FOR PUBLICATION
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANTS
: ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE:
JACQUELYN BOWIE SUESS PATRICK A. SHOULDERS
KENNETH J. FALK ROBERT L. BURKART
Indiana Civil Liberties Union Ziemer Stayman Weitzel & Shoulders, LLP
Indianapolis, Indiana Evansville, Indiana
FRANK NAGY, on behalf of himself, )
his children, WESTON NAGY and )
JORDAN NAGY, and those similarly )
situated, and SONJA BRACKETT, on )
behalf of herself, her children, CORY )
BRASHEAR and CAMERON )
BRACKETT, and those similarly situated, )
)
Appellants/Cross-Appellees-Plaintiffs, )
)
vs. ) No. 82A01-0308-CV-299
)
EVANSVILLE-VANDERBURGH )
SCHOOL CORPORATION, )
)
Appellee/Cross-Appellant-Defendant. )
OPINION FOR PUBLICATION
According to the Parents, the fee amounts to a charge for tuition, which
is violative of the constitutional provision in question. Our task is to
determine what is meant by the phrase wherein tuition shall be without charge.
We analyze questions arising under the Indiana Constitution by examining the language of
the text in the context of the history surrounding its drafting and ratification,
the purpose and structure of our constitution, and case law interpreting the specific
provisions. Indiana Gaming Commn v. Moseley, 643 N.E.2d 296, 298 (Ind. 1994).
The task of interpreting a particular provision of the Indiana Constitution is
a search for the common understanding of both those who framed it and
those who ratified it. Bayh v. Sonnenburg, 573 N.E.2d 398, 412 (Ind.
1991). In placing a construction upon a constitution or any clause or
part thereof, we should look to the history of the times and examine
the state of things existing when the constitution or any part thereof was
framed and adopted in order to ascertain the old law, the mischief, and
the remedy. Id.
The only Indiana case which directly deals with the meaning of tuition within
Article 8, Section 1 is Chandler v. South Bend Cmty. Sch. Corp., 160
Ind.App. 592, 312 N.E.2d 915 (1974). In Chandler, the Third District of
this court was faced with a challenge to the constitutionality of charging students
a textbook rental fee. The plaintiffs claimed that charging for textbooks violated
the free tuition provision of Article 8, Section 1. The court concluded:
We can find no basis for interpreting the word tuition, to include textbooks
used in public schools of the State. Blacks Law Dictionary defines tuition
as The act or business of teaching the various branches of learning.
Websters Third New International Dictionary adds . . . the act of teaching:
the services or guidance of a teacher: . . . the price of
or payment for instruction. Neither definition states or implies that the word
entails textbooks. Nor does the case law interpreting constitutional mandates of free
tuition similar to that in Article 8, Section 1, indicate a contrary result.
See Rheam v. Bd. of Regents of University of Oklahoma (1933), 161
Okl. 268, 18 P.2d 535, 538 and State ex rel. Priest v. Regents
of University of Wisconsin (1882), 54 Wis. 159, 11 N.W. 472, 473.
Chandler, 160 Ind. at 601, 312 N.E.2d at 920.
Although the fifth, sixth, and seventh editions of Blacks Law Dictionary contain no
entry for tuition, the Websters definition used in Chandler is still current.
Similarly, the non-obsolete definitions of tuition contained in the New Shorter Oxford English
Dictionary are, The action, business, or function of a teacher; teaching, instruction (esp.
in return for a fee).
See footnote
Id. at 3418. Thus, Article 8,
Section 1 mandates that the State at the very least not charge students
for the functions or services of a teacher, teaching, or instruction.
The Chandler court, although acknowledging that a historical perspective provide[s] a valid insight,
refused to consider the historical context surrounding the adoption of Article 8, Section
1, stating that such consideration is appropriate only where an ambiguity is present.
See 160 Ind.App. at 602, 312 N.E.2d at 920-21. However, given
the importance of such context and the standard set forth in Bayh, supra,
we feel it prudent to explore the history and background of this provision.
Education has long been an important part of the fundamental law of Indiana.
Our current Article 8, Section 1 is the successor to similar provisions
in the 1816 Indiana Constitution and an educational provision of the Northwest Ordinance
of 1787. See generally 1 Charles Kettleborough, Constitution Making in Indiana 3
(1916). Article Three of the Northwest Ordinance stated in part, Religion, morality,
and knowledge, being necessary to good government and the happiness of mankind, schools
and the means of education shall forever be encouraged. . . .
