Howell School Board District No. 9 v. Hubbartt

70 N.W.2d 531, 246 Iowa 1265, 1955 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 433
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 7, 1955
Docket48712
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 70 N.W.2d 531 (Howell School Board District No. 9 v. Hubbartt) 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
Howell School Board District No. 9 v. Hubbartt, 70 N.W.2d 531, 246 Iowa 1265, 1955 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 433 (iowa 1955).

Opinion

Wennerstrum, C. J.

This appeal has developed by reason of two separate proceedings involving the place of school attend *1267 anee of the children of four families. The board of the Howell School District in Davis County, Iowa, originally determined all elementary pupils in that district should attend the school it operated. Following this action of the district board there was an appeal to the Davis County Board of Education which made certain determinations. Section 285.12, 1954 Code of Iowa. As a result of its decision there was an appeal to the state superintendent of public instruction. Section 285.12, 1954 Code. It affirmed in part and reversed in part the decision of the county board. This official decided the children of all four families involved in the appeal should attend the Bloomfield, Iowa, public schools at the expense of the Howell school district. Thereafter there was an appeal to the Davis County District Court by the Howell district school board. Section 285.12, 1954 Code of Iowa. The district court held in favor of the Howell district school board. The parties adversely affected by the trial court’s decree have appealed to this court.

On July 1, 1953, the Howell district school board by resolution and order directed that all elementary pupils living in the district should attend the school within the district and that the parents of these pupils should transport their children to the district school and be compensated as provided by statute. Section 285.1(3), 1954 Code. There were various facts brought out in the several hearings relative to the conditions of the roads as they affected the several families, the proximity and availability of transportation by school bus to the Bloomfield public schools, the possibility, of obtaining better educational instruction in the latter school, the age of the children affected and their condition of health, and the fact that if the children from the Howell district attended the Bloomfield school there would be a resulting increase of cost and taxes to the taxpayers of the Howell school district. It was also shown in the several hearings there was no bus service available within the school district.

Upon appeal to the Davis County Board of Education it determined the child of Emory Hubbartt and the children of Earl Stogdill should attend the Howell school. It reversed the decision of the Howell school board and determined that the children *1268 of Dean Herbert and LaVerne McMain should be sent to the Bloomfield school.

From the decision of the Davis County Board of Education Emory Hubbartt and Earl Stogdill appealed to' the state superintendent of public instruction. The Howell school board appealed from the decision relative to the children of Dean Herbert and LaVerne McMain.

The two appeals to the state superintendent of public instruction were consolidated and following a hearing before that official a ruling and decision was filed. This decision affirmed the determination of the Davis County Board of Education relative to the children of the Dean Herbert and LaVerne McMain families and reversed the county board in its.ruling relative to the child of Emory Hubbartt and the children of Earl Stogdill. The result of the decision of the state sux>erintendent was that all the children affected should attend the Bloomfield public schools.

Upon appeal to the district court the parents of the children involved in this appeal presented several issues, some of which are not questioned in this appeal. There was no evidence presented before the trial court inasmuch as the parties stipulated the facts had been correctly set forth in the decisions of the Davis County Board of Education and the state superintendent of public instruction.

The trial court held: (1) that the action was triable as an ordinary action and not as an appellate proceeding and it was reviewable by it on the petition filed in that court and the stipulated facts; (2) that inasmuch as the Howell school board had its own school in operation and had designated its school for attendance by the children of the local residents, neither the county board of education nor the state superintendent of public instruction had any 'power or authority under the School Transportation law, or any other statute, to order the pupils sent to any other school. The four appealing parties raise as claimed errors the two rulings of the trial court as heretofore set forth.

I. Section 285.12, 1954 Code of Iowa, enacted by the Fifty-fourth General Assembly (chapter 98, section 1) (1951), *1269 which relates to State Aid For Transportation, is as follows: “In the event of a disagreement between a school patron .and the board of the school district, the patron if dissatisfied with the decision of the district board, may appeal the same to the county board of education, notifying the secretary of the district in writing within ten days of the decision of the board and by filing an affidavit of appeal with the county board of education within the ten-day period. The affidavit of appeal shall include the reasons for the appeal and points at issue. The secretary of the local board on receiving notice of appeal shall certify all papers to the county board of education which shall hear the appeal within ten days of the receipt of the papers and decide it within three days of the conclusion of the hearing and shall immediately notify all parties of its decision. Either party may appeal the decision of the county board to the state superintendent of public instruction by notifying the opposite party and the county superintendent of schools in writing within five days after receipt of notice of the decision of the county board of education and shall file with the state superintendent of public instruction an affidavit of appeal, reasons for appeal, and the facts involved in the disagreement. The county superintendent of schools shall, within ten days of said notice, file with the state superintendent of public instruction all records and papers pertaining to the case, including action of the county board of education. The state superintendent of public instruction shall hear the appeal within fifteen days of the filing of the records in his office, notifying all parties and the county superintendent of schools of the time of hearing. The state superintendent of public instruction shall forthwith decide the same and notify all parties of his decision and return all papers with a copy of the decision to the county superintendent of schools. The decision of the state superintendent of public instruction shall be subject to appeal to the district court. Any order of the district court shall be subject to appeal to the supreme court in accord with the statutes respecting appeals to that court. Pending final order made by the state superintendent of public instruction, or the district court, or the supreme court, as the ease may be, upon any appeal prosecuted to such superintendent or to such courts, the *1270 order of the county board of education from which the appeal is taken shall be operative and be in full force and effect.”

This particular legislation was undoubtedly enacted following our decision in the case of County Board of Education v. Parker (1951), 242 Iowa 1, 8,

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Bluebook (online)
70 N.W.2d 531, 246 Iowa 1265, 1955 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 433, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/howell-school-board-district-no-9-v-hubbartt-iowa-1955.