School Directors of District No. 3 v. Babcock

249 Ill. App. 305, 1928 Ill. App. LEXIS 63
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 1, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 249 Ill. App. 305 (School Directors of District No. 3 v. Babcock) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
School Directors of District No. 3 v. Babcock, 249 Ill. App. 305, 1928 Ill. App. LEXIS 63 (Ill. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Newhall

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a bill in chancery filed by appellant in the court below seeking to restrain the Board of Education of the nonhigh school district of Clay county from paying to Harter-Stanford Township High School District No. 99, of said Clay county, tuition for six pupils for the school year of 1927-1928 on account of said pupils’ attendance at said Harter-Stanford Township High School.

Demurrers were filed by all of the defendants to the bill, as amended, which were sustained by the trial court, and, the complainant electing to stand by its bill, the same was dismissed for want of equity, to which ruling the complainant excepted and this appeal is prosecuted.

The bill alleges that “District No. 3” embraces the territory within the limits of the village of Xenia; that the defendant, “District No. 99,” includes the city of Flora and land adjacent thereto, and is organized as a community high school, and is the only high school district in Clay county; that the remainder of Clay county is nonhigh school territory; that “District No. 3” maintains a three-year high school, being duly credited by the State Superintendent of Public Instruction; that it is about nine miles from the schoolhouse of “District No. 2” in the village of Xenia to. the school building of “District No. 99” in the city of Flora.

The bill further alleges that, under the provisions of section 96 of the School Law, as amended, Cahill’s St. ch. 122, ¶ 104, and in force July 7, 1927 (Session Laws 1927, page 806), if a recognized two or three-year high school is conducted in a township located in a nonhigh school district, any eighth grade graduate residing in such township, upon the approval of the county superintendent of schools, may attend a recognized high school “more convenient” in some district other than the township in which he resides, and his tuition shall be paid by the board of education of the nonhigh school district in which he resides.

The bill further alleges that six pupils, named in the bill, reside in complainant’s “District No. 3,” within four blocks of the schoolhouse; that, in going from their homes to the Flora school in “District No. 99,” they pass by complainant’s school, cross two railroads, and then, by way of concrete road, travel for about nine miles before reaching the Flora school; that the Flora school is not more convenient, or better adapted or more appropriate to the ease or comfort of the said pupils; that, prior to the beginning of the school year of 1927-1928, the said pupils represented to Leo P. Babcock, county superintendent of schools, that they desired to pursue studies not taught in “School District No. 3,” and the said county superintendent granted to said pupils a certificate of convenience and his approval for them to leave the complainant’s school and attend the defendant’s school at Flora; that the county superintendent’s action in approving and granting such transfer of pupils was illegal, and constituted a fraud and was an abuse of his official discretion; that it was not based upon any condition of convenience of any one of said pupils; that, if the nonhigh school district is permitted to pay to the defendant “District No. 99” the tuition of said pupils, the complainant “District No. 3” will suffer irreparable damages and injury.

The bill prayed that said pretended consent and approval of the county superintendent be declared null and void.

This case involves the construction of section 96, Cahill’s St. ch. 122, \\ 104, of “An Act to establish and maintain a system of Free Schools,” as amended by Act approved July 7, 1927 (Session Laws 1927, page 806), which reads as follows:

“§96. Upon the approval- of the county superintendent of schools any high school pupil may attend a recognized high school more convenient in some district other than the high school district in which he resides, and the board of education of the high school district in which said pupil resides shall pay the tuition of such pupil, provided, said tuition shall not exceed the per capita cost of maintaining the high school attended. If a recognized two or three year high school is conducted in a township located in a non-high school district, any eighth grade graduate residing in such township, upon the approval of the county superintendent of schools, may attend a recognized high school more convenient in some district other than the township in which he resides and his tuition shall be paid by the board of education of the non-high school district in which he resides. If no recognized two or three year high school is conducted in a township located in a non-high school district, then any eighth grade graduate residing in such township may attend any recognized two, three or four year high school, and his tuition shall be paid by the board of education of the non-high school district in which he resides.

“An eighth grade graduate in the meaning of this Act is any person of school age who gives satisfactory evidence of having completed the first eight grades of school work by presenting a certificate of promotion issued by the home school board, or by passing an examination given by the county superintendent of schools or by passing an examination given by the school attended.

“A recognized high school in the meaning of this Act is any public high school providing a course of two or more years of work approved by the Superintendent of Public Instruction.

“The tuition paid shall in no case exceed the per capita cost of maintaining the high school attended, excluding therefrom interest paid on bonded indebtedness, which shall be computed by dividing the total cost of conducting and maintaining said high school by the average number of pupils enrolled, including tuition pupils.

“Approved July 7, 1927.” (Session Laws 1927, p. 806; Smith-Hurd, p. 2319.)

Counsel for appellant contends that the proper construction to be given the said section 96 is that pupils residing in a township, having completed their eighth grade work, shall be compelled to attend such high school as is located in their home township, unless, by reason of physical location of their respective homes, it is nearer for them to attend a high school in an adjacent township, in which event the county superintendent of schools may grant a certificate of convenience to such pupil for attendance out of his home township.

Prior to the passage of the Amendment of 1927, under the law as it formerly existed, a pupil residing in a high school district, and desiring to attend another was required to have the approval of the county superintendent of schools. But a pupil residing in a non-high school district was not required to have such approval, with the result that any such pupil residing in a nonhigh school district could attend anywhere in the State a recognized high school, and the nonhigh school district, where the pupil resided, became chargeable with his tuition. Apparently to remedy this situation the present amendment was enacted, which providés that a pupil residing in a nonhigh school district is under the same restriction and subject to obtaining the approval of the county superintendent, as is required of a pupil in a high school district seeking to be transferred to another district.

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254 Ill. App. 224 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1929)

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Bluebook (online)
249 Ill. App. 305, 1928 Ill. App. LEXIS 63, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/school-directors-of-district-no-3-v-babcock-illappct-1928.