McBride v. Pontiac School District

553 N.W.2d 646, 218 Mich. App. 113
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 27, 1996
DocketDocket 181385, 181410
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 553 N.W.2d 646 (McBride v. Pontiac School District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McBride v. Pontiac School District, 553 N.W.2d 646, 218 Mich. App. 113 (Mich. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

Petitioners are the owners of approximately 190 residential lots in the Pine Lake Subdivision in Oakland County. Petitioners’ lands are located within the Pontiac School District, at a point where the Pontiac School District borders the Bloomfield Hills School District.

Pursuant to MCL 380.951; MSA 15.4951, they petitioned the Oakland County Intermediate School Board for transfer of their residential property from the Pontiac School District to the Bloomfield Hills School District. There is no dispute that petitioners meet the relevant threshold criteria making them eligible to petition for such transfer: two-thirds of the property owners joined in the petition, the state equalized value (sev) of all the property involved is less than ten percent of the total sev of the Pontiac School District, and the lands are contiguous to the Bloomfield Hills School District.

After the intermediate school board denied their petition, petitioners appealed to the State Board of Education pursuant to MCL 380.971; MSA 15.4971. The State Board of Education then referred the matter to its chairperson, Robert Schiller, and its administrative secretary, Robert G. Harris, for an administrative hearing. Numerous witnesses were presented by both sides.

Petitioners’ witnesses focused on the superior quality of the education available in the Bloomfield Hills Public Schools as compared with that offered in the Pontiac Public Schools, measured both by student *116 achievement test scores and the quantity and availability of programs for gifted students. Those petitioners with children — only fifteen school-age children are at issue — testified that currently all their children attend private schools but, if their petition were granted, ten of those fifteen children would attend public schools in Bloomfield Hills. Petitioners testified that they and their children work, shop, and recreate in the Bloomfield Hills area and other northwest suburbs of Detroit and avoid the City of Pontiac. None of the petitioners even possesses so much as a library card issued by the City of Pontiac, although there seemed to be some dispute about whether such cards are available to them.

Until 1991, there had been an elementary school in the Pontiac School District less than a mile from petitioner’s subdivision. It was closed, and now the nearest schools in the Pontiac School District are 4 to 4V2 miles away. Petitioners proffered testimony that the nearest Bloomfield Hills School District schools are IV2 to 2 miles away, although a representative of the Pontiac School District contested those distances and averred that the Bloomfield Hills schools are 2¥2 to 3 miles away.

The hearing examiners noted that, under current policies, the Pontiac School District not only provides school bus service but, if a child misses the bus, whether going to or coming home from school, additional buses provide service for “stranded” children to assure that they can reach school or return home safely.

The evidence also addressed the racial balance in the two school districts. The Pontiac School District consists of about sixty-five percent non-Caucasians, *117 with more than fifty percent being African-Americans, while the Bloomfield Hills School District is eighty-four percent Caucasian, and less than four percent African-American. The majority of non-Caucasians in the Bloomfield Hills School District are persons of Oriental extraction.

The properties in question have an average SEV of more than $400,000. During the period considered by the State Board of Education’s examiners, the average per pupil sev in the Bloomfield Hills School District was about four times that for students in the Pontiac School District.

Petitioners introduced evidence in support of their claim that the Pontiac School District is operated inefficiently and incompetently, spending more for administration than education than twenty-seven of the other twenty-eight school districts in Oakland County. Plaintiff’s witnesses were also critical of the level of parental involvement in the Pontiac School District’s schools.

The hearing examiners recommended denial of the petition for several reasons. First, the sev of petitioners’ properties would represent a significant loss to the Pontiac School District. Second, the residents of the area in question are overwhelmingly Caucasian, while the transfer would be from a school district with a large African-American enrollment that is subject to a continuing federal court desegregation order. Third, while the Bloomfield Hills schools are undoubtedly qualitatively superior and granting the transfer would benefit petitioners’ children, it would not benefit, and may adversely affect, through loss of substantial revenues, the remaining students in the Pontiac schools.

*118 The examiners determined that the Pontiac School District is ready and able to offer petitioners’ children an adequate and well-rounded education. Furthermore, granting the transfer would not improve the boundary line between the two districts. The examiners noted that the socialization problems faced by petitioners’ children are caused, not by the location of their property in the Pontiac School District, but, rather, by factors such as work, day-care schedules, and the involvement of the children in activities and attendance related to their private schools.

The examiners asserted that petitioners’ claimed orientation toward Bloomfield Hills is more of an orientation away from Pontiac. The examiners noted that although petitioners and their children use programs or facilities, recreational and commercial, in the Bloomfield Hills area or eastward, those programs or facilities are not school-related — because the children are not enrolled in the Bloomfield Hills schools — and that, accordingly, those services will still be available if the transfer is not granted. The examiners found no substantial evidence supporting the claim that, given the distances involved and traffic considerations, it would clearly be safer for the children to attend Bloomfield Hills schools rather than Pontiac schools. Dissatisfaction with the administration of the Pontiac School District was deemed by them a political question, not a property transfer question.

The State Board of Education concurred with the examiners’ recommendation and denied the transfer petition. Petitioners then appealed to the Ingham Circuit Court, which reversed and ordered that the transfer petition be granted. The circuit court rejected con *119 sideration of desegregation as a factor supporting denial of the petition, determining as de minimis the involvement of only 15 children out of a student population of 14,000. The circuit court also was impressed that petitioners are paying property taxes on more than $8,000,000 worth of real estate, including school taxes, and receiving no educational benefits in exchange. The circuit court also considered it unquestionably more convenient and safer for the children to travel the shortest possible distance to school and remarked that the Pontiac School District had not made arrangements for the children in question to use the Pontiac Public Library system, which in consequence was thought to explain petitioners’ reliance on the West Bloomfield Township library.

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Bluebook (online)
553 N.W.2d 646, 218 Mich. App. 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcbride-v-pontiac-school-district-michctapp-1996.