Barker v. Crum

198 S.W. 211, 177 Ky. 637, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 665
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedNovember 9, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 198 S.W. 211 (Barker v. Crum) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barker v. Crum, 198 S.W. 211, 177 Ky. 637, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 665 (Ky. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Miller

— Reversing.

This case was instituted by the appellant and tried upon an agreed statement of facts for the purpose of testing the right of the appellees, who are students in the State University, to attend that institution without paying tuition, matriculation fees, room rent, fuel and lights, or their traveling expenses in going to and returning from the university.

The right to so attend the university without paying these fees and expenses is claimed under section 7 of the Act of 1908, which is incorporated into the Kentucky Statutes as subsection 7 of section 4636a, and reads - as follows:

“Each county in the state, in consideration of the incomes accruing to said institution, under the present laws for the benefit of the said Agricultural and Mechanical College, be entitled to select, and send to said university each year one or more properly prepared students, as hereinafter provided for, free from all charges for tuition, matriculation fees, room rent, fuel and lights, and to have all the advantages and privileges of the said university, one white pupil for every three thousand, and one for each fraction thereof over fifteen hundred of white school children, based upon the last official census preceding said appointment: Provided, however, That every county shall be entitled to at least one annual ap[639]*639pointment. Said students shall he entitled, free of any cost whatever, to the benefits enumerated above for the term of'years necessary to complete the course of study in which he or she matriculates for graduation, or during good behavior. All beneficiaries of the state who continue students for one consecutive collegiate year, or ten months, unless unavoidably prevented, shall also be entitled to their necessary traveling expenses in going to and returning from said college. ■ The selection of the beneficiaries shall be made by the superintendents of common schools in their respective counties, upon competitive examination, on subjects prepared by the faculty of the university and transmitted to said superintendents before the first day of June, each year. Said competitive examinations shall be open to all persons between the ages of fourteen and twenty-four years. Preference shall be given, other things being equal, to those who have passed with credit through the public school, persons of energy and industry, whose means are small, to aid whom in obtaining a good education, this provision is intended. Said competitive examination shall be held, and the-, successful compeititor appointed between the first-day of June and the first day of August of each year. It shall be the duty of the county superintendent to make known the benefits of this provision to each common school district under his superintendency, with the time and place, when and where such competitive examination shall be held. He shall, for this purpose, appoint a board of examiners, whose duty it shall be to conduct the examination. This shall not interfere with any appointment already made to said college.”

It is conceded that the five appellees are students attending the State University; that each of them was selected from the county of his residence in the manner prescribed by the statute and has the qualifications and was appointed in the manner and upon the terms therein prescribed, and that he is entitled to attend said institution free of all charges for tuition, matriculation fees, room rent, fuel and lights and to have his necessary traveling expenses paid in going to and returning from said university, provided the statute above quoted is constitutional.

It is further agreed that the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Kentucky, the predecessor of- the present State University, was established by an act of the General Assembly of Kentucky approved February [640]*64022, 1865, for the purpose of taking advantage of the act of Congress, approved July 2, 1862, and entitled “An act donating public land to the several states and territories which may provide colleges for the benefit of agricultural and mechanic arts.” Fed. Sta. Ann. vol. 2, p. 850.

It is further stipulated that from 1865 to the present time students from the various counties in the state have attended, free of certain charges, and with certain rights and privileges, the college thus established by the state of Kentucky under the provisions of the statute of that year and subsequent acts of the General Assembly extending said college and consolidating it with other colleges, and that said students so attended by virtue of the general laws enacted by the General Assembly of Kentucky, giving them that right. Finally, it is agreed that a large number of students so attending the university studied branches taught therein other than those pertaining to agriculture and the mechanic arts.

The appellees contend that subsection 7 of section 4636a of the Kentucky Statutes, above quoted, is constitutional, (1) because it is the result of a contract between the state and the various counties thereof, that in consideration of the levying of a tax to support the college, certain selected students from each county can attend free of the charges in question; (2) because under section 184 of the constitution the General Assembly was given the power to establish a higher school of training than common schools, and it was also given discretion as to the manner in which it should be conducted, and who should attend it; (3) because the students appointed under the statute to attend the State University constitute a class to which section 3 of the Bill of Rights does not apply; and (4) that the statute will be upheld under the doctrine of contemporaneous construction.

On the other hand, the appellants — the officers of the .State University — contend that all students attending the State University must be treated alike and placed upon the same footing with regard to charges for tuition fees, room rent, fuel and light and traveling expenses, and that to exempt the appellees, under the statute above quoted, would do violence to section 3 of the Bill of Rights of the constitution of Kentucky, which provides that “no grant of exclusive, separate public emoluments or privileges shall be made to any man, or set of men, except in consideration of public services. ” ■ .

[641]*641The circuit court held the statute was constitutional; and, it accordingly entered a judgment directing the State University officers to receive the defendants as students and to provide them with tuition, room rent, fuel and light, and traveling expenses, free of charge. From that judgment the defendants prosecute this appeal.

The circuit judge stated the reasons for the conclu-. sions reached by him in a written opinion in which he concedes that the enjoyment of these advantages by the students without paying therefor is a privilege, or emolument, which is not ¿njoyed by other students at the university; that the appellees have not and are not now rendering any service to the state of Kentucky which would entitle them to any such special privileges; that if the granting of such rights is to be upheld it must be upon some ground other than that of services rendered by the students, who receive the bounties; and that if the case shall be decided solely upon the rule and principle as laid down in section 3 of the Bill of Bights, supra, it must be adjudged that the appellees are not entitled to the privileges in question.

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Bluebook (online)
198 S.W. 211, 177 Ky. 637, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 665, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barker-v-crum-kyctapp-1917.