State Ex Rel. Cook v. Board of Education

25 N.E.2d 317, 63 Ohio App. 71, 16 Ohio Op. 340, 1939 Ohio App. LEXIS 285
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 16, 1939
StatusPublished

This text of 25 N.E.2d 317 (State Ex Rel. Cook v. Board of Education) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Cook v. Board of Education, 25 N.E.2d 317, 63 Ohio App. 71, 16 Ohio Op. 340, 1939 Ohio App. LEXIS 285 (Ohio Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

Gillen, J.

Relators instituted an action, originating in this court, wherein they seek a writ of mandamus to command respondent to admit Richard Cook as a pupil in the Grant Junior High School in the Portsmouth City School District. It appears from the agreed statement of facts that Richard Cook, son of the relators, is a boy of school age residing in the Clay Township Rural School District of Scioto county, Ohio, and that he has been assigned to attend a school in that district more than four miles from his residence by the nearest direct route of public travel; that *72 the Portsmouth City School District is an adjoining district and maintains a school which includes the eighth grade which is located at a nearer distance to his residence than the school to which he is assigned. The school district of his residence is a centralized school district and transportation is furnished Richard Cook to the school to which he is assigned. The Portsmouth City School District refused to admit him as a pupil and no agreement has been made by relators or Richard Cook to pay tuition to such district.

It is agreed that the school to which Richard Cook is assigned is chartered by the Director of Education of the state of Ohio as a six-year high school of the first grade, and that Grant School, a school in the school district of the respondent, nearer to his residence than the school to which he is assigned, is chartered and recognized as a junior high school.

Section 7735, General Code, provides as follows:

“"When pupils live more than one and one-half miles from the school to which they are assigned in the district where they reside, they may attend a nearer school in the same district, or if there be none nearer therein, then the nearest school in another school district, in all grades below the high school. In such cases the board of education of the district in which they reside must pay the tuition of such pupils without an agreement to that effect. But a board of education shall not collect tuition for such attendance until after notice thereof has been given to the board of education of the district where the pupils reside. Nothing herein shall require the consent of the board of education of the district where the pupils reside, to such attendance. ’ ’

Section 7748-1, General Code, provides as follows:

“When a board of education maintains a junior high school recognized as such by the director of education *73 it shall not he required to pay the tuition of a pupil to a high school in another district, except such as may live more than four miles by the most direct route of public travel from such junior high school and nearer to a high school in another district, until such pupil has completed a ninth grade curriculum in such junior high school within the district.

“Transportation laws which apply to elementary school pupils shall apply to pupils of the seventh and eighth years in a junior high school organization; transportation laws which apply to high school pupils shall apply to pupils of the ninth year in a junior high school organization.”

For a great many years it has been provided by law that elementary school pupils may attend a nearer school within or without the district if they live more than one and one-half miles from the school to which they are assigned. The law to that effect was first enacted in 1892. 89 Ohio Laws, 233. That was before the day of centralization of schools and before any provision was made by law authorizing boards' of education to transport pupils to school. In 1904, after the centralization of schools and transportation of pupils was authorized, the law referred to above was amended ‘so as to provide that when pupils were transported to the school to which they were assigned, the provision with reference to their attending a nearer school, if they lived more than one and one-half miles from the school to which they were assigned, did not apply. Both these provisions were contained at that time in Section 4022a, Revised Statutes. When the statutes were codified in 1910, Section 4022a was codified as Sections 7735, 7736 and 7737 of the General Code. When the Legislature enacted the school foundation law in 1935 the provisions of Section 7735, General Code, were retained but Sections 7736 and 7737, General Code, were repealed. It is urged that since Section 7737 was repealed the provisions of Section 7735 *74 confer on relators the absolute right to send their son to the Portsmouth school at the expense of his home district. It is urged that in the event Richard Cook is found to be an eighth grade pupil of the elementary school his right to attend the Portsmouth school is fixed by the provisions of Section 7735, General Code, and that in the event he is found to be a junior high school pupil his right to attend is controlled by the provisions of Section 7748-1, General Code. Respondent adopts the view that in either event, if transportation be furnished by the local board, Richard Cook must attend the school to which he is assigned in the district of his residence or else attend a school outside such district at his own expense.

Section 7731, General Code, provides that all resident elementary school pupils living more than two miles from the school to which they are assigned shall be furnished transportation by the local board.

Section 7764, General Code, provides as follows:

“The child in his attendance at school shall be subject to assignment by the principal of the public school or superintendent of schools as the case may be, to the class in elementary school, high school or other school, suited to his age and state of advancement and vocational interest, within the school district; or, if the schooling is not available within the district, without the school district, provided the child’s tuition is paid and provided further that transportation is furnished in the case he lives more than two miles from the school, if elementary, or four miles from the school, if a high school or other school. The transportation of high school pupils under this section shall be in accordance with the provisions of 7749-1. The board of education of the district in which the child lives shall have power to furnish such transportation. Provided,, however, that when a high school pupil shall attend a high school other than that to which such pupil has been assigned, the transportation and tuition shall be based *75 on the cost of the transportation and tuition incident to attendance at the school to which they shall have been assigned.”

Section 7749, General Code, provides:

“When the elementary schools of any rural school district in which a high school is maintained are centralized and transportation of pupils is provided, all pupils resident of the rural school district who have completed the elementary school work shall be entitled to transportation to the high school of such rural district, and the board of education thereof shall be exempt from the payment of the tuition of such pupils in any other high school for such a portion of four years as the course of study in the high school maintained by the board of education includes.”

Section 7749-1, General Code, provides:

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 N.E.2d 317, 63 Ohio App. 71, 16 Ohio Op. 340, 1939 Ohio App. LEXIS 285, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-cook-v-board-of-education-ohioctapp-1939.