Ferris v. Paulding Exempted Village School Dist. Bd. of Edn.

454 N.E.2d 957, 7 Ohio App. 3d 163, 7 Ohio B. 208, 24 Ohio Op. 3d 400, 1982 Ohio App. LEXIS 11126
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 31, 1982
Docket11-81-4
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 454 N.E.2d 957 (Ferris v. Paulding Exempted Village School Dist. Bd. of Edn.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ferris v. Paulding Exempted Village School Dist. Bd. of Edn., 454 N.E.2d 957, 7 Ohio App. 3d 163, 7 Ohio B. 208, 24 Ohio Op. 3d 400, 1982 Ohio App. LEXIS 11126 (Ohio Ct. App. 1982).

Opinion

Guernsey, J.

In July 1971, the Auglaize-Brown Local School District, centered at Oakwood, Ohio, was merged into the Paulding Exempted Village School District, centered prior thereto at Paulding, Ohio. The merger became formalized and effective without referendum.

Prior to the merger each district had maintained respectively at Oakwood and at Paulding chartered schools including in each district grades kindergarten through twelve. After the merger grades ten through twelve were immediately terminated at Oakwood and all tenth through twelfth grade students of the *164 district continued their education at Paulding. In 1974 the ninth grade at Oakwood was terminated and all ninth grade students thenceforth went to Paulding. In 1980 action was commenced to terminate the eighth grade at Oakwood with all eighth grade students thereafter to attend school at Paulding.

The Ohio Educational Directory, which purports to list the chartering of all schools in Ohio by the State Board of Education, responded to these changes as they were respectively made, although at no time did that board take individual and affirmative action to revoke the charter of the individual school located at Oakwood with respect to the continuation there of grades eight through twelve.

This appeal commenced as an action initiated May 12, 1980, by disgruntled taxpayers and parents of students residing in the Paulding Exempted Village School District but also residing in territory formerly included in the Auglaize-Brown Local School District. It was brought against the Board of Education of the Paulding Exempted Village School District, the Ohio State Board of Education, the Ohio Department of Education and the Paulding County Board of Education to enjoin the completion of the action regarding the eighth grade and have the various previous actions set aside.

Based on its conclusion that the State Board of Education had chartered a junior high school at Oakwood for grades seven through nine and had never taken action pursuant to R.C. 3301.16 and R.C. Chapter 119 to revoke such charter, the trial court concluded, in effect, that the “transfer” of grades eight and nine from Oakwood to Paulding must be set aside and that such grades must be reestablished “defacto as well as de jure,” as part of a junior high school at Oakwood. The trial court denied all other relief sought by the plaintiffs.

The defendant Paulding Exempted Village School District is the sole defendant-appellant, assigning error of the trial court as follows:

“I. * * * in holding that the State Board of Education never lawfully changed the charter for the junior high school at Oakwood.
“II. * * * in holding that the charter provisions of R.C. 3301.16 override the authority of the school board and school superintendent in managing the schools and assigning pupils.
“III. * * * in holding that changing the charter of the school at Oakwood to facilitate the reassignment of grades 8 and 9 required compliance with Chapter 119 of the Revised Code.
“IV. * * * in holding that changing the charter of the school at Oakwood to facilitate the reassignment of grades 8 and 9 required compliance with Chapter 119 of the Revised Code with respect to the plaintiffs-appellees, who have no standing to assert a violation of Chapter 119.
“V. * * * in fashioning a remedy which bypassed the inquiry under Chapter 119 of the Revised Code as to whether the schools in question did in fact meet minimum standards to support a charter.”

The plaintiffs cross-appealed assigning error of the trial court “in not finding June 1, 1970, as the correct Oakwood Building charter date and in failing to order grades 7 through 12 returned to Oakwood Building.”

There is a strange but existing hiatus in Ohio education law as to school charters. Although at all times herein involved R.C. 3301.16 placed upon the State Board of Education the duty of classifying and chartering school districts and individual schools within each district, there is no specific statutory requirement that a school is required to have a charter to operate, that if it did not have one it could not operate, or that if it had one it would have to operate all grades included in its charter. R.C. 3301.16 prescribes, among other things, that the state board “shall *165 revoke the charter of any school district or school which fails to meet the standards for elementary and high schools as prescribed by the board,” and that “[i]n case a school district charter is revoked pursuant to this section, the state board of education may dissolve the school district and transfer its territory to one or more adjacent districts.” No provision is made as to what should happen in the event of the revocation of a charter of a school as contrasted with that of a school district, and no distinction is made as to junior high school charters, the statute dealing only with standards “for elementary and high schools.”

In essence all a charter consists of is a certification by the State Board of Education that the school district and/or individual schools within the district fulfill the standards prescribed by that board of education as provided in R.C. 3301.07 (D).

The impact of plaintiffs’ position is that in the event the State Board of Education has chartered a school, the school must be maintained and operated to the extent of its charter and no classes may be terminated by any local or exempted village school district board of education unless the State Board of Education has taken the action necessary to amend or terminate the individual school’s charter. In our opinion this position not only has no foundation but is contrary to layr when applied to the circumstances of this case.

The plaintiffs’ position and the court’s judgment wholly ignore the fact that the school in Paulding to which the students from the school in Oakwood were transferred was, if a charter was necessary, equivalently chartered at all times pertinent to include instruction in all the grades involved.

The broad discretion of a board of education is succinctly set forth in the syllabus of the leading case of Brannon v. Board of Edn. (1919), 99 Ohio St. 369, as follows:

“2. A court has no authority to control the discretion vested in a board of education by the statutes of this state, or to substitute its judgment for the judgment of such board, upon any question it is authorized by law to determine.
“3. A court will not restrain a board of education from carrying into effect its determination of any question within its discretion, except for an abuse of discretion or for fraud or collusion on the part of such board in the exercise of its statutory authority.”

R.C.

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454 N.E.2d 957, 7 Ohio App. 3d 163, 7 Ohio B. 208, 24 Ohio Op. 3d 400, 1982 Ohio App. LEXIS 11126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ferris-v-paulding-exempted-village-school-dist-bd-of-edn-ohioctapp-1982.