Clinton v. Board of Education

556 A.2d 273, 315 Md. 666, 1989 Md. LEXIS 58
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 12, 1989
Docket99, September Term, 1988
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 556 A.2d 273 (Clinton v. Board of Education) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clinton v. Board of Education, 556 A.2d 273, 315 Md. 666, 1989 Md. LEXIS 58 (Md. 1989).

Opinion

ADKINS, Judge.

In this case we shall invoke the doctrine of primary jurisdiction in order to give the Maryland State Board of Education (State Board) the opportunity to consider the issues here presented regarding State-wide educational law, policy, and administration. Generally, these issues arise within the context of § 2-201 (and related provisions) of the Education Article of the Maryland Code. 1 Section 2-201 commands that “[tjhere shall be throughout this State a general system of free public schools____” 2 See also, e.g., § 7-101(a) (“All individuals who are 5 years old or older and under 21 shall be admitted free of charge to the public schools of this State”).

It is within this general framework that the litigants in this case raise the question of whether the provisions establishing a system of free public schools entitles children who are residents of one county to attend public schools in another county without payment of tuition by their parents.

I.

On or about 11 June 1986, the appellants, Bobby and Joyce Clinton (the Clintons), then residing in Baltimore *669 County, Maryland, sought to enroll their three children (subsequently only two were determined to be of school age) at Swansfield Elementary School in Howard County, Maryland. The Clintons were then in the process of arranging the purchase of a new home in Clary’s Forest, Columbia, Howard County. They expected to move in to their new home by early autumn 1986. On 28 July 1986, Dr. Noel T. Farmer, Jr., Associate Superintendent of Schools for Howard County, approved the Out-of-District Enrollment forms for the two school-age minor children, Thandiwe and Abasi. On each form a move-in date of October 1986 was noted. Each form also indicated that failure to move into the new school district by the date noted would require the child to be transferred to the school district of residence.

In September 1986, the Clinton children enrolled at Swansfield Elementary School. Because of circumstances apparently beyond their control, the Clintons did not move into Howard County by October 1986. In fact, the Clintons did not move into Howard County during the entire 1986-1987 school year. The children, however, continued to attend Swansfield Elementary.

From December 1986 through February 1987, it appears that several deadlines for meeting the residency requirements were set, and extensions to those deadlines were sought and granted. Thereafter, the Clintons were notified that if the Howard County residency requirements were not met by 27 March 1987, their children would be excluded from the county public schools.

On 26 March 1987, the Clintons filed a complaint against appellee, the Howard County Board of Education (County Board), and others, in the Circuit Court for Howard County, seeking interlocutory and permanent injunctive relief. On 2 April 1987, the circuit court (Fischer, J.) granted an interlocutory injunction, enjoining the defendants from displacing or reassigning the Clinton children from Swansfield Elementary. This order was amended on 7 May 1987 to *670 provide that the interlocutory injunction would expire at the end of the school year, 19 June 1987.

Prior to issuance of the amended order, the County Board filed a motion to dismiss the Clintons’ complaint. Then, on 15 July 1987, the County Board filed a counterclaim for $6,360, representing the Clinton childrens’ 1986-1987 school year tuition. A bill dated 9 July 1987, for the same amount, had previously been sent to the Clintons. 3 On 16 July 1987, the court granted the County Board’s motion to dismiss. Only the counterclaim for tuition remained. On 13 May 1988, following months of legal maneuverings by the parties, the court issued an order for partial summary judgment in favor of the County Board for $4,876. 4

The Clintons appealed. 5 They challenged the lower court decision on statutory and State constitutional grounds. This Court granted a writ of certiorari prior to argument in *671 the Court of Special Appeals. 314 Md. 130, 549 A.2d 752 (1988).

II.

Called into question here is Howard County School Board Policy 14412 entitled “Enrollment and Tuition of Students Whose Parent(s) or Legal Guardian(s) Are Nonresidents of Howard County.” It provides, in part, that

[a]ll qualified school age minor persons whose parents do not have an established bona fide residence in Howard County or those majority aged students who themselves have not established bona fide residence in Howard County shall be considered nonresident students. Such students may be admitted to the Howard County Public Schools; however, tuition shall be charged and paid unless waived.

As a prefatory matter, we note that there are no Maryland statutes or rules, regulations, or bylaws of the State Board which address the validity of the County Board policy. Nor are there any reported opinions of the appellate courts of this State, or reported opinions of the State Board, which address this precise issue.

The Clintons do not deny that they and their children were not residents of Howard County during the time applicable here. The Clintons argue, however, that the County Board’s policy is repugnant to the mandates of § 1-201, which provides for “a general system of free public schools”; § 7-101(a), which establishes that individuals between the ages of 5 and 21 “shall be admitted free of charge to the public schools of this State”; and Article VIII, § 1 of the Maryland Constitution which underpins each of these provisions. See note 2, supra. 6 They concede that *672 the General Assembly has the authority to establish county residency requirements as a prerequisite to free public education in a particular county school district. But they contend that such authority rests exclusively with that law making body and cannot be delegated to the State Board or to local school boards. They point out that of all the several county school districts of this State, only the Prince George’s County School District has a statutorily established residency requirement for the use of free public" schools. See § 7-102. 7

The County Board rebuffs these contentions, arguing that the right to free public education must be analyzed within the statutory framework of the Education Article which gives local boards control over educational matters within their respective jurisdictions. In essence, it argues that the history behind Article VIII, § 1 (as set out in Hornbeck, see, note 2, supra) indicates that the structure and organization of Maryland’s free public school system were left to the dictates of the legislature and are now embodied in the Education Article.

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Bluebook (online)
556 A.2d 273, 315 Md. 666, 1989 Md. LEXIS 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clinton-v-board-of-education-md-1989.