State Ex Rel. Shoreline Etc. v. Sup. Ct. for King Cty.

346 P.2d 999, 55 Wash. 2d 177
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 3, 1959
Docket34772
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 346 P.2d 999 (State Ex Rel. Shoreline Etc. v. Sup. Ct. for King Cty.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Shoreline Etc. v. Sup. Ct. for King Cty., 346 P.2d 999, 55 Wash. 2d 177 (Wash. 1959).

Opinion

55 Wn.2d 177 (1959)
346 P.2d 999

THE STATE OF WASHINGTON, on the Relation of Shoreline School District No. 412, Plaintiff and Relator,
v.
THE SUPERIOR COURT FOR KING COUNTY, Raymond Royal, Judge, Respondent.[1]

No. 34772.

The Supreme Court of Washington, En Banc.

December 3, 1959.

Charles O. Carroll and Anthony Savage, Jr., for relator.

Murray B. Guterson, for respondent.

OTT, J.

William and Maude Wold are husband and wife, and have been residents of the state of Washington since August, 1952. Alta Lee Wold, their daughter, was born June 6, 1945. Prior to March 14, 1955, she was regularly enrolled as a grade school student at the Ronald public school in Shoreline school district No. 412 in King county. On that date, her parents withdrew her from the fourth grade. After several demands were made upon the parents by the truant officer of the school district that Alta Lee attend a public or private school, as required by Laws of 1909, chapter 97, subchapter 16, p. 364 et seq., a petition was filed in the juvenile court for King county which alleged that Alta Lee Wold was a delinquent child, because of her violation of the compulsory school attendance law of this state, and that William and Maude Wold, her parents, were contributing to her delinquency.

At the hearing upon the petition, the parents admitted that Alta Lee had not been attending public school, and that she had not been excused from attendance by any school authority. Their defense was that Alta Lee's mother had graduated from a Colorado high school in 1937; that Alta Lee was being taught the regular public grade school subjects by her mother in their home, and that this constituted a private school. A further defense was that they were members of the Seventh Elect Church In Spiritual Israel; that eating meat, fish or fowl, listening to music, and dancing *179 were forbidden by the tenets of their church, and that, to be present where meat, fish or fowl was served or music played violated their religious belief.

After considering the evidence, the juvenile court found that the "school" Alta Lee was attending did not constitute a private school as contemplated by law; that, although their church tenets were violated by public school attendance, this was not a defense to violation of the compulsory school attendance law; that Alta Lee was a dependent and delinquent child, and that the parents, William and Maude Wold, were contributing to her dependency and delinquency.

August 8, 1955, the court adjudicated Alta Lee to be a dependent child and a ward of the juvenile court, but permitted her to remain in the physical custody of her parents, conditioned upon her parents' providing, prior to September 1, 1955, a method for her education in conformity with state law.

September 14, 1955, the parents failed to appear and answer a petition relative to their compliance with the August 8, 1955, judgment, and, September 19, 1955, the court entered an order continuing the cause "Subject to Call."

The Wolds continued to disregard the judgment of the court and, on May 13, 1957, Shoreline school district No. 412 again petitioned the court for a review of the August 8, 1955, dependency order and for compliance, on the part of the parents and Alta Lee Wold, with the compulsory school attendance law.

The cause was heard before another trial judge, as the former judge voluntarily disqualified himself. Further evidence was introduced. At the close of the trial, the court found that "All of the facts and circumstances which compelled the court to assume jurisdiction over Alta Lee Wold on August 8, 1955, still exist," and that Alta Lee was still a dependent child and a ward of the court.

The court further found that the mother's teaching methods had improved in the two and one-half years she had been maintaining the home school; that the legislature had *180 not provided standards for private schools, and that, since Alta Lee was receiving a book learning comparable to that of the public schools, she was attending a private school as contemplated by law.

Following the entry of judgment, the district was granted a review in this court by certiorari.

The principal assignment of error relates to the court's finding that the Wolds' home school constituted a qualified private school as contemplated by law.

We agree with relator's contention that the court's findings are inconsistent. It found that Alta Lee Wold was not attending a public or private school, as provided by law, and was therefore a dependent child. After so finding, it then found that the home school which she was attending, and which caused her to be adjudicated a dependent child, was a qualified private school. In other words, the juvenile court obtained jurisdiction of Alta Lee Wold and made her a ward of the court because the court found that she was not attending a qualified private school, as contemplated by law. After obtaining jurisdiction of Alta Lee on this basis, the court then found that the welfare of its ward would best be served by her attending the same unqualified school because its method of education was "in conformity with the laws of this state."

The juvenile court's decision is inconsistent with State v. Counort, 69 Wash. 361, 124 Pac. 910 (1912) (to which decision we adhere), wherein this court held that a father teaching his children at home was doing so in violation of the compulsory school attendance law. In the cited case, this court said [p. 363]:

"... We do not think that the giving of instruction by a parent to a child, conceding the competency of the parent to fully instruct the child in all that is taught in the public schools, is within the meaning of the law `to attend a private school.' Such a requirement means more than home instruction; it means the same character of school as the public school, a regular, organized and existing institution making a business of instructing children of school age in the required studies and for the full time required by the laws of this state. The only difference between the *181 two schools is the nature of the institution. One is a public institution, organized and maintained as one of the institutions of the state. The other is a private institution, organized and maintained by private individuals or corporations. There may be a difference in institution and government, but the purpose and end of both public and private schools must be the same — the education of children of school age. The parent who teaches his children at home, whatever be his reason for desiring to do so, does not maintain such a school. Undoubtedly a private school may be maintained in a private home in which the children of the instructor may be pupils. This provision of the law is not to be determined by the place where the school is maintained, nor the individuality or number of the pupils who attend it. It is to be determined by the purpose, intent and character of the endeavor...."

Article IX, § 1, of our state constitution, provides that "It is the paramount duty of the state to make ample provision for the education of all children residing within its borders, ..." The legislature, in compliance with this constitutional mandate, provided for compulsory school attendance for all children between the ages of eight and sixteen years (unless excused from attendance for reasons not here material) at either a public or private school.

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Bluebook (online)
346 P.2d 999, 55 Wash. 2d 177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-shoreline-etc-v-sup-ct-for-king-cty-wash-1959.