Williamstown Graded Free School District v. Webb

12 S.W. 298, 89 Ky. 264, 1889 Ky. LEXIS 125
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedNovember 2, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 12 S.W. 298 (Williamstown Graded Free School District v. Webb) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williamstown Graded Free School District v. Webb, 12 S.W. 298, 89 Ky. 264, 1889 Ky. LEXIS 125 (Ky. Ct. App. 1889).

Opinion

JUDGE HOLT

delivered the opinion oe the court.

The Legislature, by an act approved April 15, 1884, provided for the establishment of a graded free school in Williamstown in lieu of common school district number one of Grant county, and to include the same territory. (Yol. 1, Acts 1883-4, page 1292.) Among its other provisions, as amended by a subsequent act, it authorized the trustees of the then existing district, after giving certain notice as to time, place and purpose, to hold an election on the first Saturday in J une5 1884, to take the sense of the voters as to whether the proposed school should be established; and to also then vote for six trustees therefor, who should prescribe the qualifications of its teachers, select them, and in all other respects have exclusive control of the district. They were also authorized to levy an annual tax upon the property of the district, not exceeding fifty cents upon the hundred dollars, to carry out the purpose of the law, the amount of it to be entered upon the order-book of the Grant County Court “as soon as practicable each year after the county assessor shall have returned his assessment of the property in said county.” All the property of the old district was to vest in the new one, and the trustees of the latter, in case of its establishment, were authorized to draw the ■district’s pro rata of the common school fund, it to [268]*268be used only for the payment of the teachers; and. to-this end the trustees were to ascertain the number of children within the school age in the district, and report the same to the common school commissioner of the county, to be by him reported to the Superintendent of Public Instruction. It was further provided by the twentieth section of the act: “The trustees of the common school in district number one in Grant county shall have power to open a poll, not of tener than once-every year, upon the question of establishing this district, and the election of trustees as hereinbefore provided for, until same shall be adopted; and no other-election shall be held by them, but all subsequent elections, upon any and all questions, shall be held by the board of trustees hereby created.” * * * *

An election was held in conformity to the law on the first Saturday in June, 1884, resulting in a majority voting against the establishment of the school. Another election was had in 1887 with a contrary result.. It was not held on the first Saturday in June, however, but Apon the second day of July, that time having-been fixed by the trustees of the then existing district for the election. Nor was the question then submitted to the voters in the language of the law, whether or not they were in favor of establishing a graded free-school, but whether they favored a tax of fifty cents upon each one hundred dollars of property for such a purpose. The trustees who were then elected levied, the said tax on July 11, 1887, basing it upon the assessment returned by the county assessor in December,. 1886.

These suits were brought by some of the tax-payers-[269]*269■of the district, enjoining the collection of their portion ■of the tax by sales of their property. They insist that the act of the Legislature is unconstitutional, and, therefore, void; that it abolishes their common school district; diverts its portion of the common school fund improperly ; transfers its property to another corporation, • and provides for the establishment of a school which is not “a common school” within the meaning of the law, and, if mistaken in this, that then no valid election was ever held; and those claiming to be trustees had no power to levy the tax.

Sorhe preliminary questions were made by the appellants in the form of motions to dissolve the injunctions and special demurrers to the petitions, but they did not .reach the substance of the controversy, and in view of the conclusion reached by us as to it we need not consider them. The question of the constitutionality of the law is important. It involves upon the one hand the existence of our graded schools and upon the other the protection of our common school system, which has for years been the pride of the State, as it furnishes to tire indigent children of our Commonwealth the means of obtaining an education without cost. Prior to the adoption of our present Constitution our common school system was at times in peril. It' seemed .about to be deprived of a fund for its support. It was, therefore, provided by section 1, article 11, of that instrument: “The capital of the fund called and known as the‘common school fund,’ * * * together with .any sum which may be hereafter raised in the State by taxation or otherwise for purposes of education, shall he held inviolate for the purpose of sustaining a sys[270]*270tern of common schools. The interest and dividends-of said funds, together with any sum which may be produced for that purpose by taxation or otherwise, may be appropriated in aid of common schools, but tor-no other purpose.”

Thus, by the organic law, the school fund was devoted to one purpose. The Legislature has no power to divert it to any other. It must be used “in aid of common schools.” If, however, this expression were construed to. include any purpose which might incidentally aid them, the fund might soon be frittered away, and the purpose of the framers of our Constitution not only be defeated, but our school system crippled, if not destroyed.

Looking, therefore, to the history, design and scope of this constitutional provision, it was properly defined in the case of Collins v. Henderson, 11 Bush, 74, to mean aid in defraying the expenses of schools actually kept according to law, to-wit: those under the control of trustees, kept by a qualified teacher, and which every child in the district within the school age, whether contributing to its expenses or not, might attend.

Guided by this rule, which is unquestionably the proper one in a government resting for its strength upon the intelligence of the people, let us see if the proposed school can fairly be said to be in aid of our common school system.

The title of the act is, “An act to establish and maintain a graded free school in Williamstown, Grant county.” The first section of it also declares that the purpose is to establish “a graded free school,” and [271]*271that the territory therein named “ is hereby constituted. a common school - district. * * * * The corporate name thereof shall be known as the Williamstown Graded Free School District.” All the children of the district within the school age are to have the privilege of attending free of charge, and the proceeds of the property obtained from the old district are to be applied for “said school purposes.”

The school is to be under the charge of trustees, who, in certain matters named in the act, are to report to the common school officers of the State. It is true they are, by its terms, to prescribe the course of study and the qualifications of its teachers; select them, ánd for that purpose appoint examiners; but the Legislature certainly has the constitutional power to so provide, and their doing so does not deprive the school of its common school character. If the Legislature can declare that a person shall be qualified to teach a common school, who has a certificate to that effect from a county commissioner or some other person, it can equally provide that the trustees of this school shall pass upon his or her qualifications.

In our opinion, the act is not in conflict with our common school system, but in aid of it.

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Bluebook (online)
12 S.W. 298, 89 Ky. 264, 1889 Ky. LEXIS 125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williamstown-graded-free-school-district-v-webb-kyctapp-1889.