Crim v. McWhorter

252 S.E.2d 421, 242 Ga. 863, 1979 Ga. LEXIS 771
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJanuary 5, 1979
Docket33972
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 252 S.E.2d 421 (Crim v. McWhorter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crim v. McWhorter, 252 S.E.2d 421, 242 Ga. 863, 1979 Ga. LEXIS 771 (Ga. 1979).

Opinions

Jordan, Justice.

This appeal presents the question of whether a public school system within the State of Georgia can establish a policy requiring the payment of a tuition fee as a precondition for attendance during a summer school session.

Appellants represent the Atlanta Public School System which, as they traditionally have done in the past, operated a limited summer quarter session of high school during the summer of 1978. Appellants received no direct state funding for the operation of its summer school program, but rather relied upon general operating revenue supplemented with funds raised by charging a minimum tuition fee to summer quarter students to defray the expenses of operating a summer school session.

Prior to the initiation of this action, appellants’ tuition policy for the summer session of 1977 imposed a charge often ($10.00) dollars for each five hours of courses taken by a resident student unless the student obtained a waiver of tuition. Appellants’ waiver policy provided that all students receiving Medicaid benefits would automatically receive a waiver of the tuition fee, and that any other students unable to pay the tuition charges could apply to the principal of their school for a waiver, and if the principal found a sufficient case of hardship to have been presented, a waiver of tuition would be granted.

Appellees, two high school students acting through their mothers and on behalf of all others similarly situated, filed this action seeking to declare the tuition policy of the Atlanta Board of Education and the Atlanta Public School System for their 1977 summer school session in violation of constitutional and statutory mandates and seeking to enjoin appellants from charging [864]*864any tuition fees for attendance at their summer school session. After a stipulation of facts, the trial court entered an interlocutory injunction enjoining appellants from requiring any student in the Atlanta Public School System who was financially unable to pay the summer session tuition to pay that tuition as a condition for their attendance at summer school.

Following discovery, both appellees and appellants filed motions for summary judgment. On April 4, 1978, the trial court denied appellants’ motion and granted appellees’ motion for summary judgment in all respects holding that appellants’ tuition policy for the summer quarter of 1977 violated Code§ 32-937; Art. Ill, Sec. I, Par. I of the Constitution of Georgia (Code Ann. § 2-4901); and the equal protection clauses of the Constitutions of Georgia (Code Ann. § 2-203) and the United States. The trial court also issued a permanent injunction requiring appellants to refrain from charging any tuition to any student wishing to attend all subsequent summer sessions operated by appellants.

Representatives of the Atlanta Public School System appeal, and we reverse the trial court’s decision.

1. Appellees’ motion for summary judgment before the trial court argued that appellants’ 1977 summer quarter tuition policy violated Art. VIII, Sec. I, Par. I of the Georgia Constitution (Code Ann. § 2-4901) and Code § 32-937 because summer quarter was part of appellants’ "common school system,” admission to which must be free. Code Ann. § 2-4901 states: "The provision of an adequate education for the citizens shall be a primary obligation of the State of Georgia, the expense of which shall be provided for by taxation.” In addition to this constitutional basis for a free system of common schools in Georgia, Code § 32-937 mandates that "admission to all common schools shall be gratuitous to all children between the ages of six and 19 years residing in the districts in which the schools are located.”

For a proper construction of the educational opportunities constitutionally guaranteed the citizens of this state, we feel it is necessary to consider the provisions of Code § 32-658a along with Code §§ 2-4901 and 32-937. Code § 32-658a provides that "public and secondary [865]*865schools of this state receiving state aid . . . shall be operated so as to provide that each eligible student has access to no less than 180 school days of education.”

Appellants’ summer school session receives no direct state aid and is operated in addition to the 180 school day requirement mandated by Code § 32-658a. It is clear that under our present statutes, appellants could not be compelled to operate a summer school session since it is neither required nor supported by direct state funding. Callihan v. Reid, 149 Ga. 704 (101 SE 914) (1919).

Callihan, supra, decided under the Constitution of 1877 which guaranteed only an elementary education, involved a student who wished to continue in the common schools after completing the elementary grades. This court, in interpreting the statutory provision that admission to all common schools be gratuitous, held that gratuitous admission was limited to the prescribed minimum educational requirements. "Neither in the statutes nor the provisions of the Constitution ... do we find anything rendering it mandatory upon the school authorities of a school district where the money arising from taxes levied for the purpose raises funds only sufficient to conduct and operate the common school, to have and maintain, . . . grades appropriate to a high school.” Id., at 707.

Appellees have argued that once a summer session has been put into operation, it becomes part of the common school system of a particular district and must be offered to all students without charge, relying on Claxton v. Stanford, 160 Ga. 752 (128 SE 887) (1925) and Brinson v. Jackson, 168 Ga. 353 (148 SE 96) (1929). In Claxton, the school authorities attempted to charge a matriculation fee in order to finance the operation of their school system for a nine-month term when state law required that schools remain open for only six months each academic year and state public school funds and taxes collected from the school district only financed a six-month term. In rejecting this plan this court held that "a charge for matriculation cannot be imposed as a condition precedent to admission to a public school forming a part of such general system...” Id., at 753 (2). (Emphasis supplied.) In this present case the payment of a summer session fee is [866]*866not a condition precedent for attendance during the statutorily provided nine-month term.

Brinson v. Jackson, supra, involved the same school district as in Claxton and the identical matriculation plan. Brinson held that an Act of the legislature passed subsequent to the Claxton decision and relating to the powers of trustees of school districts did not empower them to impose a matriculation fee.

Other jurisdictions which have reviewed this issue in a similar constitutional context have also upheld the payment of summer school tuition fees.

In Granger v. Cascade County School District, 159 Mont. 516 (499 P2d 780) (1972), the Supreme Court of Montana held that summer school tuition fees did not violate a constitutional requirement that the legislature establish and maintain a "general, uniform and thorough system of public, free, common schools.” Id., at 524. The Montana court explained that summer school was "both historically and logically not included in the free public school system required by our constitution” and that "(a)ccordingly, reasonable fees and charges may be imposed therefor.” Id., at 528.

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Crim v. McWhorter
252 S.E.2d 421 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1979)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
252 S.E.2d 421, 242 Ga. 863, 1979 Ga. LEXIS 771, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crim-v-mcwhorter-ga-1979.