Id. at 31-32. Upon Indianas admittance into the Union in 1816, our
first State Constitution contained the following provision regarding education:
Sec. 1st. Knowledge and learning generally diffused, through a community, being essential
to the preservation of a free Government, and spreading the opportunities, and advantages
of education through the various parts of the Country, being highly conducive to
this end, it shall be the duty of the General Assembly to provide,
by law, for the improvement of such lands as are, or hereafter may
be granted, by the [U]nited States to this state, for the use of
schools, and to apply any funds which may be raised from such lands,
or from any other quarters to the accomplishment of the grand object for
which they are or may be intended. . . .
Sec. 2. It shall be the duty of the General [A]ssembly, as
soon as circumstances will permit, to provide by law, for a general system
of education, ascending in a regular graduation, from township schools to a state
university, wherein tuition shall be gratis, and equally open to all. Id.
at 113-14 (emphasis supplied).
As observed by our Supreme Court in Richardson v. State, our ability to
discern the intentions of the framers of the 1816 Constitution is limited, because
the journal of the 1816 constitutional convention does not report the delegates remarks
or disclose informative procedural matters. 717 N.E.2d 32, 38 (Ind. 1999) (citing
Journal of the Convention of the Indiana Territory, reprinted in 61 Ind. Mag.
Of Hist. 89-155 (1965)). Indeed, our review of the journal of the
1816 constitutional convention reveals little insight into the educational provisions of the 1816
Constitution.
See footnote However, one commentator has stated that despite this liberal provision for
education in the 1816 Constitution, [t]he qualifying words, as soon as circumstances will
permit, left this promise unfulfilled by the General Assembly until it was replaced
in the 1851 Constitution.
William P. McLauchlan, The Indiana State Constitution, A
Reference Guide 34 (1996).
The second Indiana constitutional convention, which led to the adoption of our current
state Constitution, left a more complete record of its activities. Unfortunately, very
little of this record provides a direct insight as to what the framers
meant when they provided that tuition shall be without charge. Yet there
was considerable debate in the convention regarding the educational provisions of the proposed
new constitution, particularly regarding the funding of the common school system.
See footnote Still,
the debates do reveal that education was an important topic to citizens of
the day. One delegate, Mr. Read of Monroe County, speaking in support
of establishing an office of Superintendent of Schools, stated:
We are, sir, laying broader political foundations. . . . The education
of every child in the State has become simply a political necessity.
It is a necessary measure of defense and self-preservation. We
mustyes, sir,
I repeat it, we must have a better devised and more efficient system
of general education. On this subject, there can be but one opinion
in this body, and indeed, among the people of the State at large.
2 Report of the Debates and Proceedings of the Convention for the
Revision of the Constitution of the State of Indiana 1850, at 1858-59 (1850)
(hereinafter Debates) (emphasis in original).
Another delegate, Mr. Bryant of Warren County, quoted from the 1840 census, which
indicated that Indiana was the most ignorant of all the free States, and
far, very far, behind many of the slave States. Debates at 1889-90
(emphasis in original). According to Mr. Bryant, the 1840 U.S. Census revealed
that over 38,100 Indiana citizens over the age of twenty-one were illiterate.
See footnote
Id. at 1890. As a result of these disturbing statistics, the people
of this State called for improvements and to adopt some system of general
education in accordance with that marked out by the framers of [the 1816]
Constitution. . . . [A] bill was passed through the House of
Representatives, and defeated in the Senate. The question was submitted to the
people, whether they would have free schools or not. They responded in
the affirmative by a majority of about sixteen thousand . . . .
Id. (emphasis supplied). Thereafter, a new bill was passed by the
House which established a system of free schools with a limited tax.
Id. The Senate then referred this to the citizenry of the State
by a provision that the law should operate in only those counties which
adopted it by a popular vote, and more than sixty counties did so.
Id. See also Maize v. State, 4 Ind. 342 (1853) (referring
to school law of 1849). Such efforts were either too little or
too late, for the 1850 U.S. Census showed that Indiana had 73,299 illiterate
men and women.
See footnote
Debates at 1890.
In light of this historical context, we can say with some certainty that
the evil to be addressed by what became Article 8 of our Constitution
was a lack of education and the subsequent problem of illiteracy among Indianas
citizens. In response to this problem, the framers of the 1851 Constitution
drafted our current Article 8, Section 1. For present purposes, the most
notable change between the 1816 and 1851 constitutional provisions providing for public education
was the elimination of the qualifying words as soon as circumstances will permit.
See footnote
This made the duty imposed upon the General Assembly immediate. The
striking of this provision was upon the motion of Mr. Bryant, who stated:
I will say that this clause was inserted inadvertently by the committee.
It was not intended to retain anything more of the first section of
the present Constitution, than those parts of it that were applicable to our
system. We certainly did not intend to insert anything that would have
the effect of preventing or postponing the establishment of
free schools. Debates
at 1858 (emphasis supplied).
Providing an education to all citizens of the State, a goal which the
1816 Constitution had failed to reach, was the goal of the framers of
our current Constitution.
