Schmidt v. Blair

213 N.W. 593, 203 Iowa 1016
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMay 6, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 213 N.W. 593 (Schmidt v. Blair) 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
Schmidt v. Blair, 213 N.W. 593, 203 Iowa 1016 (iowa 1927).

Opinions

Evans, C. J.

The defendants are the members of the school board of the Consolidated District of Lytton, in Calhoun County. The plaintiffs are resident taxpayers of such Consolidated School District. The complaint of the plaintiffs was directed to the alleged unwarranted use of school busses and the alleged unwarranted expenditure of school funds for such purpose. No substantial disputed fact is presented for our consideration.

This Consolidated School District of Lytton was the owner of seven school busses, purchased by said district for the purpose of complying with the requirements of Sections 4179 to 4182, Code of 1924. The essence of the dispute is whether the use of these busses and the expenditure incident thereto, complained of by plaintiffs, were within the contemplation of the statutory provisions here referred to. These statutory sections are as follows:

“The board of every consolidated school corporation shall provide suitable transportation to and from school for every child of school age living within said corporation and more than a mile from such school, but the board shall not be required to cause the vehicle of transportation to leave any public highway to receive or discharge pupils, or to provide transportation for any pupil residing within the limits of any city, town, or village *1018 within which said school is situated.” Section 4179, Code of 1924.
‘ ‘ The board shall designate the routes to be traveled by each conveyaneé in transporting children to and from school. The board shall have the right on account of inclemency of the weather to suspend the transportation' on any route upon any day or days when in its judgment it would be a hardship on the children, or when the roads to be traveled are unfit or impassable.” Section 4180, Code of 1924. ‘ •
“The school'board may require that children living an unreasonable distance from school shall be transported by the parent or guardian a distance of not more than two miles tó connect with any vehicle of transportation to- and from school or may contract with an adjoining school coiporatio-ii for'-the instruction of any child living an unreasonable distance from school. It shall allow a reasonable compensation for the transportation of children to and from their.homes to.connect with such vehicle of' transportation, or for transporting them to an adjoining .district. In determining what an unreasonable distance would be, consideration shall be given to the number and age of the children, the condition, of the roads, and the number of miles-to be traveled in going to- and from school.” Section 4181, Code of 1924. ■ ■ .'
“The school board of .any school, corporation maintaining a consolidated school shall contract with as many suitable persons as it deems necessary for the transportation of children of school age to and from school. . Such contract shaE be in writing ■and shall state the route, the length of time contracted for, the compensation ito be -allowed per-week of five school days, or per month of four school weeks, and may provide that two weeks’ salary be retained by the board pending full compEance therewith by the party contracted with, and shaE always provide that any pai*ty or parties to said contract, and every person in charge of a vehicle-conveying children to- and from- school, shaE'be at all times subject to any 'rales said board shall' adopt for the -protection of the children, or to govern ■ the -conduct; of the, person -in charge-o-f said-conveyance.-” Section 4182,-Code of 1924.

. ■■ The petition -alleged,- and the undisputed evidence disclosed, that these.busses were -used.by-the approval and-direction of the defendant-board for various miscellaneous purposes, quite dis *1019 tinct from those specified in the statute; and were likewise-used for the transportation of persons other than those described in' the statute. Some of:‘these uses'were the following: thetrans-' portation'of school children to various cities- and towns outside1 of the Consolidated School District to basket ball- games; to baseball games; to other' athletic-contests-betw'eén schools; 'to spelling contests; to oratorical contests; to attend a moving picture ; to picnics; to visit the reformatory at -Rockwell City; to take a class picture. Transportation was also furnished to the teachers of the school, to attend teachers’-institutes and con-' ventions. Such transportation w'as conducted wholly at the expense of the district. These purported uses are not so'much denied-by the defendants'as they are justified-by them. They jus-' tify such 'use, and declare their purpose to continue the- same.' They justify" on the ground that by such uses they were serving the best interests' of the district and of the school pupils; and that they were acting within the discretion conferred upon them by the law; and this is the crux of the controversy.

If it be granted, for the purpose of the argument,'that'rivalries and contests between schools; whether athletic or scholastic, are useful in the development of a proper spirit in the schools, and "that social pleasures have their proper function‘in the same direction, and that the attendance of teachers’ institutes and conventions by teachers is a practice to be desired and encouraged, yet the question remains whether a school board has authority to furnish transportation to -distant places for such purposes, and to apply the funds of the school district to that purpose.- '

The 'question before us is not whether the defendanhboard is properly exercising its- statutory discretion, but whether it is exceeding its statutory power. The question of discretion is not subject to- judicial control, but the question of statutory power is subject to judicial control. Ries v. Hemmer, 127 Iowa 408.

■ Indeed, the jurisdiction of the courts necessarily attaches to all cases where public officials are charged with the expenditute of public ■ funds in excess of their statutory power. In Perkins v. Board of Directors, 56 Iowa 476, we said:

courts - of the state are’ arbiters of all questions involving the construction of the statutes conferring authority' upon Officers and jurisdiction upon special tribunals; ' It was certainly never the intention of the legislature to confer upon *1020 school boards, superintendents of schools, or other officers discharging quasi judicial functions, exclusive authority to decide questions pertaining to their jurisdiction and the extent of their power.- All such questions may be determined by the courts of the state. Hence, when the rights of a citizen are involved in the exercise of authority by a school officer, the courts may determine whether such authority was lawfully exercised. ’ ’

The expenditure charged in this case was substantial. The distances from the school district to the various points of transportation varied from 7 miles to 40.

Prior to the enactment of the sections above set forth, there was no statutory power in any board of directors to provide transportation at public expense for school children for any purpose. If, prior to such an enactment, an exercise of such power had been attempted, it could without doubt have been enjoined.

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Bluebook (online)
213 N.W. 593, 203 Iowa 1016, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schmidt-v-blair-iowa-1927.