State ex rel. Boynton v. Bunton

40 P.2d 326, 141 Kan. 103, 1935 Kan. LEXIS 95
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 26, 1935
DocketNo. 31,938
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 40 P.2d 326 (State ex rel. Boynton v. Bunton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Boynton v. Bunton, 40 P.2d 326, 141 Kan. 103, 1935 Kan. LEXIS 95 (kan 1935).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Harvey, J.:

This is an action to enjoin the members of the school board of a common-school district in which is situated a city of the third class, and which maintains a high school, from using moneys of the school district to employ a person to transport pupils from without the district to its high school, or to pay directly to pupils without the district a sum to provide such transportation. After a hearing on the merits the trial court denied the injunction and rendered judgment for defendants. Plaintiff has appealed.

The facts are not seriously controverted and may be stated as follows: School district No. 27 in Bourbon county is a common-school district, and maintains a high school with a four-year accredited course. Within it is Fulton, a city of the third class, and it sometimes is spoken of as the Fulton school. It is small in area, about one mile square. It appears to be adjoined on all sides by common-school districts, none of which contains a city of the third [104]*104class, or maintains a high school. West of Fulton about eight miles is Mapleton, a city of the third class, situated in a common-school district which does not maintain a high school. The school district in which Mapleton is situated does not adjoin the Fulton district— in fact, two other common-school districts are situated between them. It seems the county is authorized and levies a tax to pay the tuition of high-school students residing in a common-school district which does not maintain a high school, to a high school in the county which the pupil attends. This tuition is $108 per year. The year prior to the bringing of this action the Fulton district had received high-school students from adjoining and nearby school districts, perhaps some from Mapleton, which did not maintain high schools. The Fulton district received from the county the tuition for each of such pupils and paid to the pupil a bonus of fifty cents per week for attending its high school, to compensate the pupil in whole or in part for the cost or expense to him of his transportation to the Fulton high school. Shortly prior to the bringing of this action the members of the Fulton school board decided to change this plan to one best described by the testimony of D. T. Bunton, clerk of the school board and one of the defendants. A synopsis of his testimony on this point is as follows:

“It was our intention if this injunction suit had not been started to operate the bus at the expense of district No. 27 and transport students from without the said district to the high school in Fulton. The district was to pay Bob Meek 175 a month for operating the bus; besides this we offered students residing outside of district and not in the bus route fifty cents a week as a bonus for attending the Fulton high school. District No. 27 paid this same bonus to some students last year. We paid this to help pay their cost of transportation. This was paid direct to the students themselves. We made this offer for the district to pay this amount to pupils residing as far south as the Hammond line, six miles south of Fulton, as far east as the Missouri line, two miles north to the Linn county line and as far west as Mapleton, 9 miles. The district board did not adopt any formal resolution, but we talked it over and planned to have Mr. Meek run the bus; we, the district board, agreed to pay Mr. Meek $75 per month to run the bus and transport the students. There are two country school districts intervening between district No. 27 and Mapleton. We were to pay Mr. Meek and he was to bring students to the Fulton high school from Mapleton and along the road. We were going to use public money, the money of the district No. 27, for that purpose. We planned to use a part of the $108 tuition money paid by the county for each outside student attending the Fulton high school.”

[105]*105Mr. Meek testified:

“I am the ‘bus man’ in this case. Last year we had cars and the children drove them themselves.' This year we decided amongst ourselves we would get a bus and Fulton agreed to pay $75 a month. I am now hauling 44 pupils. The children that haul pay nothing in addition to the $75.”

There is no contention that any statute authorizes Eulton district to use any of its money, whether received as tuition or otherwise, to pay transportation cost or expenses for nonresident pupils attending its high school, or to pay any of its money to such pupils for attending its school as bonus, or for transportation cost or expense, or for any purpose. All the money of the Fulton district, including what it received for tuition, so far as this record shows, was raised by taxation, and its school board had no authority to use it for a'purpose other than that for which the tax was levied and collected. Obviously the trial court was impressed with the desire of all good citizens to educate children and to give them' an opportunity to obtain an education, and further by the fact that the legislature has enacted statutes repeatedly providing for payment by the public of cost or expenses of the transportation of pupils to school when suitable schools were not near them. However commendable these motives may be — and they are — we have a department of our government, namely, the legislature, to provide for such use of public money if and when it deems such action proper, and until it does make such provision neither should school officials use the money for a purpose for which it was not levied and collected, nor should courts authorize such use. Chapter 242 of the Laws of 1929 (R. S. 1933 Supp. 72-604) was referred to as illustrative, but it is conceded not to be in point, since it applies to two high-school districts, and here the Fulton district alone has a high school. Appellees, however, do stress R. S. 1933 Supp. 72-605 as being applicable. It reads:

“That the board of education of any city of the third class having a four-year accredited high school may use such public funds of such board of education or such school district for the purpose of transporting high-school students from an adjoining district having a city of the third class and maintaining only a graded school, under such mies and regulations as such board of education or school board may prescribe.”

The argument concerning the applicability of this statute centers about the meaning of the word “adjoining” as used in the statute. Adjoin means to be contiguous to; to be in contact with; to abut [106]*106upon; and adjoining means contiguous, adjacent, according to the approved usage of the language (Webster’s International Dictionary). We are admonished by statute (R. S. 77-201, clause 2) to construe words and phrases according to the context and the approved usage of the language. This is the meaning applied by courts to statutes authorizing acts of cities or districts in adjoining cities or districts. (See Lower Ind. Creek Dr. Dist. v. Vallery, 343 Ill. 49, 174 N. E. 842; Bullock v. Cooley, 225 N. Y. 566, 122 N. E. 630; Rehill v. East Newark and Jersey City, 73 N. J. L. 220, 63 Atl. 81; Plainfield Water Co. v. Plainfield, 84 N. J. L. 634, 87 Atl. 448; Fralinger v. Cooke, 108 Md. 682, 71 Atl. 529.)

“What is adjoining must touch in some part.” (Baxter v. York Realty Co., 112 N. Y. Supp. 455.)

. Our own cases construing statutes using the word “adjoining” or “adjacent” and defining those terms are to the same effect: State, ex rel., v. Kansas City, 50 Kan. 508, 31 Pac. 1100; Board of Education v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
40 P.2d 326, 141 Kan. 103, 1935 Kan. LEXIS 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-boynton-v-bunton-kan-1935.