Ransom v. Rutherford County

123 Tenn. 1
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 123 Tenn. 1 (Ransom v. Rutherford County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ransom v. Rutherford County, 123 Tenn. 1 (Tenn. 1909).

Opinion

Mr. Justice McAlister

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The bill was preferred by certain citizens and taxpayers of Rutherford.' county and the city of Murfrees-boro against said city and county to impeach the validity of two acts, passed by the general assembly of 1909, providing for the establishment of. normal schools and the issuance of bonds by said city and county for the purchase of sites and the erection of buildings for said schools.

The first act assailed is chapter 264, Acts of 1909, approved April 27, 1909, and entitled:

“An act to provide for the improvement of the system of public education of the State of Tennessee — that is to say, to establish a general education fund by appropriating thereto annually twenty-five per cent, of the gross revenue of the State; to provide for the apportionment of this fund and specifying what part shall be apportioned to the several counties of the State on the basis of scholastic population; what part shall be used to equalize more nearly the school facilities of the several counties, and the conditions on which this part [7]*7shall be apportioned; what sum shall be used to assist in paying salaries of county superintendents, and.1 on what conditions; what part shall be used to encourage and assist in the establishment and maintenance of public county high schools, and on what conditions; and providing for the grading and inspecting of high schools; what part shall be used for the establishment and maintenance of school libraries and on what condb tions; what part shall be used for the establishment and maintenance of three normal schools for white teachers, one in each grand division of the State, and one agricultural and industrial normal school for negroes, and providing for the location, establishment, and control of said schools; and what part shall be apportioned to the University of Tennessee and it's various stations; and to repeal chapter 537 of the Acts of 1907.”

Section 1 provides:

“That for the purpose of improving, unifying and extending the system of public education of the State of Tennessee, for the purpose of giving more adequate support to public schools of all grades, and for the purpose of extending the benefits of the school system more equally to all the sections, counties, and districts of the State, a general education fund shall be, and the same is hereby created, and for the year one thousand nine hundred and nine and annually thereafter twenty-five- per cent, of the gross revenue of the State shall be paid into this general education fund, to be apportioned as hereinafter provided; and the comptroller of the treasury shall pass, and he is hereby directed to [8]*8pass, on the first day of January and the first day of July of each and every year, to the credit of said general education fund, the amount due thereto according to the provisions of this act, and to distribute the same as hereinafter provided.”

Section 2 provides:

“That sixty-one per cent, of the general education fund provided by this act sh'all be apportioned to the several counties of the State according to scholastic population, as the interest on the permanent school fund is apportioned and for the same purposes.”

Section 8 provides:

“That ten per cent, of the general education fund provided by this act shall be, and the same is hereby, set aside as a special fund to be used and expended for the purpose of more nearly equalizing the common schools in the several counties of the State, the same to be apportioned among the several counties of the State by the State board of education in accordance with the provisions hereinafter set forth.”

Section 7 of said act provides:

“That thirteen per cent, of the general education fund provided by this act may be used for the establishment and maintenance of normal schools solely for the education • and professional training of teachers for the elementary school of the State, as herein provided. One normal school for the education and professional training of white teachers shall be established and maintained in each grand division of the State, and shall be [9]*9open and free alike to white males and females resident in the State of Tennessee; and one agricultural and industrial normal school for the industrial education of negroes and for preparing negro teachers for common schools shall he established and maintained, and shall be open and free alike to negro males and females resident in the State of Tennessee;.but no person shall be admitted to either of these schools who is under sixteen years of age and who has not finished at least the elementary school course prescribed for the public schools of the State; nor shall any person be admitted to either of the normal schools for white teachers who does not first sign a pledge to teach in the public or private schools of the State of Tennessee, within the next six years after leaving the school, at least as long as he or she has attended said school.
“Each school established and maintained under the provisions of this section of this act. shall have connected with it one or more practice and observation schools, in which shall be taught at least all the subjects prescribed for the primary schools of the State; and the county boards of education of any county, or the district directors of any school district, or the board of education of any incorporated city or town having a special school system under the provisions of its charter may, and the same is hereby empowered to contract with the State board of education to provide for the teaching of children of public school age in such practice and observation schools, and to pay; to the said nor[10]*10mal school all or any portion of the public school fund belonging to such county, district, or incorporated city or town, as agreed upon by the school authorities of said county, school district, or incorporated city or town, and the State board of education, as in the case of consolidated schools under the provisions of the State school law. ...
“The general management and control of all normal schools established and maintained under the provisions of this section of this act shall be vested in the State board of education; and the said State board of education shall have power to employ a bookkeeper, whose duty it shall be to keep the accounts of the normal school funds as directed by the board, and the salary shall be fixed by the board and paid out of the normal school fund herein provided before the apportionment to the several schools and on the warrant of the comptroller.
“All schools established under the provisions of this section of this act shall be located by the State board of education; and in making such locations, said board shall take into consideration accessibility, centralness of position, healthfulness of location, cheapness of living, opportunities for arranging for suitable practice and observation schools, and the value and usefulness of offers of donations of grounds, buildings, money, etc. “In addition to any accepted donations of land, money, or buildings, the income from the fund provided by this [11]*11act and this section of this act for the years one thousand nine hundred and nine and one thousand nine hundred and ten or any portion of the same may he used for building and equipment.

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Bluebook (online)
123 Tenn. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ransom-v-rutherford-county-tenn-1909.