Members of the Jamestown School Committee v. Schmidt

405 A.2d 16, 122 R.I. 185, 1979 R.I. LEXIS 2144
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedAugust 15, 1979
Docket78-60-Appeal
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 405 A.2d 16 (Members of the Jamestown School Committee v. Schmidt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Members of the Jamestown School Committee v. Schmidt, 405 A.2d 16, 122 R.I. 185, 1979 R.I. LEXIS 2144 (R.I. 1979).

Opinion

*187 Bevilacqua, C.J.

The United States District Court for the District of Rhode Island has certified for our resolution 1 three questions concerning G.L. 1956, §§16-21.1-1, -2, -3 (Supp. 1978) (hereinafter referred to as the act). This statute provides a program for busing pupils to schools not within the limits of the city or town in which the students reside. The plaintiffs, both individually as taxpayers of their towns and collectively as members of the School Committees of Jamestown and Charlestown, brought an action in the Federal District Court against the Commissioner of Education (the commissioner) and other state defendants, seeking a declaratory judgment that the act violates both the State and Federal Constitutions and an injunction against administration of the statute. The following questions were certified:

1. Does the act violate article XII of the Rhode Island Constitution?
2. Does the act violate article IV, section 2 of the Rhode Island Constitution?
3. Can the act be fairly construed to avoid federal constitutional infirmities?

Before addressing the certified questions, we note that while the Federal District Court has the fundamental obligation to determine whether the act violates the Federal Constitution, the function of this court is to construe the act 2 and to decide whether it contravenes the Rhode Island Constitution. Nowak, Rotunda, Young, Handbook on Constitutional Law 21 (1978).

*188 The General Assembly has divided Rhode Island into five transportation districts. Section 16-21.1-2. The act further provides that students, whether they attend public schools or nonpublic, nonprofit, regionalized or consolidated schools, shall be transported to school by bus in two instances. First, a student who both resides in and attends school in the same transportation district receives transportation. Section 16-21.1-2. Second, under certain conditions, a pupil who attends a school outside the trasnportation region in which he resides, but within 15 miles of his residence, may obtain busing services by acquiring a variance from the commissioner. The latter provision is predicated upon findings by the commissioner that no similar school exists within the region in which the pupil resides and that bus transportation is necessary to enable the student to enjoy an educational opportunity that is rightfully his or hers to pursue. Only upon making such findings may the commissioner grant a variance requiring a city or town to provide bus transportation. Section 16-21.1-3.

*189 I

The plaintiffs contend that the act violates article XII of the Rhode Island Constitution by diverting tax dollars appropriated for the support of public schools to the transportation of students enrolled in nonpublic schools. The relevant sections of article XII are as follows:

“§1. Duty of general assembly. — The diffusion of knowledge, as well as of virtue, among the people, being essential to the preservation of their rights and liberties, it shall be the duty of the general assembly to promote public schools, and to adopt all means which *190 they may deem necessary and proper to secure to the people the advantages and opportunities of education.
“§2. Permanent school fund. — The money which now is or which may hereafter be appropriated by law for the establishment of a permanent fund for the support of public schools, shall be securely invested, and remain a perpetual fund for that purpose.
“§4. Implementation of article — Diversion of funds. — The general assembly shall make all necessary provisions by law for carrying this article into effect. They shall not divert said money or fund from the aforesaid uses, nor borrow, appropriate, or use the same, or any part thereof, for any other purpose, under any pretence whatsoever.”

The plaintiffs note the clear mandate in section 2 of article XII that the permanent school fund be applied specifically for the support of public schools and interpret section 4 in conjunction with section 1 of the same article as prohibiting the diversion of funds from the support of public schools to the promotion of private schools. Typical of what plaintiffs perceive as an unconstitutional diversion of funds is the allocation of money for the purpose of transporting students by publicly funded buses to private schools.

*191 At the outset we note that this court must construe a duly enacted statute to be constitutional if such a construction is reasonably possible. State v. Authelet, 120 R.I. 42, 46, 385 A.2d 642, 647 (1978); J.M. Milk, Inc. v. Murphy, 116 R.I. 54, 71, 352 A.2d 661, 670 (1976). Before we decide whether the act corresponds to the intent of the constitutional framers, we shall first seek to glean that intention from the language in section 1 of article XII.

The text of article XII, section 1 is facially ambiguous. It is unclear whether the duties of the General Assembly “to secure to the people the advantages and opportunities of education” was intended by the constitutional framers to be limited to public education. If we apply the maxim noscitur a socik 3 to this language, then the word “education” would be read in light of the less comprehensive idea “public education.” See Commonwealth v. Baker, 368 Mass. 58, 68, 330 N.E.2d 794, 800 (1975); Deignan v. Cowan Plastic Products Corp., 99 R.I. 193, 196, 206 A.2d 534, 536 (1965). See ako 2A Sutherland, Statutory Construction §47.16 at D01 (4th ed. Sands 1973). As a result, the word “education” is qualified by the word “public” and all the duties of the General Assembly would be read as bounded by the domain of public education.

On the other hand, section 1 is worded in the conjunctive:

“it shall be the duty of the general assembly to promote public schools, and to adopt all means which they may deem necessary and proper to secure to the people the advantages and opportunities of education.” (Emphasis added.)

Generally, the conjunctive “and” should not be considered as the equivalent of the disjunctive “or.” See Earle v. Zoning Board of Review, 96 R.I. 321, 324, 191 A.2d 161, 163 (1963). Use of the conjunctive implies separate, as opposed to

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405 A.2d 16, 122 R.I. 185, 1979 R.I. LEXIS 2144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/members-of-the-jamestown-school-committee-v-schmidt-ri-1979.