Jeter v. Ellenville Central School District

50 A.D.2d 366, 377 N.Y.S.2d 685, 1975 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 11481
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedDecember 30, 1975
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 50 A.D.2d 366 (Jeter v. Ellenville Central School District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jeter v. Ellenville Central School District, 50 A.D.2d 366, 377 N.Y.S.2d 685, 1975 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 11481 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1975).

Opinion

Herlihy, P. J.

This action was commenced pursuant to CPLR article 78, on behalf of certain foster parents and foster children in Ellenville, New York, against the Ellenville Central School District (hereinafter Ellenville) which had refused to admit the children to public schools until their tuition was paid by either the school district where each child resided when he was removed to a foster home in Ellenville or the welfare’ agency responsible for his support and maintenance.

By order to show cause, Ellenville was directed to permit enrollment of the children pending disposition of further proceedings. Thereafter, Special Term ordered the service of an amended petition joining as party respondents the various school districts (hereinafter sending school districts) in which the named foster children had allegedly resided prior to their foster care placement in Ellenville (a receiving school district), as well as the social services agencies which had allegedly placed the children in Ellenville. The amended petition sought a directive compelling the payment to Ellenville of the tuition costs from these added respondents.

By the interposition of numerous cross claims, this at first localized controversy expanded into the broad single issue of [369]*369which governmental entities must pay for the cost of educating foster home children under subdivision 5 of section 3202 of the Education Law as amended by chapter 867 of the Laws of 1973 and chapter 919 of the Laws of 1974.

By order dated May 20, 1975, Special Term converted the article 78 proceeding into a declaratory judgment action and made the following rulings (Matter of Jeter v Ellenville Cent. School Dist., 81 Misc 2d 511): (1) subdivision 5 of section 3202 of the Education Law is constitutional; (2) no receiving school district can refuse admittance to a foster child because the tuition costs have not been paid; (3) social services agencies are responsible for all tuition costs if they had assumed responsibility for such costs prior to January 1, 1974; and (4) where there has been no such assumption, the school district in which such pupil resided at the time he became a public charge is ultimately liable for the tuition costs.

Section 374 of the Social Services Law empowers social services agencies to place children in foster homes within the State of New York. Pursuant to such power the agencies in various cases have found suitable homes outside of the school district in which infants resided at the time the agencies assumed control. Prior to the amendment of subdivision 5 of section 3202 of the Education Law (all statutory references hereinafter are to the Education Law unless otherwise specified) in 1973, the cost of education of a foster child was required to be borne by the receiving district wherein the foster home was located unless the Commissioner of Education in proceedings initiated by the receiving district should rule that such district could refuse to accept the child or should rule that tuition should be paid by the agency responsible for the support of the child. All parties agree that the precipitating reason for the enactment of the 1973 amendment was to relieve the receiving school districts of the severe economic burdens arising from the cost of educating foster home children. The new paragraph a of subdivision 5 of section 3202 reads in pertinent part as follows: "The cost of instruction of pupils placed in family homes at board by a social services district or a state department or agency shall be borne by the school district in which each such pupil resided at the time the social services district or state department or agency assumed responsibility for the support and maintenance of such pupil; provided, however, that such cost of instruction shall continue to be borne while such pupil remains under the [370]*370age of twenty-one years, by any social services district or state department or agency which assumed responsibility for tuition costs for any such pupil prior to January one, nineteen hundred seventy-four.”

The parties hereto raise various issues which relate primarily to the impact the statute, as amended, might have upon their liabilities for the tuition costs as sending school districts, receiving school districts, or welfare agencies. So as to facilitate an orderly consideration of the appeal, the contentions of the parties will be considered seriatim as presented in their briefs.

I

Appellant City School District of the City of New Rochelle (hereinafter New Rochelle) contends that Special Term erred in construing the provisions in the above-quoted section. It argues that a proper interpretation would result in a declaration that as to any child who became a foster child prior to January 1, 1974, tuition costs are to be borne solely by the appropriate welfare agency responsible for the general support of the infant prior to that date.

In considering this contention of New Rochelle, it is immediately to be noted that it runs contrary to the express language of the amended statute. The Legislature referred to the assumption of responsibility by a welfare agency for support in the first portion of the amended section and expressly limited the reference in the proviso to those having "assumed responsibility for tuition”. It is doubtful that the Legislature by use of the meaningful word "tuition” actually intended to have liability in the proviso depend upon general support.

Upon the face of the section there is no ambiguity as to the intent of the Legislature to impose tuition costs upon a State agency other than a school district for foster children only where such agency had somehow assumed such liability prior to January 1, 1974. Pursuant to former subdivision 5 of section 3202 an agency supporting such a child was only legally liable for tuition when the Commissioner of Education expressly directed such payment. There is, however, nothing in former subdivision 5 of section 3202 which would have prevented an agreement by such an agency with a school district whereby such agency would pay tuition and, accordingly, there might be more than one basis for a continuing agency liability after January 1, 1974. In any event, the [371]*371legislative intent to impose liability for tuition costs upon welfare agencies only when they had been directly subjected to such costs prior to January 1, 1974 is manifest in the language used in the amendment. (See Meltzer v Koenigsberg, 302 NY 523, 525.)

New Rochelle contends that in fact there had been no assumption of tuition costs by welfare agencies either by order of the commissioner or voluntarily prior to 1974. Presumably, if the Legislature adopted the proviso knowing that no agencies had previously assumed responsibility for tuition, the intent might have been that urged by New Rochelle. However, this is not established in the record. To assume that the Legislature did not knowingly use the word "tuition” would be speculation. The intent of the Legislature was to provide relief to receiving districts, and, therefore, there is no merit to the argument that the manifest intent is being ignored.

The interpretation of the proviso by Special Term as requiring agencies responsible for the support and maintenance of foster children to pay tuition only where such an obligation was undertaken or in effect prior to 1974 for children then on their rolls is not undermined by this attack upon appeal.

II

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Bluebook (online)
50 A.D.2d 366, 377 N.Y.S.2d 685, 1975 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 11481, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jeter-v-ellenville-central-school-district-nyappdiv-1975.