Oelrichs Sch. Dist. 23-3 v. Sides

1997 SD 55
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMay 14, 1997
DocketNone
StatusPublished

This text of 1997 SD 55 (Oelrichs Sch. Dist. 23-3 v. Sides) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Oelrichs Sch. Dist. 23-3 v. Sides, 1997 SD 55 (S.D. 1997).

Opinion

Unified Judicial System

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OELRICHS SCHOOL DISTRICT 23-3,
Appellee,
v.
JOHN SIDES, CAROL SIDES and HELEN SIDES
,
Appellants.
[1997 SD 55, __ NW2d __]

South Dakota Supreme Court
Appeal from the Seventh Judicial Circuit, Fall River County, SD
Hon. Merton B. Tice Jr., Judge
#19636 — Affirmed

Dwight A. Gubbrud, Bennett, Main, Frederickson & Bailey, Belle Fourche, SD
Attorneys for Appellee.

John J. Delaney, Estes, Porter & Delaney, Rapid City, SD
Attorneys for Appellants.

Considered on Briefs Mar 25, 1997; Opinion Filed May 14, 1997

 GILBERTSON, Justice.

 [¶1] John, Carol and Helen Sides appeal the disapproval of their petitions for a minor school boundary change. We affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

 [¶2] John Sides, his wife Carol and his mother Helen Sides all filed separate petitions for a minor boundary change transferring their property from the Oelrichs School District to the Hot Springs School District. All three petitioners live together on a Fall River County ranch, and their address is Smithwick, South Dakota. They represent 100 percent of the voters within the proposed boundary change area. There is no question that the amount of land involved implicates the minor boundary change provision of statute. {fn1}  The ranch is not coterminous with both school districts, but is separated from the school district line only by federal grassland and state land, all of which is leased by the Sides. {fn2} 

 [¶3] The Sides children, Amanda (8th grade), Jack (6th grade) and Shauna (3rd grade) attended the Smithwick school, which is in the Oelrichs District, until it closed at the end of the 1994-95 school year. The Sides children were the only students at Smithwick for part of the school’s final year. It is the closing of the Smithwick school which appears to have prompted the petitions for boundary change. The Sides want their children to attend school in the Hot Springs District.

 [¶4] The Sides’ petitions were approved by the Hot Springs District, but unanimously disapproved by the Oelrichs District. The Sides appealed the Oelrichs School Board’s decision to the Secretary of Education and Cultural Affairs as provided by SDCL 13-6-85. After an evidentiary hearing before a hearing examiner, {fn3}  the Secretary of Education reversed the school board and approved the petitions. The Sides children were enrolled in the Hot Springs School District, and are presently attending school within that district.

 [¶5] The Oelrichs School District appealed to the circuit court, which held a full evidentiary hearing. {fn4}  During the hearing, the court required counsel to clearly identify which testimony had been presented to the school board and which testimony was being presented for the first time to the court. At the conclusion of the hearing, the judge ruled from the bench that considering the evidence both ways, the school board decision must be upheld. The Sides appeal. {fn5} 

LEGAL ANALYSIS

 [¶6] Whether the Oelrich’s School Board decision to disapprove the Side’s minor boundary change petitions was clearly erroneous, arbitrary, capricious or an abuse of discretion?

 [¶7] A school board’s decision on a minor boundary petition has two avenues of appeal: directly to the circuit court, or to the Secretary of Education. SDCL 13-6-85. The grant of decision-making power to the Secretary is designed to encourage settlement of boundary disputes without resort to court action; however, the decision of the Secretary nonetheless is subject to appeal to the circuit court. The Secretary’s decision in such appeals is to be given no deference by the reviewing court. SDCL 13-6-85; Oldham-Ramona Sch. Dist. v. Ust, 502 NW2d 574, 579 (SD 1993).

 [¶8] The circuit court reviews the decision of the school board de novo. SDCL 13-46-6. It is not a trial de novo in the truest sense of the term, and the court is not permitted to determine the propriety of the board’s decision. Strain v. Rapid City Sch. Bd., 447 NW2d 332, 338 (SD 1989).

School boards are creatures of the legislature and are a part of the legislative branch of government. Therefore, the judiciary may not invade the province of the school board's decision making unless such decision making is done contrary to law.

Moran v. Rapid City Area Sch. Dist., 281 NW2d 595, 598 (SD 1979).

 [¶9] We are not bound by a presumption that the circuit court decided correctly. The proper scope of review for this court is the same as that of the circuit court. Strain, 447 NW2d at 338.

[T]he trial de novo required by SDCL 13-46-6 permits an independent inquiry into the facts, but only for the purpose of passing on the legality of board’s decision. The circuit court must determine (1) whether the board possessed the administrative power to make the decision ... , and (2) whether the board acted unreasonably or arbitrarily, or whether the board manifestly abused its discretion.

Colman-Egan Sch. Dist. No. 50-5 v. Jones, 520 NW2d 890, 892 (SD 1994) (citing Moran, 281 NW2d at 599).

 [¶10] In the instant case, the school board’s administrative power to make the decision is not at issue; however, in deciding whether the board’s decision was arbitrary, capricious or an abuse of discretion, the circuit court is required to determine only whether there was substantial evidence to support the school board’s decision. Oldham-Ramona, 502 NW2d at 580-81; it does not need to justify the school board’s decision by a preponderance of the evidence received. Id. at 579. Substantial evidence has been defined as "such relevant and competent evidence as a reasonable mind might accept as adequate to support a conclusion." Id. at 581.

 [¶11] Keeping in mind this very narrow scope of review, this Court previously has looked to five substantive factors in reviewing minor boundary change decisions:

1. Whether the petitioners are more closely aligned to the economic, social and religious life of the community into which they are being transferred?

2. Whether there is bus service to the residence?

3. Whether the district line which places their property in the current district was drawn in an arbitrary fashion?

4. Whether petitioner’s child has special needs best met in the District petitioners are attempting to join?

5. Whether the petitioners live closer to the school district they are joining as opposed to the district they are leaving?

Colman-Egan, 520 NW2d at 892; Oldham-Ramona, 502 NW2d at 581.

 [¶12] These factors were included in a packet of information provided to the Oelrichs School Board by its attorney prior to the decision of the board on the Sides’ petitions.

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