After the ratification of the new Constitution, the controversies arising under Article Eight
mainly dealt with the issues surrounding school funding. See e.g., Greencastle Township
v. Black, 5 Ind. 557 (1854) (local township tax to pay expenses of
local common schools and the State statute which authorized such were unconstitutional because
the uniformity of the common school system would be destroyed); Adamson v. Auditor
& Treasurer of Warren County, 9 Ind. 174 (1857) (although statutes conferring to
township trustees the power to tax must be general, exercise of such power
need not be uniform throughout the State); Shepardson v. Gillet, 133 Ind. 125,
31 N.E. 788 (1892) (rejecting claim that statute was unconstitutional which authorized trustees
of incorporated towns to levy taxes for the support of town schools within
their corporations); Sch. City of Marion v. Forrest, 168 Ind. 94, 78 N.E.
187 (1906) (stating that no question had been raised concerning the validity of
statutes authorizing school boards to levy taxes for certain purposes, aside from the
question as to the power to tax for tuition purposes).
In Robinson v. Schenck, 102 Ind. 307, 1 N.E. 698 (1885), the Court,
citing Adamson, overruled Maize and Black, supra. The Court held that [i]f
it be true that the local authorities may be invested with authority to
levy taxes to build school-houses, then it must also be true that they
may be invested with authority to levy taxes to employ teachers. 102
Ind. at 317, 1 N.E. at 704. In describing the
broad authority of the legislature in dealing with education, the Court stated that
the only limits thereupon were that the system must be a general and
uniform one, and tuition must be free and open to all. 102
Ind. at 318, 1 N.E. at 705. The Court also
withdrew from the distinction drawn in Adamson between teacher pay and school buildings:
There is not the remotest implication in the Constitution authorizing the conclusion that
there is a difference between the right to levy taxes for the purpose
of erecting houses for the accommodation of the pupils, and the right to
levy taxes to pay teachers for instructing them, and the court has no
power to create such an implication. The act of teaching implies a
place to teach as well as a teacher. Both the teaching and
the place where instruction is imparted are embraced within the language of our
Constitution, and the two things are so closely blended that they can not
be separated. If the teacher of a private school were to send
to the father of one of his pupils an account for tuition, and
afterwards a bill for the use of the place where the school was
conducted, the position of the teacher would, in principle, be precisely the same
as that occupied by those who affirm that the power to levy a
tax to erect school-houses may be delegated, but the power to levy a
tax to pay teachers can not be. 102 Ind. at 318, 1
N.E. at 704-05 (emphasis supplied).
Still, none of these early cases dealt directly with the question of what
tuition without charge means.
An early case which comes close to the subject is State ex rel.
Clark v. Haworth, 122 Ind. 462, 23 N.E. 946 (1890). Haworth involved
a constitutional challenge under Article 1, Section 23 to a statute providing for
a statewide bidding process for the procurement of textbooks.
See footnote Section 7 of
the statute in question stated in relevant part:
upon the receipt of such books by said school trustees they shall furnish
them on demand to the school patrons or school children of their respective
corporations at the price fixed therefor by the contract entered into between said
board of commissioners and said contractor; and it shall be the duty of
such school officers to sell such books for cash only . . .
.
Haworth, 122 Ind. at 492, 23 N.E. at 956 (Berkshire, J., dissenting).
In discussing this provision, the Haworth Court observed:
It is to be remembered that the statute does not command that every
person shall buy the books; it confines the requirement to those who receive
the benefit of the public schools. These schools are owned and maintained
by the state, and the state may prescribe the terms and conditions upon
which pupils may enter them, except that it can not disregard the constitutional
injunction that tuition shall be without charge, and equally open to all.
122 Ind. at 473-74, 23 N.E. at 949.
Thus, the Haworth Court was faced with a statute which required public school
children to purchase books. And in discussing an attack under Article 1,
Section 23, the Court took note of Article 8, Section 1, but mentioned
no violation of Article 8, Section 1 by the statute requiring students to
purchase textbooks. Although this could be read to suggest that the Haworth
Court did not consider a charge for textbooks to be included within a
system of free tuition, we find it significant that the Haworth Court was
not faced with a direct challenge to the statute in question under Article
8, Section 1. Any discussion of Article 8, Section 1 was in
passing and not necessary to the holding of the Court. As far
as our research has revealed, Chandler remains the only Indiana case to have
directly discussed the question of what Article 8, Section 1 means by the
provision that tuition shall be without charge.
Given the historical background and purpose of Article 8, Section 1, we have
our doubts with respect to the holding of Chandler. If the mandate
of Article 8, Section 1 was to remedy the problem of widespread illiteracy
and the lack of proper education among Indiana citizens, such a mandate could
be easily thwarted if public schools, although not charging for tuition as that
term was strictly construed in Chandler, nevertheless charged for things necessary to properly
educate students. Under Chandler, Indiana public schools could effectively, and constitutionally, price
education beyond the means of many Hoosiers.
