Lanphier v. Tracy Consolidated School District

277 N.W. 740, 224 Iowa 1035
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 15, 1938
DocketNo. 44243.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 277 N.W. 740 (Lanphier v. Tracy Consolidated 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
Lanphier v. Tracy Consolidated School District, 277 N.W. 740, 224 Iowa 1035 (iowa 1938).

Opinion

Mitchell, J.

This is an action in mandamus brought by Frank Lanphier against the Tracy Consolidated School District, its officers and directors. All the facts, for the purpose of this case, appear in the petition and amendment thereto, which allege that the Tracy Consolidated School District is duly organized under the laws of the State of Iowa, located in Marion and Mahaska Counties; that Frank Lanphier resides in said school district, and has five children of school age who are entitled to attend school in that district; that his residence is situated more than a- mile from said school and is located upon a public highway and is not within the limits of any city, town, or village; that under the provisions of section 4179 of the Code of 1935 it is mandatory upon the school board of every school district to provide suitable transportation for every child of school age living within said corporation; that the Tracy Consolidated School District, thru its officers and directors, has failed and refused to provide transportation for the Lanphier children; that demand has been made of the school district and its officers that transportation be furnished.

To the petition was filed a motion to dismiss, on the grounds: (1) That the plaintiff has a plain, speedy, and adequate remedy at law and there is no showing that he has used or attempted, to use said remedy of appealing to the county superintendent from the decision of the school board; (2) that the school board does not have a mandatory duty under section 4179 of the Code, as alleged in plaintiff’s petition. That it has the right under section 4180 of the Code to suspend the transportation of any route when in its judgment it would be a hard *1037 ship on tbe children and when the roads to be traveled are unfit or impassable. That the school board also has the discretion under section 4181 of-the Code to require children living an unreasonable distance from school to be transported by the parents or guardian a distance of not more than two miles to connect with any vehicle of transportation to and from school. That, in determining what an unreasonable distance is, consideration shall be given to the number and age of the children and the condition of the roads and the number of miles to be traveled in going to and from school. That the district has a bus traveling within three-fourths of a mile of plaintiff’s home. That mandamus is not the proper procedure when a board of directors, in carrying out the terms of the statute, have power of exercising their judgment and discretion, and the remedy for one aggrieved is to appeal to the county superintendent of the schools and not mandamus.

The court .sustained the motion to dismiss. Plaintiff refused to plead further, and judgment was entered against him, dismissing the case and assessing the costs. Being dissatisfied with the ruling of the lower court, plaintiff has appealed.

Realizing the importance of education and desiring that every child have the opportunity of attending school, the legislature of this state passed certain statutes relative to the transportation to and from school of children living in the country.

The appellant in this case bases his entire right of recovery upon section 4179 of the 1935 Code and ignores sections 4180 and 4181, limiting section 4179 and giving the school board the privilege of discretion in the matter of transportation.

Section 4179 is as follows:

“4179. Transportation. The board of every consolidated school corporation shall provide suitable transportation to and from school for every child of school age living within said corporation and more than a mile from such school, but the board shall not be required to cause the vehicle of transportation to leave any public highway to receive or discharge pupils, or to provide transportation for any pupil residing within the limits of any city, town,- or village within which said school is situ-„ ated.”

This is followed immediately by section 4180, which reads as follows:

*1038 “4180. Transportation routes — suspension-of service. The board shall designate the routes to be traveled by each conveyance in transporting children to and from school. The board shall have the right on account of inclemency of the weather to suspend the transportation on any route upon any day or days •When in its judgment it would be a hardship on the children, or when the roads to be traveled are unfit, or impassable. ’ ’

Then follows section 4181, which reads:

“4181. By parent — instruction in another school. The school board may require that children living an unreasonable distance from school shall be transported by the parent or guardian a distance of not more than two miles to' connect with any vehicle of transportation to and from school or may contract with -an adjoining school corporation for the instruction of any child living an unreasonable distance from school. It shall allow a reasonable compensation for the transportation of children to and from their homes to connect with such vehicle of transportation, or for transporting them to an adjoining district. . In determining what an unreasonable distance would be, consideration shall be given to the number and age of the children, the condition of the roads, and the number of miles to be traveled in going to and from school. ’ ’

A reading of the last two sections shows that a patron of the school district cannot require the school board to transport children from their homes to the school when they live an unreasonable distance from the school and where the roads to be traveled are unfit or impassable. In such a case the board may require the parents to transport their children a distance not exceeding two miles, to connect with the regular school bus route. Certainly, no one can say that this is an unreasonable requirement. If the bus was required to travel unfit or impassable roads it might delay arrival on time at the school, it might work an unnecessary hardship on other children, and the cost might be prohibitive. In the case at bar the pleadings show that the regular school bus route passed within three-fourths of a mile from appellant’s home. Under this condition he is obliged to transport his children that distance, and the school board is obliged to allow him reasonable compensation for so transporting them.

*1039 Where a school board has a positive duty to perform and it is given no discretion, then of course mandamus will lie to compel it to act. However, where the school board is given a discretion, as it was in this case, as shown by sections 4180 and 4181 of the Code, the appellant has an adequate remedy by appeal, first, to the county superintendent, and then, if he is aggrieved by the decision of the county superintendent, to the state superintendent of public instruction, as provided by chapter 219 of the Code. Having that right of appeal, his remedy at law is adequate, and mandamus cannot be brought against the school board.

In the case of Templer v. School Twp., 160 Iowa 398, at page 401, 141 N. W. 1054, 1055, this court said:

“The different grounds stated in the demurrer present the ultimate question of plaintiff’s right to proceed by mandamus in this action.

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Related

State v. School Dist. No. 7, Lewis County
203 S.W.2d 881 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1947)
Harwood v. Dysart Consolidated School District
21 N.W.2d 334 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1946)
Mitchell v. Consolidated School District No. 201
135 P.2d 79 (Washington Supreme Court, 1943)
Allgood v. City of Oskaloosa
1 N.W.2d 211 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1941)

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Bluebook (online)
277 N.W. 740, 224 Iowa 1035, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lanphier-v-tracy-consolidated-school-district-iowa-1938.