Board of Education v. Board of Education

399 P.2d 539, 194 Kan. 450, 1965 Kan. LEXIS 282
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMarch 6, 1965
DocketNo. 43,952
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 399 P.2d 539 (Board of Education v. Board of Education) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Board of Education v. Board of Education, 399 P.2d 539, 194 Kan. 450, 1965 Kan. LEXIS 282 (kan 1965).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Schroeder, J.:

This is a declaratory judgment action between two school boards to determine whether territory annexed to the City of Wichita should become subject to the jurisdiction of the Board of Education of the City of Wichita.

The question is whether “territory of an adjacent school district” found in the provisions of G. S. 1961 Supp., 72-5316a, et seq. (now K. S. A. 72-5316a, et seq.) means any and all adjacent school territory without regard to the class of the adjacent school district.

The Board of Education of the City of Haysville (plaintiff-appellant) hereafter referred to as the appellant, administered the public schools for grades one through eight for a defined territory located outside the city limits of Haysville, the same being attached [451]*451territory, which is located adjacent to the city limits of Wichita, Kansas, on the south. The public high school grades nine through twelve for pupils residing in the appellant’s school district were and are administered by an independent high school district. Such high school district also included three additional common school districts within its territorial boundaries.

For many years the appellant’s school district was Common School District No. 187, Sedgwick County, Kansas, and its common school district territory included the City of Haysville and a1 rural or suburban county area surrounding such city. The City of Haysville is located approximately three miles south of Wichita, Kansas. In 1958 the City of Haysville, by reason of population growth, became classified as a city of the second class. This transition of the City of Haysville from the status of a city of the third class to a city of the second class also effected a change in classification of the common school district. It became a school district of a city of the second class. (G. S. 1961 Supp., 72-1611 and 72-1614 [now K. S. A. 72-1611 and 72-1614].) This transition from a common school district to a school district of a city of the second class did not affect the territorial boundaries of the former common school district and in the transition territory within the City of Haysville formed the basic territory of the school district and all territory of the former common school district outside the city limits of Haysville was “attached to such city for school purposes.” (G. S. 1961 Supp., 72-1614 [now K. S. A. 72-1614].) Following this change in the status of the appellant’s school district in 1958, the appellant continued to conduct and at the present time conducts public schools only for grades one through eight.

In the early part of 1963 the city limits of Wichita were extended by annexation and a portion of the territory annexed included a part of the attached territory of the appellant’s school district. The land or territory annexed to the City of Wichita was adjacent to the city limits of the City of Wichita prior to annexation. The territory annexed to the City of Wichita was situated wholly outside the corporate limits of the City of Haysville, Kansas.

The portion of the adjacent territory of the appellant’s school district annexed to the City of Wichita did not contain any school buildings used by the appellant for school purposes.

The Board of Education of the City of Wichita (defendantappellee) hereafter referred to as the appellee, maintains public schools through the twelfth grade for territory comprising the city [452]*452limits of Wichita and “territory attached to such city for school purposes.” (G. S. 1961 Supp., 72-1611 [nowK. S. A. 72-1611].)

For school purposes the appellee claims it has a right to that portion of the territory located in the appellant’s school district which was annexed by the City of Wichita. It contends the property rights of the appellant and appellee should be determined under 72-5316a, et seq., supra.

The appellant contends its district is a second class school district, and that the statutes above referred to are not applicable to its school district; that it is not required to do any of the acts set out in said statutes because it is not an adjacent school district as defined and set out therein.

Thus, the issue presented by this action is whether or not the annexation ordinance adopted by the governing body of the City of Wichita, which extended the city limits of Wichita to include adjacent lands then a part of the attached territory of the appellant school district, effects a transfer of the annexed territory for public school purposes from the appellant’s school district to the appellee’s school district in accordance with 72-5316a, et seq., supra.

The trial court held the phrase “territory of an adjacent school district” as used in 72-5316a, et seq., supra, includes the territory annexed from the attached territory of the appellant’s school district, and that the rights between the parties are to be determined pursuant to such statutes.

By agreement and stipulation, dated the 28th day of June, 1963, as permitted by 72-5316b (a) (now K. S. A. 72-5316b [a]), the parties, without waiving their rights in the declaratory judgment proceedings, agreed that the annexation of territory of the appellant’s school district into the city limits of Wichita prior to June 30, 1963, be fixed and made “effective . . . for common-school and high-school purposes” as of June 30, 1965.

The legislative direction as to how school districts are affected when cities extend their boundaries into “an adjacent school district” is set out in 72-5316a, et seq. Section 72-5316a, supra, including preface, reads:

“Rights upon annexation of part of school district territory by extension of city limits. Whenever any city of the first or second class by the extension of its limits shall annex a part of the territory of an adjacent school district, the property rights and claims between the board of education of such city and the board of the adjacent school district shall be adjusted as provided in this act.”

[453]*453It is the contention of the appellant that the legislature did not intend to include second class or first class school districts in the class of school districts referred to in the above statute. Here both the appellant and the appellee are boards of city school districts, the appellant having a school district of the second class, and the appellee having a school district of the first class, as defined by statute. (G. S. 1961 Supp., 72-1611 [now K. S. A. 72-1611].)

The appellant argues that nowhere in the statute does it refer to an adjacent school district as meaning a first or second class school district. The appellant quotes a portion of G. S. 1961 Supp., 72-5316b (a) (now K. S. A. 72-5316b [a]) as follows:

“The annexation of such territory shall not be effective for common-school or high-school purposes until June 30 . . . Provided, further, That the board of education of such city and the boards of the adjacent common-school district and tire adjacent rural high-school district may by mutual agreement determine and fix any other June 30 as the effective date of such annexation. . . .”

Ry reason of the foregoing it is argued that adjacent school districts are defined in the statutes as referring to adjacent common and rural high school districts.

The appellant also cites G. S.

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Related

Williams v. Board of Education
422 P.2d 874 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1967)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
399 P.2d 539, 194 Kan. 450, 1965 Kan. LEXIS 282, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-education-v-board-of-education-kan-1965.