money by the board of education from funds derived from taxation is shown in Board of Education of Wilkes County v. Butler, 154 Ga. 569 (115 SE 10), and Pace v. County Board of Education, 150 Ga. 777 (105 SE 366), and does not extend to the object above mentioned. It would be an unconstitutional expenditure of money by the Board of Education of Troup County to pay for personal injuries received by a bus driver under the circumstances herein stated, or for compensation insurance under the workmen‘s compensation act.” Certainly the expenditure of school funds to provide workmen‘s compensation for teachers and employees of a county school system, which could be classified as a part of the salaries or general compensation to said employees, is closer to being an expenditure “for
In Floyd County v. Scoggins, 164 Ga. 485, 488 (139 SE 11, 53 ALR 1286) (one Justice dissenting), this court held that the portion of the Workmen‘s Compensation Act which required counties of Georgia to insure their employees against or pay them compensation for personal injuries or for their deaths while in the employment of the counties, violated
Applying the reasoning of Floyd County v. Scoggins, 164 Ga. 485, supra, the mere fact that the school lunch program may render pupils more efficient does not make it “for educational purposes,” and further if school funds can be expended for feeding lunches to pupils why also would not the providing of proper clothing, suitable dwellings, proper medical attention or breakfast and
While the feeding of children is a worthy and beneficial undertaking and may well enhance the opportunities for a better learning situation, we are forced to the conclusion that eating is not education. Thus, the expenditure of funds derived from taxation over the whole State in support of the school lunch program is not an expenditure “for educational purposes” within the meaning of
Judgment reversed. All the Justices concur, except Grice and Undercofler, JJ., who dissent.
UNDERCOFLER, Justice, dissenting. It has been held that the phrase ” ‘for educational purposes,’ [contained in the
I am authorized to state that Justice Grice concurs in this dissent.
