County Board of Ed. Boyle County v. Caldwell

59 S.W.2d 995, 248 Ky. 751, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 311
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedApril 28, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 59 S.W.2d 995 (County Board of Ed. Boyle County v. Caldwell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
County Board of Ed. Boyle County v. Caldwell, 59 S.W.2d 995, 248 Ky. 751, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 311 (Ky. 1933).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Perry

Affirming.

The appellee, Charles W. Caldwell, brought this action against the County Board of Education of Boyle County and its members to require them to pay the tuition- of his daughter and son, who are attending the Danville High School.

The defendants’ demurrer to plaintiff’s petition having been overruled, answer was filed and proof taken, when, on submission of the case to the lower court upon these pleadings and proof, it adjudged that the plaintiff was entitled to the mandatory relief sought.

Prom this judgment granting the mandamus, the appellant, the County Board of Education of Boyle County, appeals.

The facts pleaded and heard in evidence are these:

The appellee, Charles W. Caldwell (plaintiff below), lives in Boyle county, Ky., upon a large farm situated on the Danville and Lebanon turnpike, which is the main road from Danville to Parksville. His residence is some 2 4/10 miles from the Danville High School and 5 7/10 miles from the Parksville High School. Plaintiff’s farm is beyond the limits of the Danville school district, the east line of his farm being the boundary line between the Danville city high school district and the county high school district of Parks-ville, in which his farm is located.

The plaintiff has two children of high school age and standing, namely, a daughter, Virginia, sixteen years of age, and a son, Logan, fourteen years of age, who are attending the Danville High School.

*753 Danville is a fourth class city and its high school district is separate from the county district.

It is admitted that the Parksville High School is -something more than twice as far from plaintiff’s home as the Danville High School and also that a portion of the highway next the Parksville High School, for a distance of something more than one-fourth of a mile, is in bad condition and very rough.

It is further both pleaded and shown by the evidence that the defendant operates a school bus over the 'Danville-Lebanon highway, for the daily free transportation of the pupils living in the said Parksville high ■school district to and from its said high school. The «aid school bus has a seating capacity sufficient for ■some thirty pupils, though it is the custom to daily transport on an average of about fifty pupils. Also, it is shown that the bus trip between plaintiff’s home and the Parksville High School requires some fifteen minutes longer time than required to make the trip between his home and the Danville High School.

It is further shown and admitted that the defendant county board of education maintains ,no district •county high school east of Danville and that it has an arrangement with the Danville High School to pay it ■an agreed tuition of $45 for each and such of its pupils of high school standing attending its high school, who live east of Danville, and who would thus be required to pass through Danville in order to attend the Parks-ville or other county high school maintained by it.

The plaintiff, while living in the Parksville school district, upon the county board’s refusal to pay under this arrangement the tuition of his two children, filed ■suit for a mandamus requiring them to do so, contending that, under section 4526b-5, Carroll’s Kentucky ■Statutes, 1933 Supplement, it was the most convenient school for his children to attend and that therefore, under the statute as so amended, the appellant county board of education was obligated to pay their tuition.

The appellant here seeks a review and reversal of the lower court’s judgment, requiring it to pay this tuition, contending that the principal and material question involved is, “Is the regulation of the County Board of Education in requiring appellee’s children to attend the Parksville High School an abuse of a reason *754 able discretion or is such requirement reasonable and just?” It insists that, if it is a reasonable requirement, the judgment of the lower court should be reversed.

Appellee, on the other hand, contends such is not. the question presented by the appeal, but submits that the only question here presented to this court is, whether the chancellor properly adjudged that it was. “more convenient” for appellee’s daughter and son to attend the Danville High School than it was for them to attend the Parksville High School.

We are of the opinion that the position of the appellee as to the real issue here presented upon the-record is the correct one.

In the late case of Eastham v. Greenup County Board of Education et al., 247 Ky. 16, 56 S. W. (2d) 550, the court, in discussing the very similar question there presented, said:

“Prior to chapter 72 of the Acts of 1932, section 4526b-5 of the Statutes read:
“ 4 That where an approved high school already exists- that any high school pupil shall have the-privilege of attending the school in the county which is most convenient; and that the county in which he resides shall pay the tuition of said pupil at the-same rate as fixed for other high school pupils in said county.’
“This section had been construed to mean that the high school student had the privilege of attending the most convenient high school only where-such high school was located in a county other than that of the residence of the student and was most-convenient to him under the standards of convenience laid down in the opinions. Reed v. Mason County Board of Education, 220 Ky. 489, 295 S. W. 436; Beck v. Lyon County Board of Education, 217 Ky. 67, 288 S. W. 1012.”

While such remained the meaning of the statute-as so construed, it was further held in the case of Scott County Board of Education v. Crumbaugh, 213 Ky. 771, 281 S. W. 977, that, although the county board of education did not maintain the high school at the county seat, it was not required to pay tuition for students in-the high school at such county seat maintained by the, *755 graded school district comprising such county seat, the county board maintaining an adequate and accessible high school to which such students could go.

The law then was, prior to its later 1932 amendatory modification, that as between two high schools, both located in the same county, a .high school pupil residing therein, but outside the county seat high school district, was required to attend the high school that the county board of education, in the exercise of a reasonable discretion, directed him to attend.

The law was so declared in Scott County Board of Education v. Crumbaugh, 213 Ky. 771, 281 S. W. 977, 979, where the court further in its opinion said:

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Related

Stallins v. Caldwell County Board of Education
120 S.W.2d 656 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1938)
Madison County Board of Education v. Smith
63 S.W.2d 620 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1933)

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59 S.W.2d 995, 248 Ky. 751, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 311, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/county-board-of-ed-boyle-county-v-caldwell-kyctapphigh-1933.