Dean v. Board of Education of Harrodsburg

57 S.W.2d 477, 247 Ky. 553, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 419
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedFebruary 3, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 57 S.W.2d 477 (Dean v. Board of Education of Harrodsburg) 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
Dean v. Board of Education of Harrodsburg, 57 S.W.2d 477, 247 Ky. 553, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 419 (Ky. 1933).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Chiep Justice Dietzman

Affirming in part and Reversing in part.

Tbis is a declaratory judgment suit brought for the purposes of determining tbe boundary lines of tbe school district known as the Harrodsburg educational district. The district contended that it embraced not only the city of Harrodsburg, but also a considerable territory outside of but adjacent to and surrounding the city limits. The people within this territory outside the city limits contended that the boundaries of the district were confined to the corporate limits of Har-rodsburg. The lower court held that the boundaries of the district extended beyond the corporate limits of Harrodsburg, and took in some surrounding territory, but not to the extent claimed by the board of education. From this judgment, both sides have appealed.

A proper decision of this case requires an extended investigation into the various acts of the Legislature passed since the Harrodsburg educational district was established, and we must begin with the act creating that district. That act was chapter 745 of the Loc. & Priv. Acts of 1875-76, section 1 of which reads:

“That for the purpose of establishing a graded system of free schools in Harrodsburg, Kentucky, the said town of Harrodsburg is hereby constituted a common school district, and declared to be a body-corporate, and possessing all powers necessary for the execution of the purposes hereinafter set forth. Its corporate name shall be known as the Harrods-burg Educational District.”

Thus we see that, at the outset, the boundaries of the Harrodsburg educational district were coincident with the corporate limits of the town. The act creating the district contained no provision for thereafter enlarging the boundaries of the district. A patient investigation by both counsel and the court has. disclosed no act bearing on our problem until chapter 260 of the Acts of 1891-92-93 was passed on July 6, 1893. That act, in accordance with the mandate of our present Constitution then but recently adopted, provided for a sys *556 tem of common schools throughout the state. It was composed of fifteen articles. Article 7, as section 65 thereof clearly indicates, related to the common school districts of the county as distinguished from graded school districts, and therefore section 67 of the same article, which provides:

“The county superintendent shall, in a hook to be kept in his office for that purpose, and subject to public inspection, describe each district in his county by its number and boundary, and shall furnish to the trustees of each district a description of the boundary thereof” — has reference to the common school districts of the county, and has no bearing on the graded school districts. Article 10 of chapter 260 provided for the establishment of graded school districts. This article begins with section 100, which later became section 4464 of the Kentucky Statutes, Edition of 1894, and subsequent editions. This section provided for the establishment, of graded school districts in towns and cities of the fifth and sixth classes and in rural districts, but made no provision for the extension of boundaries of graded school district's established pursuant to its provisions. Section 124 of that act provided:
“The provisions of this article shall not affect, or in any way interfere with, any graded common school or schools maintained by any city of the fifth or sixth class, or any . town or school district organized by virtue of a special act of the General Assembly, unless the said city, town or district shall, by a majority vote, indorsed by the recorded action of the board of trustees, accept the provisions of this article for the.government of the said school or schools in any election held under the written order of the county judge, or of the mayor of said city, in the manner. ’ ’

And here follows the method of taking the vote of the electors of the graded school district.

This section became section 4488 of the Kentucky Statutes of 1894. Section 125 of chapter 260, which became section 4489 of the Kentucky Statutes of 1894, provided:

“The provisions of this article shall not affect, or in any way interfere with, any system of graded *557 common schools established and maintained by any city of the first, second, third or fourth class, by virtue of a general or special act of the General Assembly. Any city of the first, second, third or fourth class may accept the provisions of this law, and establish graded common schools, subject to all the provisions thereof,” in the manner set out by the statute.

We thus see that for graded school districts established by a special act of the General Assembly to come under the graded school law set up by this chapter 260, there had to be taken a vote of the electors which had to result in favor of the district being governed by these general graded school laws of the state. At this point we may pause to note that this same Legislature which enacted this chapter 260, and which was' the first Legislature that met after the adoption of the present Constitution, by an act adopted September 30, 1892 (Acts 1891-92-93, c. 99), assigned the various towns and cities of this commonwealth to the classes set up by the Constitution; Harrodsburg being assigned to the cities of the fourth class. This Legislature also provided charters for thei various classes of cities. For cities of the fourth class, of which Harrodsburg was one, a system of public schools was authorized. See sections 3588 to 3606, Kentucky Statutes of 1894. The provisions for this system did not permit of the school district thas authorized extending beyond the boundaries of the city. The act itself clearly provided that in order for a city of the fourth class to avail itself of the right to establish a school system under these provisions of its charter, the board of councilmen of the city had to determine to do so by ordinance. See section 3606, Kentucky Statutes of 1894. In the case of Taylor v. Russell, 117 Ky. 539, 78 S. W. 411, 25 Ky. Law Rep. 1652, this court held that the authority vested in cities of the fourth class by section 4489, Kentucky Statutes, 1894 Edition, to establish schools under the general graded school laws of the state did not empower such cities which had established schools under the charter provisions of municipalities of the fourth class relating to a public school system to change from these charter provisions schools to graded schools under the general schocd laws. It is true the case of Trustees of Princeton Graded Common Schools v. Stone, 142 Ky. 715, 135 S. W. 307, which makes no reference to the Taylor Case, *558 supra, is on this point diametrically opposed to the rule announced in the Taylor . Case, and' both cases cannot stand. But it will not be necessary in this case to decide which case lays down the proper rule. It is sufficient to note the conflict. At all events, both cases recognize that a fourth-class city might then have its schools conducted either because of a special law passed before the adoption of the present constitution organizing the schools of such city, or because of the general graded school laws of the state, or because of the charter provisions relating to the subject of cities ■of that class.

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Bluebook (online)
57 S.W.2d 477, 247 Ky. 553, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 419, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dean-v-board-of-education-of-harrodsburg-kyctapphigh-1933.