William Penn School District v. Pennsylvania Department of Education

170 A.3d 414, 2017 WL 4287879, 2017 Pa. LEXIS 2281
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 28, 2017
Docket46 MAP 2015
StatusPublished
Cited by53 cases

This text of 170 A.3d 414 (William Penn School District v. Pennsylvania Department of Education) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
William Penn School District v. Pennsylvania Department of Education, 170 A.3d 414, 2017 WL 4287879, 2017 Pa. LEXIS 2281 (Pa. 2017).

Opinions

OPINION

JUSTICE WECHT1

Appellant-Petitioners in this case are school district^, individuals, and groups with an interest in the quality of public education in Pennsylvania. They contend that the General Assembly and other Respondents collectively have failed to live up to the mandate, embodied in our Constitution’s Education Clause, that the General Assembly “provide for the maintenance and support of a thorough and efficient system of public education.”2 They further allege that the hybrid state-local approach to school financing results in untenable funding and resource disparities between wealthier and poorer school districts. They claim that the General Assembly’s failure legislatively to ameliorate those disparities to a greater extent than it does constitutes a violation of the equal protection of law guaranteed by the Pennsylvania Constitution.3

The Commonwealth Court, sitting in its original jurisdiction, dismissed both claims at the pleading stage, relying upon this Court’s prior dispositions of similar cases.4 Arguably, these prior decisions held that such challenges to prerogatives constitutionally conferred upon the General Assembly were political questions that the courts cannot adjudicate without infringing upon the constitutional separation of powers. Concluding that these decisions controlled the issues presented, the Commonwealth Court ruled that Petitioners’ claims lay outside the reach of the judiciary as non-justiciable political questions pursuant to the principles set forth in Baker v. Carr, 369 U.S. 186, 82 S.Ct. 691, 7 L.Ed.2d 663 (1962), and its federal and Pennsylvania progeny.

It is settled beyond peradventure that constitutional promises must be kept. Since Marbury v. Madison, 5 U.S. 137, 1 Cranch 137, 2 L.Ed. 60 (1803), it has been well-established that the separation of powers in our tripartite system of government typically depends upon judicial review to check, acts or omissions by the other branches in derogation of constitutional requirements. That same separation sometimes demands that courts leave matters exclusively to the political branches. Nonetheless, “[t]he idea that any legislature ... can conclusively determine for the people and for the courts that what’ it enacts in the form of law, or what it authorizes its agents to do, is consistent with the fundamental law, is in opposition to the theory of our institutions.” Smyth v. Ames, 169 U.S. 466, 527, 18 S.Ct. 418, 42 L.Ed. 819 (1898).5 Thus, we must be skeptical of calls to abstain from a given constitutional dispute.- We hold that this is not a case that requires such abstention. Accordingly, we reverse the Commonwealth Court’s contrary ruling.

I. Background

A. The Pennsylvania Constitution and Public Education6

The lineage of charters that led to Pennsylvania’s current Constitution offers a window into the shifting priorities and prerogatives animating the Commonwealth’s sometimes fractious history. This history informed the introduction and evolution of what became the Education Clause, a provision that has remained in our Constitution in materially the same form since 1874. We choose as a starting point William Penn’s 1682 Frame of Government of Pennsylvania. This was Pennsylvania’s first charter, .“in effect a constitution agreed,upon between Penn and the colonists,’’.and “the first real [Constitution followed in • the colony of Pennsylvania.” Gedid, supra n.6, § 3.2[a] at 33 (citing Thomas Raeburn White, Commentaries on the Constitution of Pennsylvania xvii (1907)). Notably, Penn’s Framework provided for the creation of schools, and the colonial assembly passed education legislation as early as 1683. William Penn himself stressed that the people should “spare no cost” in providing for education, opining that, “by such parsimony all is lost that is saved.” PARSS at 87 (quoting. .Philip S. Klein, et al, A History op Pennsylvania 384 (2d ed. 1973)). The Framework was short-lived, as Penn issued the Charter of Privileges in 1701, notable for its addition of certain defined individual liberties, and in particular its expansion 'of religious freedom and concomitant broadening of the electoral franchise, which, in turn, transformed Pennsylvania into a haven for oppressed religious sects. Notably absent from the Charter, though, was any provision concerning education.

Continued economic growth, as well as demographic, economic, and political changes, led to the Pennsylvania Convention of 1776. The Constitution that emerged from the convention, which came to be a model for other state charters, added extensive and now-familiar procedural protections, intra-govemmental checks and balances, and a detailed declaration of rights, Education also returned in the 1776 Constitution’s mandate that “[a] school or schools shall be established in each county by the legislature, for the convenient instruction of youth, with such salaries to the masters paid by the public, as may enable them to instruct youth at low prices.” PA. Const, of 1776 § 44.

Aspects of the 1776 Constitution, including in particular its further expansion of the franchise, its unicameral legislature, its weak executive Council of Censors lacking veto power, and a judiciary characterized by the combination of democratic selection and the brevity of judges’ terms, provoked conflict among political factions. This led to gridlock, recrimination, and, in due time, the 1789 Pennsylvania constitutional convention, which culminated in the adoption of the 1790 Constitution. The new Constitution divided legislative power into two houses, replaced the Council of Censors with a unitary executive having .veto power, and extended life tenure on good behavior to judges who were appointed rather than elected.7 Like other state constitutions enacted in that era, it resembled in its broad strokes, and in- its conception of tripartite representative democracy,.the United States Constitution..

The fledgling federal constitution conspicuously omitted- any mention of education, which presumably was among the unenumerated powers reserved to the states by the Tenth Amendment.8 But in Pennsylvania, the Constitution of 1790 preserved generally the' 1776 Constitution’s educational mandate, refining the language of the earlier clause to direct .the legislature “to provide, by law, for the establishment of schools throughout the: State, in such manner that the poor may be taught gratis.” PA. Const. , OF 1790 art. VII, § 1.

Judge Dan Pellegrini has provided a useful account of how the 1790 Education Clause’s mandate was applied in the decades that followed:

Laws effectuating the [1790 Education Clause], passed in 1802’, 1804[,] and 1809, allowed parents who declared themselves paupers to receive state aid to pay tuition at private institutions. But the “pauper school” approach reached few children, and as late as 1828, the state had paid the tuition of only 4,477 children that year. Ellwood P. Cubber-ley, Public Education in the United States 192 (2d ed. 1934).

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Bluebook (online)
170 A.3d 414, 2017 WL 4287879, 2017 Pa. LEXIS 2281, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/william-penn-school-district-v-pennsylvania-department-of-education-pa-2017.