Fayette County Board of Education v. Tompkins

280 S.W. 114, 212 Ky. 751, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 230
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedFebruary 5, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 280 S.W. 114 (Fayette County Board of Education v. Tompkins) 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
Fayette County Board of Education v. Tompkins, 280 S.W. 114, 212 Ky. 751, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 230 (Ky. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Thomas

Reversing.

The appellee and plaintiff below, A. B. Tompkins, and 26 other citizens and taxpayers of Fayette county residing outside of the corporate limits of the city of Lexington, filed this .equity action in the Fayette circuit court against the appellant and defendant below, the Fayette County Board of Education, seeking to compel it to pay tuition of plaintiff’s children who had completed the course of the county free common schools and who were eligible to enter high schools, for their attendance in the university high school located in Lexington, Kentucky. It was alleged in the petition that defendant had never established nor did it maintain any high school within the city of Lexington, the county seat of Fayette county, as plaintiffs claimed it was its duty to do under the provisions of section 4526b-2, a part of our present statutes, and which itself is a part of an act relating to public schools enacted in 1908 and commonly known as the ¡Sullivan Act. The present and next preceding section to that above referred to (4526b-l) requires the county board of education of each county to establish therein one or more county high schools within two. years after the passage of that act, “provided there is not already existing in the county a high school of the first class,” in which case the board was exonerated from the duty of establishing another one by making arrangements with the trustees of .such high school for the free tuition of pupils in the county eligible thereto, and the board was vested by that section with full authority to malee such an arrangement. The section relied on (4526b-2) says in part: “The first county high school to be established in the county (by the county board of education) shall be located at the county .seat, provided there is not already existing in the county seat a high school of the required grade,” and it was to enforce that provision, or the provided substitute for its failure (i. e., the payment by the board of the tuition of county pupils eligible *753 and desirous to take the high school course) that this action was filed.

The answer pleaded the want of funds as a reason why defendant had not established and maintained a high school within the corporate limits of the city of Lexington, and also facts showing that it had contracted expenses for teachers in the five or six other high schools it maintained in the county, which with other necessary expenses amounted to as much or more than its possible income as measured by the maximum limits of the law. It further pleaded that some few years ago it erected a first class high school located .7 of a mile south of the corporate limits of Lexington on the Iiarrodsburg pike; that the city was rapidly growing in that direction and that residences had been constructed and were occupied extending from the corporate limits to that building, which was and is known as Picadome school, and that it was large enough and sufficient in every respect to take care of and accommodate, not only paintiff’s children, but all others within the county who were eligible and desired to attend it; that in constructing that school it did so with the intention and purpose of complying with the above excerpt from the statute, and it alleged that by so doing it substantially complied therewith, and that it was advised by the then attorney general of the state to the same effect. As a reason for erecting that school building as well as acquiring the ground therefor it also averred, that at the time it was limited in funds and that a suitable and eligible site with proper space was difficult if not impossible of acquisition within the corporate limits, and that the site so selected near to the corporate limits was elevated, spacious and obtained at a reasonable price and much less than it would have cost within the city. A demurrer filed to the answer as a whole was sustained and defendant declining'to plead further, judgment was rendered against it as prayed for in the petition, to reverse which it prosecutes this appeal.

We had before us the same statute and involving the same duties on the part of the county board in the recent case of Christian County Board of Education v. Morris, 207 Ky. 221, and in our opinion in that case we held that it was the primary duty of the county board of education to either establish and maintain a high school as directed in the statute or to defray the tuition expenses of pupils attending a high school in the county seat if one was *754 therein maintained, and arrangements should be made f or the attendance of such pupils. While it does not appear in the opinion in that case, yet the fact was that a stipulation was therein made showing the number as well as the locality of various high schools maintained by the Christian county board -of education, and that the nearest one to the city of Hopkinsville, the county seat of the county, was between six and seven miles, and we held that ‘ ‘ The primary duty of a county board of education under the statute above (4526b-2) is to establish and maintain a high school at the county seat by one of two plans,” and that “In the case now before us there is neither a substantial nor any compliance with the provisions of the statutes.” That opinion was eminently proper under the facts of that case, since by no course of reasoning could it be insisted that a high school located between six and seven miles from the corporate limits of the county seat town was in any sense “at the county seat” as is required by the statute as the place for the location of the first and only high school if but one is established and maintained.

In this case, however, the required established high school was located within .7 of a mile from the corporate limits of the county seat town with a continuous population extending from such limits to the established school, and the question is: Whether such location under the facts may propery be considered as being at the county seat within the intent and purpose of the statute? In the first place, it will be noticed that the opinion in the Morris case broadly intimated and inferentially held that a substantial compliance with the statute was all that was required, and in this opinion we expressly adopt that view without qualification. So that, if the answer in this case had not alleged the fact showing a literal compliance with the statute, we would be bound to hold that it was sufficient to show a substantial compliance therewith.

If, however, we were in error in that conclusion (but concerning which we have no doubt) we are then equally positive that both the etymological as well as legal definition of the word “ at, ” as used in the statute with reference to location, does not have the same significance as the words'“in” or “within,” so as to require the establishment of the high school within the corporate limits of the county seat own. As applied to location, Mr. Webster in defining the word says, “Primarily, this word expresses the relation of presence or contact in space or *755 time, or of direction towards. It has much the sense of to without its implication of motion, and is less definite than in, or, by, etc. Thus, at the house, may be in or near the house.” In the case of Waynesville v. Satterhwait, 136 N. C.

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Bluebook (online)
280 S.W. 114, 212 Ky. 751, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 230, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fayette-county-board-of-education-v-tompkins-kyctapphigh-1926.