Schmidt v. Payne

199 S.W.2d 990, 304 Ky. 58, 1947 Ky. LEXIS 584
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedFebruary 18, 1947
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 199 S.W.2d 990 (Schmidt v. Payne) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schmidt v. Payne, 199 S.W.2d 990, 304 Ky. 58, 1947 Ky. LEXIS 584 (Ky. 1947).

Opinion

*59 Opinion op the Court by

Judge Siler

Affirming.

Lonis Payne and others, appellees, who are parents of 10 elementary school children of the independent school district of Shelbyville, sought a writ of mandamus to require Paul Schmidt and others, appellants, who are members of the board of education of the same district, to furnish school transportation for appellees’ children. Thé chancellor having granted the writ, the board members are now appealing.

The chief contention of this appeal is that the trial court’s judgment should be reversed because there exists no statutory authority requiring boards of independent school districts to furnish school transportation for any pupils of such districts.

The legislative authority of this Commonwealth created, in 1871, the Shelbyville Graded School and circumscribed its rather large boundary with radii running 3 miles outwardly from the county courthouse in Shelby-ville. The district has retained that same boundary for these 76 years. Since Shelbyille is a city of the 4th class, subsequent legislative authority has sanctioned the retention and continuation of this same school district without change or alteration. See KRS 160.020. The school authorities in this district at Shelbyville have never furnished any school transportation to any of the pupils of their school during any of these years of this school’s autonomy.

The evidence for appellees shows that their children, all of immature age, live on a hard surfaced but rather hazardous road, at distances varying from about 2 to 3 miles, leading southward from Shelbyville and from this school; that these parents have heretofore transported their children in their own conveyances to school rather than have them risk the hazards of sharp curves, motor traffic, a railroad crossing and bad weather.

The appellant’s evidence shows that while 10 roads run through this school district into Shelbyville, yet none of these roads is connected by a crossroad within 5 miles of Shelbyville, thereby posing a rather difficult transportation problem; that the operation of school busses would necessitate an immediate increase of 30 cents per hun *60 dred dollar valuation in the prevailing tax rate of this school district; that the operation of school busses would necessitate the opening of the school building at 6 A. M. instead of 8 A. M., with teacher supervision likewise required for the earlier hour, all in accordance with the requirements of the hauling schedule that would become necessary; that the busses of the type and kind required are not available under present post war conditions.

Appellees contend that KRS 158.110 requires all boards of education in this state'to furnish school transportation to all elementary pupils who do not live within a reasonable walking distance of their respective schools.

Appellant board members contend that this statutory provision, which uses the words, “boards of education,” without further particularity, should be interpreted to mean only county boards of education, not to mean independent school district boards, such as this one at Shelbyville.

We have heretofore held that KRS 158.110 is a mandatory requirement upon county boards of education, but we have not yet ruled that it is likewise as to the independent boards. See Madison County Board of Education v. Skinner, 299 Ky. 707, 187 S. W. 2d 268, and eases cited therein.

A research into our existing school laws indicates that KRS 158.110, as well as other parts of the present codification of laws governing schools in this Commonwealth, finds its genesis as to breadth and dimension in Chapter 65 of Kentucky Acts of 1934. This chapter of the 1934 Acts aimed at an efficient and symmetrical uniformity in all our public schools and in the school laws of this state. This chapter created and recognized only “school boards,” whereas, under previous laws, there had been both “school boards” and also other bodies referred to as trustees of graded common schools. While this chapter continued to recognize the general autonomy of a “graded school” under the name of an “independent school district,” yet the aim of this new school law was an overall uniformity in all our public schools with resulting coalescence between the powers and duties of an independent school system, on the one hand, and those of a county school system, on the other hand. Under the compulsions and incentives of this view of ours as to *61 this intended uniformity among all of our present public school systems in Kentucky, we must now hold that KBS 158.110 wraps its mandatory force around these appellants as members of this independent school district at Shelbyville.

But even though KBS 158.110 applies to independent schools, yet these schools,' along with all other public schools facing the same problem, have, appellants further contend, a broad discretion in deciding whether dr not appellees’ children actually live within a reasonable walking distance of their school.

Appellants are correct in this latter contention. Nevertheless, this court has the right and duty to review any such discretion, when it has been exercised, in order to determine whether or not it may have been abused in any particular instance. See the ease of Bell County Bd. of Education v. Wilson, 263 Ky. 556, 92 S. W. 2d 821, and cases cited therein.

So, now looking at the conditions of this specific case, we find that these young children were walking distances of 2 to 3 miles to their school at Shelbyville. We find that there was and is a tortuous road presenting a possible peril upon its pedestrians, particularly little children, in almost every furlong of its length. This road has neither sidewalks nor graveled berm. This route is one of heavy travel, both by trucks and other vehicles. This route crosses a narrow bridge, a railroad, a federal highway where fast-moving traffic continually chants a funeral dirge for the unwary. Now it does seem entirely possible to consider that one school route of 2 miles might constitute a reasonable walking distance while another and different school route of only 1 mile might constitute an unreasonable walking distance. These hazards and highway conditions may be ticula-r route should certainly enter into a proper determination of what constitutes a reasonable walking distance. The hazards and highway conditions of any par-more decisive as determining factors in a question of this kind than the mere distance involved. Because of both the hazards and the distances proven in this specific case and as to appellees’ particular route, we believe that appellants abused their discretion in deciding that appel *62 lees’ children are within a reasonable walking distance of their school.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
199 S.W.2d 990, 304 Ky. 58, 1947 Ky. LEXIS 584, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schmidt-v-payne-kyctapphigh-1947.