Missoula High School Legal Defense Ass'n v. Superintendent of Public Instruction

637 P.2d 1188, 196 Mont. 106, 1981 Mont. LEXIS 912
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 22, 1981
Docket81-436
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 637 P.2d 1188 (Missoula High School Legal Defense Ass'n v. Superintendent of Public Instruction) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Missoula High School Legal Defense Ass'n v. Superintendent of Public Instruction, 637 P.2d 1188, 196 Mont. 106, 1981 Mont. LEXIS 912 (Mo. 1981).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE SHEEHY

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal by the Superintendent of Public Instruction of the State of Montana from an adverse ruling in a declaratory judgment and injunction action issued by the District Court, Fourth Judicial District, Missoula County. The District Court ordered the Superintendent to pay $1,275,735.50 to a Missoula County high school district and awarded counsel for the respondent attorney fees and costs of $2,177.00 out of the funds to be so paid.

We affirm the District Court.

The Superintendent contends that the District Court erred in its interpretation and application of section 20-1-301, MCA, *108 and that it further erred in awarding attorney fees to the respondent.

The disputed statute follows:

“20-1-301. School fiscal year. The school fiscal year shall begin on July 1 and end on June 30. At least 180 school days of pupil instruction shall be conducted during each school fiscal year, [except that 175 days of pupil instruction for graduating seniors may be sufficient as provided in 20-9-313, or] unless a variance for kindergarten has been granted under 20-1-302 or a district is granted a variance under the provisions of chapter 9, part 8, of this title. Any district that fails to provide for at least 180 school days of pupil instruction shall not be entitled to receive any apportionment of the state interest and income funds. Any such forfeited moneys shall be apportioned by the county superintendent to the other elementary districts of his county.”

The bracketed portion of the above statute was added by an amendment in the 1981 legislative session and was effective at all times during this dispute. Section 1, Ch. 148, Laws of Montana (1981).

The Missoula County high school district was forced to close its high schools 18 days earlier than the required 180 day school term because of a teachers’ strike. The total amount of interest and income monies to which the high school district would have been entitled for the school year 1980-81 was $1,275,735.50.

The Missoula County Attorney, and later the Superintendent of Public Instruction, asked the Attorney General for an opinion as to the effect of section 20-1-301, in view of the shortened school term and also in light of section 20-9-805(1), MCA, to which we will later advert. The Attorney General issued an opinion to the effect that the high school district, by way of penalty, should lose its interest and income monies and l/180th of the remaining state equalization aid for each missed school day.

When it appeared that the High School District would lose the interest and income monies by virtue of the Attorney General’s opinion and the compliance with that opinion by the Superintendent of Public Instruction, the plaintiff, Missoula *109 High School Legal Defense Association, a private association organized in connection with the teachers’ strike, filed action in the District Court for a declaratory judgment that the high school district was entitled to its interest and income monies regardless of the statutes. The District Court so found and issued its order and judgment which is here appealed.

We first examine the provisions of section 20-1-301, supra. The District Court concluded that the words of the statute and its legislative history indicate that the penalty provision of that section applies only to elementary districts and not to high school districts. The District Court further concluded that even if the penalty provision did apply to high school districts, it would be a denial of due process for the Superintendent of Public Instruction to impose such a penalty without first conducting a fact-finding procedure to determine whether the failure to provide for at least 180 days of pupil instruction was a result of willful acts of the school district trustees.

The Superintendent contends that by its interpretation the District Court amended the penalty provision of the statute by inserting the word “elementary” thus:

“Any [elementary] district that fails to provide for at least 180 school days of pupil instruction shall not be entitled to receive any apportionment of the state interest and income funds.”

The Superintendent contends that such interpretation violates the equal funding requirements of 1972 Montana Constitution, Art. X, and the statutory guidelines for interpretation of statutes contained in sections 1-2-101 and 1-2-233, MCA. He further contends that the “plain meaning rule” adopted by this Court in State v. Cudahy Packing Co. (1905), 33 Mont. 179, 82 P. 833, 837, is violated by the District Court’s interpretation.

It is obvious that section 20-1-301, MCA, as it is now constituted, is ambiguous. The 1981 amendment did not clear up the ambiguity, as the Superintendent contends, but rather intensified it. The statute speaks of apportioning money “to the other elementary districts”. The provision makes no sense unless an elementary district'has already been, ref erred to. *110 This is clear from the common understanding of the word “other” and from ordinary rules of grammar, which this Court is bound to follow. Steinbrenner v. Love (1942), 113 Mont. 466, 129 P.2d 101, 102. In order to agree with the Superintendent, this Court must ignore either the word “other”or the word “elementary”.

There would be no difficulty in applying the statute if we were dealing here with an elementary school district that had failed to provide 180 school days of pupil instruction. It is when a high school district is involved, as here, that the internal conflicts within the statute manifest themselves to make the statute unworkable. Since this is a penal statute, admitted on all sides, it must be strictly construed. State v. State Highway Patrol (1958), 133 Mont. 162, 321 P.2d 612, 613.

Section 20-1-301, MCA, also appears to conflict with section 20-9-805(1). A study of the legislative history of section 20-1-301, is instructive to demonstrate such potential conflict, as well as to indicate how the problem we are dealing with here arose.

“Interest & income moneys” (I&I) are defined in section 20-9-341, MCA. Essentially our I&I money is derived as proceeds from land grants, gifts, escheated estates, and other sources set out in 1972 Mont. Const., Art. X, §2. Ninety-five percent of such income must be “equitably apportioned annually to public elementary and secondary school districts . . .” 1972 Mont. Const., Art. X, § 5.

Before the adoption of the 1972 Montana Constitution, section 75-6908, R.C.M. 1947 (Section 258, Ch. 5, Laws of Montana (1971), provided for the distribution by the Superintendent from the state treasury of I&I monies on the basis of the number of school census children through the county superintendent of schools.

Section 75-7402, R.C.M. 1947 (Section 366, Ch.

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Bluebook (online)
637 P.2d 1188, 196 Mont. 106, 1981 Mont. LEXIS 912, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/missoula-high-school-legal-defense-assn-v-superintendent-of-public-mont-1981.