I. O. O. F. v. Board of Education

110 S.E. 440, 90 W. Va. 8, 1922 W. Va. LEXIS 184
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 17, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 110 S.E. 440 (I. O. O. F. v. Board of Education) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
I. O. O. F. v. Board of Education, 110 S.E. 440, 90 W. Va. 8, 1922 W. Va. LEXIS 184 (W. Va. 1922).

Opinion

Meredith, Judge:

The petitioner applied by petition for a peremptory writ of mandamus against the Board of Education of the Independent School District of Elkins, Boyd Wees and Dr. C. H. Hall, the only members of said Board, and W. W. Trent, superintendent of schools of said district, alleging that the [11]*11Grand Lodge of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows of West Virginia, under authority of chapter 55-A, section 32-b, Barnes Code, 1918, has acquired about 100 acres of land near the city of Elkins and has established a home thereon for “the care and support of the orphans and widows of deceased members and of disabled and aged members of said organization in indigent circumstances,” and has admitted thereto 126 children between the ages of six and twenty-one years, as well as other persons eligible thereto, and that said 'Home is located within the boundaries of said Independent School District, and that said children are residents of said school district and are entitled to attend the public Schools therein; that some of said .children may have no parents living, and as to the large majority thereof one of such parents is dead, and when the children of a deceased parent are placed in said Home they are placed there under the absolute care and control of the proper authorities of said Grand Lodge, the living parent or parents releasing all claim over the care and custody of said children; that all of said children since the 12th day of September, 1921 (that being the opening date of the schools of said district for the present school year) have been excluded from said schools by the defendants because the petitioner refused to pay the tuition demanded by said defendants, no tuition being required of other children, residing in said school district. Petitioner also shows that said children were regularly enumerated by the school authorities as required by law.

An alternative writ was issued returnable October 4, 1921, to which the defendants entered a demurrer, made a motion to quash and also made return.

Petitioner demurred to said return and the circuit court, without passing on the sufficiency of the return, sustained defendants’ demurrer, quashed the writ and rendered judgment for costs against petitioner. The ease is here to be heard upon its merits.

Defendants present three defenses:

First, that the petitioners, S. B. Hart, J. D. Silcott, Henry Woody, S. P. Bell and S. M. Kendall, comprising the Board of Directors of said Home, and appointed as such by said [12]*12Grand Lodge to manage said Home according to the rales and regulations adopted by said Grand Lodge, do not show that they have been authorized to bring this proceeding. This objection has not been insisted upon in the argument, but we think it sufficiently appears that they have immediate control of said Home and the children therein, and that they' have the right to maintain this action in the name of the Grand Lodge.

Second, that said Home was originally outside the boundaries of said Independent School District and that the Legislature in 1915 enacted a statute authorizing the extension of said boundaries so as to include said Home within said school district upon a vote of the people therefor, and that before such vote was had in 1916, to-wit, on July 29, 1915, said Grand Lodge and said Board of Education entered into a written contract whereby it was agreed that upon the annual payment to said Board of Education by said Grand Lodge of a sum equal to one-half of the annual cost of instruction of said children of said Home in the public schools of Elkins, as ascertained and certified to by said Board, said payment beginning with and including the school year 1913-14, said children resident of said Home should be permitted to attend the public schools of said Independent School District without further charge, whether said Home should be included in said Independent School District or not, the cost for instruction per capita to be based each year on the enrollment in'the schools as shown by the official school records; that said Grand Lodge paid according to said contract for all years prior to and including the school year 1918-19, but refused to pay for the school years 1919-20 and 1920-21, and that said Board was willing to carry out said contract ■if said Grand Lodge would make payment according to its agreement. The Home was taken into said Independent School District by vote of the people in 1916, and in our view, as hereinafter expressed, said contract was no longer binding on said Grand Lodge. If the children had a right without payment of tuition to attend said schools, then any agreement by said Grand Lodge to pay such tuition was [13]*13without consideration and therefore void, and said contract constitutes no defense to this action.

■ Third, the chief defense relied upon is that the children living in said Home, although living within the bounds of said school district, have no legal .residence within the district in the meaning of the school law, nor such residence as to entitle them to attend the public schools therein free of charge. Defendants claim that the residence of these children is where their respective parents or guardians may reside, to-wit, in the various school districts throughout the state whence they came, and that in order to obtain entrance to the Elkins schools they must present “transfers” from the Boards of Education of their respective districts to the Board of Education of the Independent School District of Elkins so ,that the latter may receive pay from said respective Boards of Education, as provided by chapter 2, section 59, Acts 1919. ¥e hold that the section providing for “transfers” of pupils from one school district to another has no application in this case'. The children residing in this Home do not need “transfers” to entitle them to attend the public schools of the Independent School District of Elkins. They live in that school district; they make that their home; they are admitted to it to remain until they become twenty-one years of age unless sooner discharged therefrom; indeed it is shbwn in the petition that they have no other home.

In construing the former school statute, Code, 1916, chapter 45, section 69, which provides that children between six. and twenty-one years of age residing in a sub-district or independent district “with intent to make such district their home,” this court, in the case of Morrison v. Smith-Pocahontas Coal Co., 88 W. Va. 158, 106 S. E. 448, held that a boy over fourteen years of age who was working in a coal mine in Wyoming County, .West Virginia, but whose father lived in the state of Virginia, had a right to attend the free schools in this state, and that it was unlawful to employ him in a coal mine in West Virginia while such schools were in session. It was contended there that the residence of the father was the place of residence of the boy and that con[14]*14sequently it was not unlawful to employ him in the mines of this state while the schools were in session, but the court held that although “the domicile of the plaintiff in this case for some purposes may have been that of his parents in Virginia, nevertheless as he left his home in Virginia, with or without their consent, and was allowed to labor and appropriate his earnings, and was liable to become a citizen and resident of this state, the state thereby became interested in his education and good citizenship.”

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Bluebook (online)
110 S.E. 440, 90 W. Va. 8, 1922 W. Va. LEXIS 184, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/i-o-o-f-v-board-of-education-wva-1922.