Spears v. Honda

449 P.2d 130, 51 Haw. 1, 1968 Haw. LEXIS 95
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 12, 1968
Docket4754
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 449 P.2d 130 (Spears v. Honda) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Spears v. Honda, 449 P.2d 130, 51 Haw. 1, 1968 Haw. LEXIS 95 (haw 1968).

Opinion

*2 OPINION OE THE COURT BX

RICHARDSON, C.J.

Plaintiffs-appellants, minors attending the public schools, brought suit through their guardians ad litem, taxpayers in the City and County of Honolulu, to challenge the use of public funds to provide bus transportation subsidies to sectarian and private school students under Act 97, S.L.H. 1965; Act 233, S.L.H. 1967; and Rule 1 of the State School Board issued pursuant to Act 233. Appellants, seeking a declaratory judgment and injunctive relief, assert, among other things, that the acts and the rule violate Article IX, Section 1, of the Constitution of the State of Hawaii, which provides that no public funds shall be “appropriated for the support or benefit of any sectarian or private educational institution.”

I.

Before proceeding to the merits of the case, we must review the legislative acts and the rule in dispute.

Under Act 97, which took effect on July 1, 1965, the State assumed responsibility for several governmental *3 functions previously delegated to the various county governments, including “the transportation of school children.” Act 97, §§ 1, 13. During fiscal 1967, the sum of $54,610.70 was disbursed by the State Comptroller for transportation of both public and nonpublic school students under authority purportedly granted by Act 97.

Under Act 233, effective on June 6, 1967, the Legislature authorized the State Department of Education “to provide suitable transportation for all school children in grades kindergarten to 12 and in special education classes [classes comprised of handicapped and mentally retarded children] and to promulgate rules and regulations relating thereto with a view to providing equal opportunity for education to the school children of the State.” (Emphasis added.) The act directed the department to adopt such “policy, procedure and program as it deems necessary to provide suitable transportation. . . ,” 1

The Board of Education, which formulates policy for the department under Article IX, Section 3, of the Hawaii Constitution, adopted Eule 1 on August 3, 1967. Eule 1 established regulations for the granting of subsidized bus transportation to school children attending both public and nonpublic (sectarian or parochial, and private) schools. Under the regulations, the children paid the first ten cents of the cost of a bus ride, and were subsidized only for the remaining cost of the ride (usually fifteen cents). 2

*4 Acting under the authority purportedly granted to it by Acts 97 and 233 and Rule 1, the department also devised the following mechanics of operation in providing the subsidy to nonpublic school children: The department sent tickets representing the amount of the subsidy for each bus ride to the nonpublic schools. The schools were delegated the responsibility of passing out to the children forms of certification to be signed by the children’s parents, attesting that the children qualified for the subsidy under the Rule 1 restrictions. Such forms were then collected by the schools and returned to the department, which made only a cursory, at-random check to determine whether the children were actually qualified. The schools were also delegated the responsibility of distributing tickets to the “certified” children and of sending lists containing the names of the “certified” children to the carriers. The children presented the tickets to the carriers, which were public agencies owning busses, or private persons, often the nonpublic schools themselves, owning and operating motor vehicles called “busses,” “for compensation for the transportation of children to and from school.” Act 233, S.L.H. 1967, § 3. The various carriers billed the department monthly for the total amount of the subsidy represented by all of the tickets collected in a month. The department, through the State Comptroller, then reim *5 bursed the carriers. These mechanics were used during the 1966-67 school year and were to be followed during the 1967-68 school year, during which the department anticipated an expense of $42,000 in providing the subsidy. Before the sum could be disbursed, however, appellants brought this action.

II.

The nub of appellants’ argument is that, by authorizing subsidies to nonpublic school children for their bus rides, Acts 97 and 233 and Rule 1 appropriated funds for the “support or benefit” of nonpublic educational institutions. Defendants-appellees, including the Board of Education, the Superintendent of the Department of Education, and the State Comptroller, argue, inter alia, that the acts and the rule do not violate Article IX, Section 1, because the bus subsidy constitutes “support or benefit” to school children attending nonpublic educational institutions, not to the institutions themselves. In most jurisdictions which have faced the problem of classifying various forms of public assistance to nonpublic schools, this argument is known as the child benefit theory. 3 Appellees also argue *6 that there is a presumption in favor of the validity of the legislation. The lower court found no evidence to rebut that presumption and held for the appellees under the child benefit theory, among other grounds, in a judgment entered March 13, 1968. Appellants filed notice of appeal on March 27, 1968. 4

The general rule is that, if the words used in a constitutional provision, such as Article IX, section 1, are clear and unambiguous, they are to be construed as they are written, Judd v. Board of Education, 278 N.Y. 200, 15 N.E.2d 576 (1938), reargument denied, 278 N.Y. 712, 17 N.E.2d 134 (1938). If an act of the Legislature is challenged as repugnant to such a constitutional provision, the burden of showing that it is unconstitutional is on the party asserting unconstitutionality, and that party must show that the repugnancy is too clear to admit of any dispute. Henderson Bridge Co. v. Henderson Gity, 173 U.S. 592, 615 (1899).

We find that appellants have met this requirement. As appellants contend, the intent of the framers of our Constitution regarding the nature of appropriations constituting “support or benefit” to sectarian and private schools is clear from the proceedings of our Constitutional Convention of 1950; the Convention delineated the scope of the State’s role in the education of children in public and nonpublic schools, and it specifically rejected the child *7 benefit theory as applied to bus transportation and similar general welfare programs for nonpublic school students.

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Bluebook (online)
449 P.2d 130, 51 Haw. 1, 1968 Haw. LEXIS 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spears-v-honda-haw-1968.