Hazelton v. Cranmer
Hazelton v. Cranmer
Opinion of the Court
The custodian of the school moneys for the school district of Stafford township, in the county of Ocean, seeks a writ of mandamus to compel the collector of the county of Ocean to pay over all the school moneys in the custody of the respondent apportioned to the board of education of the township for the year beginning July 1st, 1930, and for the year beginning July 1st, 1931.' The sums involved appear to be $5,748.02 and $4,983.83, respectively. The case was not orally argued, and the only brief that has come to our hands is that in behalf of the relator.
The funds were retained by the collector of the county of Ocean in compliance with an order of the state commissioner of education dated November 26th, 1930. That order grew
The issue is whether or not the 1929 act is constitutional, and our conclusion is that it is not. The act provides in part that “any child who shall be a resident of a district which does not furnish a full high school course of study * * * may be admitted to a school in another district. The high schools throughout the state to which other districts shall send their pupils or a part thereof shall be deemed to be those high schools which at the time of the passage of this act are already designated by boards of education of districts lacking high school facilities as aforesaid as schools for their pupils or a portion of their pupils to attend. Such existing designation of a high school * * * shall continue until the board of education thereof shall for good and sufficient reasons desire a change in such existing designation and shall secure the approval of the commissioner of education therefor; * *
It is said, and we think truly, that the act is limited in its purview to school districts that did not at the time of passage furnish a full high school course of study and that it does not apply to any school district which in the future may lack or discontinue high school facilities or which at the time of the passage of the act had no high school facilities and were not sending high school pupils to another district; that the statutes include only those districts which at the
We assume from the absence of opposing briefs that the unconstitutionality of the statute is conceded. Inasmuch as the order to withhold the funds was based upon an order by the commissioner of education which in turn was grounded in this unconstitutional statute, there appears to be no reason why the fund should be longer withheld.
A writ of mandamus will issue in accordance with the terms of the rule, but without costs.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- LEON W. HAZELTON, CUSTODIAN OF SCHOOL MONEYS FOR THE SCHOOL DISTRICT OF STAFFORD TOWNSHIP, RELATOR v. THEODORE CRANMER, COLLECTOR OF THE COUNTY OF OCEAN
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published