Mumm v. Troy Township School District

38 N.W.2d 583, 240 Iowa 1057, 1949 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 394
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedAugust 5, 1949
DocketNo. 47438.
StatusPublished

This text of 38 N.W.2d 583 (Mumm v. Troy Township 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
Mumm v. Troy Township School District, 38 N.W.2d 583, 240 Iowa 1057, 1949 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 394 (iowa 1949).

Opinion

Mulroney, J.

— The defendant school district and its officers and directors appeal from a judgment and decree ordering that a writ of mandamus issue, commanding them to furnish transportation for plaintiff’s children to and from the school in Williamsburg', in accordance with the provisions of section 279.19, Code, 1946. In the trial court the defendants had answered that they had made diligent effort to arrange for the transportation of plaintiff’s children but had been unable to contract with any.person to transport the children for reasonable compensation. Their answer admitted all of the material allegations of plaintiff’s petition; that plaintiff was the father of four little children of school age, the oldest being nine; that the Troy Township School No. 5 that plaintiff’s children should attend is closed and the school in Williamsburg had been designated by the board as the school plaintiff’s children should attend; and that plaintiff’s home in Troy Township is approximately three and one-half miles from the Williamsbui'g school. The answer *1059 further stated that the district had no school bus because defendants had “determined that because of ihe excessive costs thereof and because of the fact that no funds are available for such purpose, it would be inimical and detrimental to and would place an unnecessary burden upon defendant school district to purchase a school bus or other conveyance for the purpose of transporting the children” to Williamsburg. The answer stated the other children in the township were transported to school by their parents under contract with the board and alleged that plaintiff’s petition for the writ of mandamus was not brought in good faith but actually' was brought for “the purpose of coercing defendant directors into paying plaintiff an exorbitant and unreasonable compensation” for transporting his children to the Williamsburg school.

The defendants seek reversal here on two grounds, (1) the uncontradicted evidence shows that it was impossible to arrange for the transportation of plaintiff’s children, and the writ therefore commanded the performance of an act that was impossible of performance, and (2) the court erred in finding the equities were with plaintiff for the reason that the record shows that plaintiff did not maintain his action in good faith but merely for the purpose of coercing defendants into arranging with plaintiff for the transportation of his own children upon terms dictated exclusively by him.

I. Section 279.19, Code, 1946, provides in part as follows:

“When children enrolled in an elementary school other than in a consolidated district live two and one-half miles or more from the school in their district or subdistrict or when the school in their district or subdistrict has been closed and they are thereby placed more than twO‘ miles from the school designated for their attendance, the board shall arrange with any person outside the board for the transportation of such children to and from school and the cost of such transportation shall be paid from the general fund * *

The defendants’ duty to provide transportation' is mandatory. Harwood v. Dysart Consolidated Sch. Dist., 237 Iowa 133, *1060 21 N. W. 2d 334. Defendants’ answer is in the nature of confession and avoidance. They in effect confess they have the statutory duty but seek to excuse their nonperformance of the mandate of the statute by pleading, (1) their inability to contract with anyone to haul these children for a reasonable price, and (2) no funds are available for the purchase of a bus and it would be unnecessarily burdensome on the district to purchase a bus for the transportation of plaintiff’s children. The defendants had the burden of establishing their defense. 55 C. J. S., Mandamus, section 325b; Ontjes v. Harrer, 208 Iowa 1217, 227 N. W. 101.

The record shows without dispute that plaintiff had reluctantly transported his children during the prior school year and had informed the president and secretary of the school board before the 1948-1949 school year that he would not be able to transport his children for that term. There is no clear evidence that the board did anything before the term started toward trying to hire someone to haul these children, or in fact before the suit was started on September 10, 1948. The reason nothing much was done earlier, according to the secretary of the board, was because the board had contracts with all the parents of pupils except the plaintiff and one Clyde Jones and they thought these two could be persuaded to sign contracts to haul their children. The board seemed to be of the opinion that it had the option of providing’ bus transportation for all the children or contract with the parents, and further, that its full duty to transport was performed if it set up a schedule for parents’ compensation for transportation of their own children. The board’s duty was to transport and it is no excuse that it failed in its effort to shift this duty to the parents. It completely failed as to the Clyde Jones children, who did not. go to any school during the 1948-1949 term, because their father either could not or would not transport them to the Williamsburg school.

Nearly all the directors told of having contacted several persons whom they asked to contract to haul plaintiff’s children. In only one or two- instances was there any compensation mentioned: They all told of how the persons contacted refused the-job'. Where the persons contacted are described, they were *1061 farmers, truchera or persons with other jobs. Under the board’s schedule, if that were adhered to, the compensation for the hauling of plaintiff’s children, over one of the poorest roads in the county, would be $35 a month. The advertisement (inserted in the paper about a month after the. suit was brought), failed to produce applicants who were willing to contract to transport plaintiff’s children.

The record is silent as 1o the financial condition of the district — the condition that defendants pleaded would render a bus purchase unnecessarily burdensome on the district. Defendants set forth a list of their contracts with the parents. They are paying these parents about $450 a month to transport their own children. Four of the directors’ wives have contracts to transport their children and the record shows that some of the contractees have children of high school age who drive to and from the school and the contraetee parents do not accompany the children. The $450 figure does not include what the district, would have to pay to transport the children of Clyde Jones and the plaintiff. In spite of this amount being paid monthly (for a nine-month term) the secretary testified the board never even considered buying a school bus. Even if it be thought a school district would be excused from buying a bus, because such purchase would be “an unnecessary burden”, the pleaded defense is not sustained .by the record.

There is no force in an argument that the transportation of plaintiff’s children was impossible when almost all of the children in the district (and all of the directors’ children) were being transported at the expense of the district. The funds of the district are to be devoted to the transportation of all of the children in the district. They are all equally entitled to conveyance.

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Related

Harwood v. Dysart Consolidated School District
21 N.W.2d 334 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1946)
Ontjes v. Harrer
227 N.W. 101 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1929)

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Bluebook (online)
38 N.W.2d 583, 240 Iowa 1057, 1949 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 394, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mumm-v-troy-township-school-district-iowa-1949.