Opinion No. 77-262 (1977) Ag

CourtOklahoma Attorney General Reports
DecidedNovember 7, 1977
StatusPublished

This text of Opinion No. 77-262 (1977) Ag (Opinion No. 77-262 (1977) Ag) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oklahoma Attorney General Reports primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Opinion No. 77-262 (1977) Ag, (Okla. Super. Ct. 1977).

Opinion

SCHOOLS

Under the provisions of 70 O.S. 102 [70-102] (1976), a student who has been granted an emergency transfer for the two preceding school years, and a younger brother of such student presently eligible to attend school and having previously been granted a transfer for the purpose of attending kindergarten, may continue to attend school within the receiving district conditioned only upon the approval for such attendance by the receiving district. The Attorney General is in receipt of your request for a legal opinion wherein you ask, in effect, the following question: Under the provisions of 70 O.S. 8-102 [70-8-102] (1976), may a student who has been granted an emergency transfer for the two preceding school years, and a younger brother of such student presently eligible to attend school and having previously been granted a transfer for the purpose of attending kindergarten, continue to attend school within the receiving district with such receiving district's approval only, or must such transfer also be approved by the sending district? Title 70 O.S. 8-102 [70-8-102] (1976), provides, in respects relevant to your question: "The county superintendent of schools shall grant an application for transfer of a child from the district in which he resides to another school district furnishing instruction in the grade he is entitled to pursue if such transfer has the approval of the boards of education of the sending and receiving districts. A student granted a transfer during the 1972-73 school year, or any school year thereafter, may continue to attend the school to which he is transferred with the approval of the receiving district only, and any brother or sister of such student may attend such school with approval of the receiving district only, provided that this provision shall not apply to pupils transferred for the purpose of attending classes in special education or a graduating senior in counties having a population of four hundred fifty thousand (450,000) or above, previously legally enrolled in the school district to which he wishes to transfer, or to students with catastrophic medical problems." (Emphasis added) Your question essentially asks if a prior emergency transfer, as provided under other provisions of the School Code, would constitute "a transfer" such as that contemplated in the above-quoted and emphasized proviso concerning the continued attendance to the receiving district under circumstances where a prior transfer was granted, such continued attendance to the receiving district requiring only the receiving district's approval. It should be initially noted that the emergency transfers to which you refer are those as may be granted pursuant to the provisions of 70 O.S. 8-104 [70-8-104] (1971), or 70 O.S. 8-111 [70-8-111] (1976). Under these two Sections, a student may be granted an emergency transfer by the county superintendent under circumstances in which there has been a destruction of the school building, an inability to furnish the grade of study the pupil is entitled to pursue, where there is a total failure of transportation facilities previously had or contemplated, or where there is an inability of the sending district to offer the subject a pupil desires to pursue. In lights of the grounds upon which a so-called regular transfer may be granted, the same being distinguishable from the grounds upon which a so-called emergency transfer may be granted, your question is primarily whether a prior year's emergency transfer would qualify as a prior transfer within the meaning of 70 O.S. 8-102 [70-8-102], supra, so as to require the approval of the receiving district only for the subsequent transfer to be granted. A fundamental rule of statutory construction and interpretation requiring little citation is the rule which provides that where a statute is plain, clear and unambiguous its evident meaning must be accepted, there being no justification for the use of interpretative devices to reach and find a different meaning. McVicker v. Board of County Commissioners, Okl., 442 P.2d 297 (1968). In keeping with the rule of statutory interpretation noted above, it would appear that the prior year's transfer proviso of 70 O.S. 8-102 [70-8-102], allowing a student to continue to attend the school to which he transferred with the approval of the receiving district only, would be applicable to a prior year's emergency transfer as authorized under the provisions of Article VIII, Title 70, Oklahoma Statutes. In this connection, it is noted that there are indeed different types of student transfers referred to throughout the School Code. Title 70 O.S. 8-102 [70-8-102] and 70 O.S. 8-103 [70-8-103] (1976), pertain to what is commonly referred to as a "regular" transfer. Conversely, 70 O.S. 8-104 [70-8-104] (1971) and 70 O.S. 8-111 [70-8-111] (1976), pertain to transfers commonly categorized as emergency transfers. In addition to these two types of transfers, it may be found that the School Code allows student transfers where the grade a student is entitled to pursue is not offered within the district (70 O.S. 8-101 [70-8-101] (1971)), where there has been a closure of school (70 O.S. 8-106 [70-8-106] (1971)), and where such transfers are for special education students (Article XIII, Title 70, Oklahoma Statutes). While all of the above-referred student transfers are distinguishable in type and are respectively granted for specified reasons, all are nevertheless student transfers per se. With the exception of the special exclusion language following the prior year's transfer proviso of 70 O.S. 8-102 [70-8-102], supra, the proviso generally applies to transfers without distinction as to type. Accordingly, it may be concluded that since this proviso would include prior emergency transfers. The interpretation above expressed would appear to be consistent with the apparent legislative intent ascertainable from a review of the various provisions concerning the transfer of pupils, as contained within Article VIII, Title 70, Oklahoma Statutes. In this connection, it is observed that beyond the so-called plain reading rule the more substantive rule of statutory construction is to ascertain and declare the intention of the Legislature in the enactment of such provision and to carry such intention into effect. Bohn v. Divine, Okl. App., 544 P.2d 916 (1975). The subject 70 O.S. 8-102 [70-8-102], as contained within the original School Code of 1971, contained no provision allowing for the continuance of attendance to a school to which a transfer was granted in the prior year. This proviso was first inserted in the statute under H.B. 1289, Ch. 90, O.S.L. 1973. The subject proviso first inserted by virtue of the 1973 amendment provided that a student who transferred during the 1972-73 school year could continue to attend the school to which he was transferred with the approval of the receiving district only, and any brother or sister of such student could likewise attend such school with the approval of the receiving district only.

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Related

McVicker v. BOARD OF COUNTY COMM'RS OF COUNTY OF CADDO
442 P.2d 297 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1968)
Bohn v. Divine
544 P.2d 916 (Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma, 1975)

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Opinion No. 77-262 (1977) Ag, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/opinion-no-77-262-1977-ag-oklaag-1977.