Marshall County Board of Education v. State Ex Rel. Williams

42 So. 2d 24, 252 Ala. 547, 1949 Ala. LEXIS 483
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedAugust 18, 1949
Docket8 Div. 471.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 42 So. 2d 24 (Marshall County Board of Education v. State Ex Rel. Williams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marshall County Board of Education v. State Ex Rel. Williams, 42 So. 2d 24, 252 Ala. 547, 1949 Ala. LEXIS 483 (Ala. 1949).

Opinion

LAWSON, Justice.

The main question for determination on this appeal is, what is the minimum age at which children may be admitted into the public elementary schools of Alabama?

Section 298, Title 52, Code of 1940, reads as follows: “A child who is six years of age on or before October first shall be entitled to admission to public elementary schools at the opening of such schools for that school year or as soon as practicable thereafter; a child who is under six years of age on October first shall not be entitled to admission to such schools during that school year, except that a child who becomes six years of age on or before February first may, on approval of the hoard of education in authority, be admitted at the beginning of the second semester of that school year to schools in school systems having semiannual promotions of pupils.”

*549 At the 1947 regular session of the legislature both houses of that body passed House Bill 318, the title of which is “An Act to amend Section 298 of Title 52 of the 1940 Code, which relates to the minimum age at which children may enter public school.” The governor did not approve, but he failed to return the act to the legislature within the time allowed by § 125 of the Constitution and, therefore, the act, if otherwise constitutional, became the law of this State.

The said 1947 act, Act No. 234, H. 318, Acts 1947, p. 103; § 298, Title 52, 1947 Cum.Pocket Part, Vol. 8, Code 1940, reads as follows: “Section 298 of Title 52 of the 1940 Code is amended to read: ‘A child who is six years of age on or before January 15th shall be entitled to admission to the public elementary schools at the opening of such schools for that school year or within the first two weeks of school; a child who is under six years of age on January 15th shall not be entitled to admission to such schools during that school year, except that a child who becomes six years of age on or before June first may, on approval of the board of education in authority, be admitted at the beginning of the second semester of that school year to schools in school systems having semi-annual promotions of pupils.’ ”

The Attorney General of Alabama on August 18, 1947, in an opinion rendered to Dr. A. R. Meadows, State Superintendent of Education, held that the said 1947 amendatory act was unconstitutional on the ground that it is so ambiguous, vague, indefinite, incomplete and unintelligible as to be inoperative and void for uncertainty in meaning. Quarterly Report of Attorney General, Vol. 48, p. 99.

The Superintendent of Education of Marshall County, being advised by the State Superintendent of Education of the opinion of the Attorney General declaring the 1947 amendatory act to be unconstitutional, ordered the principals of the elementary schools under his jurisdiction and authority to be governed by the terms and provisions of § 298, Title 52, Code 1940, as to the minimum age requirements for admission of pupils.

On August 31, 1948, this suit was instituted by the filing of a petition for writ of mandamus in the name of the State of Alabama on the relation of Bryan Williams, T. S. Stribling, Crawford Purser, Selma Porch, and Mildred M. Bell. As amended, the petition made the Marshall County Board of Education, the individual members of that Board, and the Superintendent of Education of Marshall County parties defendant.

The amended petition alleges, in substance, that each of the relators are residents of the city of Guntersville and are parents of children who will become six years of age after October 1, 1948, and before January 15, 1'949; that the Guntersville Elementary School is the only public school to which relators are entitled to send their children qualified to enter the public school system, and that such school is under the jurisdiction of the Marshall County Board of Education; that the Guntersville Elementary School opened for the scholastic year 1948-1949 on Monday, August 16, 1948, and that at that time relators presented their, children at the school for enrollment, ready to prove the birth dates of the children; that the principal of the school declined to enroll them, and the matter was referred to the defendant Solly, the County Superintendent of Education, and the County Board of Education; that several conferences were held between the County Superintendent of Education and the relators, “in which it was clearly understood and agreed that the school principal was acting under instructions from defendants, and that the sole reason for the position taken by defendants was that Act No. 234 of 1947, General Acts, page 103, was void, and that Section 298 of Title 52 of the Code of 1940, controlled”; that relators are ready, able and willing to comply with every valid regulation applicable to said Guntersville Elementary School if duly informed of same.

The answer or return of the defendant to the alternative writ clearly showed that their refusal to admit the children of relators was based on the alleged invalidity of the 1947 act heretofore referred to.

After a hearing Judge Stone concluded that the said 1947 act was not invalid and *550 that, therefore, the children of relators were entitled to be admitted to the Guntersville Elementary School. Judge Stone ordered that the peremptory writ of mandamus issue to the defendants commanding them to admit the said children. The writ was issued.

'• The defendants appealed to this court, but the judgment of the trial court was not superseded and the children were admitted to the school as ordered.

The sole ground advanced below and here as to the invalidity of the said 1947 amendatory act is that it is so ambiguous,_ vague, indefinite, incomplete and unintelligible as to be inoperative for uncertainty in meaning. Such was the reason the At-, torney General declared the said act to be invalid.

It is settled that a court is empowered to declare legislative enactments inoperative and void for uncertainty in meaning where they are so incomplete, so .conflicting, or so vague and indefinite that the court is unable, by the application of the accepted rules of construction, to deter-. mine what the legislature intended. In re Opinion by the Justices, 249. Ala. 88, 30 So. 2d 14; Dewrell v. Kearley, 250 Ala. 18, 32 So.2d 812.

But in our opinion the 1947 act here under consideration does not contain the vices of legislative enactments condemned in the opinions just above cited.

We think that the chief fallacy in the argument of counsel for appellants and in the opinion of the Attorney General is that an incorrect meaning has been attributed to the term “school year” as it appears in the said amendatory act.

“School year” is not defined in the 1947 amendatory act or in § 298, Title 52, Code 1940, which it purports to amend. Nor is that specific term defined in any other section of Title 52, which title relates to schools.

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42 So. 2d 24, 252 Ala. 547, 1949 Ala. LEXIS 483, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marshall-county-board-of-education-v-state-ex-rel-williams-ala-1949.