Rawdin v. Bristol Township School District

44 Pa. D. & C.2d 713, 1968 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 106
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Bucks County
DecidedMarch 29, 1968
Docketno. 552
StatusPublished

This text of 44 Pa. D. & C.2d 713 (Rawdin v. Bristol Township School District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Bucks County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rawdin v. Bristol Township School District, 44 Pa. D. & C.2d 713, 1968 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 106 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1968).

Opinions

Bodley, J.,

In this equity action, plaintiff, a citizen and taxpayer of defendant school district, seeks to enjoin the school district from expending public funds for the purpose of transporting resident pupils of Bristol Township to nonpublic schools located in Bristol Borough. The basis of the action is the alleged illegality of the school district’s resolution of August 17, 1967, which authorized the extension of busing such private school students to St. Ann’s and St. Mark’s parochial schools. The said resolution was adopted by the school board by vote of six “ayes” and three “nays”. The six named individual defendants are those school board members who voted in favor of the resolution.

By leave of court, certain other persons were permitted to intervene, some as parties plaintiff and some as intervenors in support of the action of the school board. Following the filing of an answer to the complaint and a reply to new matter contained in the answer, a hearing was held before the undersigned on [715]*715Octobér 23, 1967, for the purpose of completing the record. The matter was then placed upon the argument list and was heard by the court en banc.

The record reveals that in September 1965, defendant school district, for the first time, commenced busing nonpublic school students who resided within the township, by virtue of authority granted the school board by the Act of June 15, 1965, P. L. 133, 24 PS §13-1361. In order to accommodate the increased passenger load of the school district’s fleet of buses, now numbering 57, the school administrators worked out schedules under which public school students would first be picked up by each bus involved and eventually dropped at their respective schools and, after making three such trips, each bus would then start upon a separate schedule during which it would pick up parochial school students only and drop them off at a designated point within Bristol Township. Two or more separate trips for the parochial school students were also made by each bus involved. Naturally, in order to permit the repeated use of each individual bus, the starting times for the various schools, both public and parochial, necessarily varied. Whether such starting times were fixed in order to accommodate the busing problem or whether this is merely a coincidence, does not appear of record, nor is it of any importance to the determination of the matter before us. And, although it would appear that other parochial school students may have been, and may continue to be, transported by the public school buses under the arrangements authorized in September 1965, the action before us concerns only the busing of those parochial school students who attend St. Ann’s Parochial School and St. Mark’s Parochial School in Bristol Borough.

When the busing schedules were first set up in September 1965, to accommodate the parochial school students who lived within the township and attended St. [716]*716Ann’s and St. Mark’s Schools in Bristol Borough, such students were picked up by the buses involved at various points within the township and discharged at Landreth Manor Circle in Bristol Township, this point being the point closest to St. Ann’s and St. Mark’s Parochial Schools on the then existing established public school bus route. Because of police complaint, apparently resulting from the discharge and consequent milling around of some 500 parochial school students, the point of discharge was changed after a week’s time, for safety reasons, to Cherry Street, also located within Bristol Township, but nearer to the parochial school destination and approximately four-tenths of a mile away from Landreth Manor Circle. Until September 1967, the Bristol Township school authorities continued the above-recited practice of picking up the parochial school students and discharging them at Cherry Street in the morning, and then, with schedules reversed, the same buses would pick up the parochial school students at the Cherry Street location and drop them off at various points within Bristol Township so that they might return to their homes. Prom September 1965, until the system was changed in September 1967, school buses, maintained by St. Mark’s and St. Ann’s Parochial Schools, met these children in the morning at the Cherry Street location in Bristol Township and transported them on to their respective schools. In the afternoon, the parochial school buses would return the school children to the Cherry Street location, at which point the public school buses would then load them and transport them back to the various stops within Bristol Township.

Under the authorization of the resolution, dated August 17, 1967, the practice was changed, in September 1967, so that the 10 Bristol Township public school buses involved no longer dropped off- the children at Cherry Street in the morning, nor picked them up at [717]*717Cherry Street in the afternoon. The practice also changed so that no longer did the parochial school buses from St. Mark’s and St. Ann’s meet the parochial school students, as they did theretofore, in order to transport them to such schools within Bristol Borough. Rather, under the authorization of the challenged school board resolution, the public school buses of Bristol Township, beginning September 1967, picked up the township’s parochial school students, as they did theretofore, at various points within the township, and then transported such students directly to the doors of St. Mark’s Parochial School and St. Ann’s Parochial School. The net result has been that 10 public school buses, owned by the defendant school board, are used for two or three round trips in the morning and two or three round trips in the afternoon to transport the parochial school students from various points within Bristol Township to their respective parochial schools in Bristol Borough and back again in the afternoon.

The record indicates that prior to September 1967, the 10 buses involved traveled 60 miles per day upon the task of delivering the nonpublic school students involved. After September 1967, each of the 10 buses traveled an additional 3.9 miles per day, by virtue of the extension of the schedule from Cherry Street to the schools involved. The record also indicates that the gross cost per mile per bus is 46.3 cents and the reimbursement from the State for such mileage is 43.8 percent of the total expenditure. The School District of Bristol Township is a coterminus district, that is to say, all of the public school children served by the district reside in and go to school within the township.

It is acknowledged by all concerned that, in transporting public school students from the various bus stops within the township to the various public schools, none of the buses ever proceed to the vicinity of St. [718]*718Mark’s or St. Ann’s Parochial Schools in Bristol Borough. The public and private school students are not mixed; that is, no bus, during its travel to and from the public school, picks up a parochial school student, and no bus, during its travel to and from the parochial schools, picks up a public school student. The routes followed by the 10 buses involved in transporting students to St. Mark’s and St. Ann’s schools are basically the same as those routes traveled by the school buses transporting public school pupils, except for the deviation from the established route within the township in order to transport the students directly to St. Ann’s and St. Mark’s schools.

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Bluebook (online)
44 Pa. D. & C.2d 713, 1968 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rawdin-v-bristol-township-school-district-pactcomplbucks-1968.