Kramm v. Bogue

59 P. 394, 127 Cal. 122, 1899 Cal. LEXIS 610
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 8, 1899
DocketSac. No. 676.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 59 P. 394 (Kramm v. Bogue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kramm v. Bogue, 59 P. 394, 127 Cal. 122, 1899 Cal. LEXIS 610 (Cal. 1899).

Opinion

HAYNES, C.

The defendants constitute the hoard of education of the city of Stockton, and this action was brought to have it adjudged that plaintiff’s son, Frederick W. Kramm, aged eleven years, is entitled to the privileges and benefits of the public schools of said city, and to require the defendants to admit him thereto. Defendants demurred to the complaint upon the ground that it did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The demurrer was sustained, and, the plaintiff electing to stand upon his complaint, judgment was entered against him, and from that judgment he appeals.

An outline of the facts shown by the complaint may be briefly stated as follows: Prior to the reincorporation of the city of Stockton in 1870 there was a school district adjacent to the city, known as North school district. By the act of reincorporation a portion of said district was added to and became part of the city, the added territory including certain real estate, the property of said North school district. In 1872 an act was passed “to provide for the settlement of the value of school property in the several school districts that were adjacent to the city of Stockton, and which was, by act of the legislature, approved January 26, 1870, included within the limits of said city.” (Stats. 1871-72, p. 530.)

In March, 1882, the trustees of said North school district conveyed to the board of education of the city of Stockton its school property described as the south half of block 147 in said city, “in consideration that the residents of all that territory known as North school district, in said county, shall forever have all the rights and privileges of the public schools of the city of Stockton,” said property to be held in trust for the use of the public schools of said city. In said conveyance said North school district further agreed that all the school money thereafter apportioned to said North school district should he paid to said board of education. The property so conveyed is alleged to have been then of the value of ten thousand dollars, *124 and now of the value of thirty thousand dollars; that the school funds apportioned to said district have been ever since paid to the board of education; that on said land so conveyed there was at that time a schoolhouse in which was conducted the public school of said district, and from that time until the exclusion of plaintiff’s son the children of the residents of said North district enjoyed the privileges and benefits of the city schools.

The plaintiff further alleged that on April 5, 1897, a petition was duly made and presented to the board of supervisors of the county of San Joaquin praying that all that part of said North district which was not included in the corporate limits of the city of Stockton be annexed to said city for school purposes only; that said petition was signed by a majority of the heads of families residing in said portion sought to be annexed, and that said board of supervisors, at a regular session held on said fifth day of April, 1897, by an order duly adopted, made, and passed, did annex to said city, for school purposes only, all of said remainder of said North district, and that the same ever since has been, and is now, part of the school district of the city of Stockton; that on October 34, 1898, plaintiff applied to said defendants for the admission of his said son to the schools of said city and that his said application was refused for the alleged reason, and none other, that this plaintiff and his said child did not reside within the corporate limits of the city of Stockton, and that his said child has ever since been excluded from said schools wrongfully and unlawfully, for the reason aforesaid, and not otherwise.

¡Respondent contends that it does not appear that plaintiff’s child has been deprived of any school privileges, in that it does not appear “that he has been prevented from attending a public school.”

If, as alleged, the plaintiff and his son reside in Stockton school district, plaintiff had a legal right to have his child attend the schools in that district, and it will not be presumed that by some special arrangement he was permitted to attend a school in a district in which he did not reside. Besides, the refusal of defendants to admit him to the Stockton schools was not based upon any such reason, but was based upon the ground that he was not a resident of the city of Stockton; but if, being *125 a resident of Stockton district, any reason existed which justified the refusal to admit him, it was a matter of defense not proper to be anticipated in the complaint.

It is also contended that no proper application to he admitted is shown hy the complaint to have been made; that the application must he made to the teacher of the school; that the scholar must be registered and admitted in the order in which applications are made. The Political Code, section 1683, is cited to this point. That section only provides that “pupils must he admitted to the schools in the order in which they are registered.” It does not provide that the application shall he made to the teacher; hut the Political Code defines the powers and duties of trustees of school districts and of hoards of education in cities, and makes it their duty “to keep a register, open to the inspection of the public, of all children applying for admission and entitled to he admitted into the public schools, and to notify the parents or guardians of such children when vacancies occur, and receive such children into the school in the order in which they are registered.” (Pol. Code, sec. 1617, subd. 14.) It is the pupils thus registered hy the hoard of education which the teacher must receive “in the order in which they are registered.”

It is not necessary now to consider or decide whether the contract of March 37, 1883, contained in the conveyance made by the trustees of Eorth school district to the hoard of education, was within the power of said trustees and hoard, either under the general statute or under the act of 1873. If the action of the hoard of supervisors in adding the remainder of said biorth district to the city for school purposes was authorized and regular, the plaintiff was entitled to the relief prayed for, whether the same right existed under said contract or not; hut if it he assumed that said contract was invalid and conferred no legal right upon the inhabitants of that portion of the original district which is now outside of the corporate limits of the city to send their children to the city schools, it nevertheless furnished a strong equitable ground for the action of the board of supervisors, in annexing it to the city for school purposes. That, however, is not sufficient to sustain their action, if such annexation is not authorized by law. Section 1576 of the Political *126

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
59 P. 394, 127 Cal. 122, 1899 Cal. LEXIS 610, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kramm-v-bogue-cal-1899.