Flowers v. Independent School District

16 N.W.2d 570, 235 Iowa 332, 1944 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 507
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 12, 1944
DocketNo. 46538.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 16 N.W.2d 570 (Flowers v. Independent School District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Flowers v. Independent School District, 16 N.W.2d 570, 235 Iowa 332, 1944 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 507 (iowa 1944).

Opinion

Oliver, J.-

Appellee lived on a farm in the' Independent School District of Tama. He had three daughters, aged twelve, eleven, and nine years, respectively, who attended elementary school in said district. His dwelling was situated on a graveled highway and was two and eight-tenths miles from said schoolhouse, measured on the public highway by the most practicable *333 route. From the school said route runs west on Highway 30, one and nine-tenths miles, thence north on the graveled highway nine-tenths mile to appellee’s dwelling. Prior’ to the school term which commenced in September 1943, appellee’s children had been regularly transported over this route back and forth between their home and the school in a motor school bus owned and operated by one Weaver, under contract with appellant school board.

The school-bus main trunk route was along Highway 30 but the route included several side trips to the homes of appellee and others which were situated upon highways intersecting Highway 30. ' Beginning with September 1943, the side trips upon intersecting highways were eliminated and the route was limited to the former main trunk route. Thereafter the bus picked up and discharged appellee’s children at the intersection of Highway 30 and the highway upon which they lived. This required them to use other means to travel the nine-tenths mile between their home and the bus stop.

Thereupon appellee instituted this action in mandamus for an order commanding appellants to provide transportation for said children to and from their residence and the school. Appellants pleaded that they had eliminated the side trips in the exercise - of their discretion, as a war-emergency measure, to save rubber tires, gasoline, and school-bus equipment, and that, under the circumstances, the transportation furnished was adequate. They also alleged such action was taken in compliance with requirements of the Office of Defense Transportation and the State Department of Public Instruction, and that it was for the duration of the war only. Upon trial the court ordered appellants to arrange for transportation for said children to and from the public highway in front of their home and in front of the school building.

I. Section 4233.4, Code of 1939, provides, in part:

“When children enrolled in an elementary school other than in a consolidated district live two and one-half miles or more from the school in their district or subdistrict * * * the board shall arrange with any person outside the board for the transportation of such children to and from school.”

Code section 4233.5 states:

*334 “Distance — how measured. Distance to school shall in all cases be measured on the public highway only and by the most practicable route, starting on the roadway opposite the private entrance to the residence of the pupil and ending on the roadway opposite the entrance to the school grounds.”

The provision that the board shall arrange for the transportation of such children to and from school is mandatory. This has been pointed out in previous decisions and is not disputed by appellants. Riecks v. Independent Sch. Dist., 219 Iowa 101, 257 N. W. 546; Bruggeman v. Independent Sch. Dist., 227 Iowa 661, 668, 289 N. W. 5. But the statute has not been interpreted with particular reference to the language “transportation * * * to and from school.”

The purpose of the statute is to afford children living two and one-half miles or more from school substantially the same educational advantages as those living nearer. However, we do not think it should be strictly construed as requiring in all cases that a school bus stop at a point in the highway in front of the home of each child to permit him to enter or leave the- bus. Within reasonable limits, and without unreasonable discrimination, the board may determine the route and the times and places for bus stops to receive or discharge passengers. The statute should be given a reasonable and practical construction so that, without unnecessary burden to the school district, all children entitled thereto may be furnished transportation as nearly complete as is reasonably possible.

This is substantially the position taken by other courts in considering analogous provisions in their laws. In State ex rel. Brand v. Mostad, 28 N. D. 244, 248, 148 N. W. 831, 832, the court said:

‘ < * * * the on]y questions to be determined are whether the language * * * which provides for transportation ‘to and from school,’ is to be strictly construed so that in all cases children must be actually conveyed from their house doors to the doors of the schoolhouse, or whether a reasonable discretion in such matters has been left with the school board. Also, whether, if such discretion exists, there was an abuse thereof in the case at bar.

*335 “We are firmly of the opinion that the legislative intention was that actual transportation from the door of the home to the door of the schoolhouse should only be furnished as far as the same was reasonably practicable. In other words, that, though the statute is mandatory and cannot be avoided, it should be construed as if passed by reasonable men, and should be interpreted according to its spirit rather than according to its letter. * * *

“It must have been the intention of the legislature that some reasonable discretion should be exercised in the matter, and that, though conveyance from the house to the schoolhouse should be furnished as nearly as is reasonably possible, the letter of the statute should not be made the pretext for absurd and unreasonable exactions.

There is a like holding in Lyle v. State ex rel. Smith, 172 Ind. 502, 88 N. E. 850. State ex rel. Stewart v. Miller, 193 Ind. 492, 141 N. E. 60, follows Lyle v. Smith, supra, and cites State ex rel. Brand v. Mostad, supra, 28 N. D. 244, 148 N. W. 831, and other cases, with the observation that no authorities to the contrary have been called to the attention of the court. Walters v. State, 212 Wis. 132, 248 N. W. 777, also follows the rule and cites the foregoing cases. See, also, annotations in 63 A. L. R. 423, 118 A. L. R. 816, 146 A. L. R. 633. Although the cited decisions from North Dakota and Indiana involve transportation by horse-drawn school wagons, and some parts of the discussion are from that standpoint, the legal principles upon, which those decisions are based are applicable to transportation by motor school bus.

II. Under powers given the President by the Second War Powers Act of 1942, 50 U. S. C. App., section 633, and by the President delegated to the Office of Defense Transportation, said office issued general order ODT 21, which, among other things, governs rubber-tired commercial vehicles, including school busses, and forbids their operation except under a Certificate of War Necessity.

Such certificate requires compliance with various requirements and policies calculated to save rubber and other materials, and limits the gasoline ration. One policy is to practically eliminate travel over branch routes to pick up or discharge students *336 who live less than one and one-half miles from a school-bus trunk route.

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Bluebook (online)
16 N.W.2d 570, 235 Iowa 332, 1944 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 507, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flowers-v-independent-school-district-iowa-1944.