Although the fee being charged by the EVSC is currently only twenty dollars,
nothing in the logic of the EVSCs argument, or the Chandler holding, would
prohibit public schools from charging a student a $200 fee, or for that
matter even a $2000 fee. This logic would permit our system
of public schools to be priced out of reach in order to avoid
raising local taxes. It would be a cold comfort indeed to inform
a Hoosier family of limited means that they could send their children to
public schools without being charged for teachers salaries, but to say that they
would be charged for school buildings, heating, electricity, textbooks, etc.
We also find instructive that portion of Article 8, Section 1 which immediately
follows the mandate that the common schools not charge for tuition. In
context, Article 8, Section 1 states that tuition in common schools shall be
without charge, and equally open to all. Were public school students charged
for everything but the strictest definition of tuition, it could hardly be said
that the schools were truly equally open to all if the poorest of
families were unable to afford these other charges.
To be sure, Chandler has remained unchallenged since it was decided. Too,
we do not lightly disagree with long-standing precedent. Nevertheless, in a matter
relating to our state Constitution, we are not beholden to blindly follow what
we consider to be an erroneous holding. We therefore conclude that, to
have any forceful meaning at all, Article 8, Section 1 must be interpreted
to mean that not only must Indiana public schools not charge for tuition
in the sense of the services of a teacher or instruction, but also
must not charge for those functions and services which are by their very
nature essential to teaching or tuition. Cf. Indiana High Sch. Athletic Assn.
v. Carlberg, 694 N.E.2d 222, 229 (Ind. 1997) (recognizing that our Constitution specifies
that knowledge and learning are essential to the preservation of a free government
and so mandates a statewide system of free public education.). It is
absurd to suggest that public schools may not charge for the services of
a teacher, but may charge students a fee for things as essential to
teaching and instruction as the services of the teacher, such as school buildings,
maintenance, heating and cooling, electricity, or textbooks. To so hold, as did
the Chandler court, leaves Article 8, Section 1 impotent and effectively meaningless.
This could not have been the intent of those who drafted Article 8,
Section 1 in an effort to ensure an adequate education for all Indiana
citizens.
See footnote We are not insensitive to concerns of local officials faced with
the difficult choice of raising taxes or cutting back on popular school programs.
However, we cannot ignore what we see as the mandate of our
Constitution.
There is indisputable merit to the position taken by the dissent to the
extent that Judge Bailey sees the issue as one for solution by the
community. We depart, however, from that view if it be limited to
a particular local community or a segment thereof.
The education of the children of the State of Indiana is a concern
of the State community. That is precisely why the drafters of our
Constitution imposed the duty of a general and uniform system . . .
wherein tuition shall be without charge and open to all.
Our holding today does not, as suggested by the dissent, necessarily require the
provision of basketballs . . . trainers . . . [and] soccer fields
(Dissent at 29) at no expense to the immediate users and beneficiaries of
such items, personnel, and facilities. We certainly do not imply that taxpayers
must necessarily foot the bill for 10,000 seat basketball arenas, state-of-the-art concert halls,
or a faculty dining room with linen tablecloths, china, and a fully staffed
chefs kitchen; nor do we say that local taxpayers may not choose to
pay for such accessories or frills to their educational environment. Be that
as it may, our holding specifically relates to only those functions and services
which are by their very nature essential to teaching or tuition. Slip
op. at 16. The holding itself is limited in its inclusions.
On the other hand, the dissent would limit the requirement of free education
imposed by our Constitution of state-wide application to the lowest common denominator of
what may be perceived to be teaching, i.e. nothing more than payment of
minimum teachers salaries to the fewest number of teachers necessary to cover the
required curriculum. It would seem to provide encouragement to those among
us, hopefully a very small minority, who see no value in a broadly
based education and curriculum but who find adequate a teaching of readin writin
and rithmatic without the frills of foreign languages, computer science, and honors
programs. Such regression would be akin to a return to the one-room
school house with a solitary, dedicated, but limited school-marm.
See footnote
We recognize that courts in our sister states have reached varying holdings with
regard to questions of what may properly be charged by public schools under
their constitutions.See footnote
See Jeffrey F. Ghent, Validity of Exaction of Fees from
Children Attending Elementary or Secondary Public Schools, 41 A.L.R. 3d 752, 757 (1972);
78A C.J.S. Schools & School Districts § 726-27 (1995); 68 Am. Jur. 2d
Schools § 238-39 (2000).
The EVSC seeks to distinguish the present situation from those cases in which
various fees charged to students were held to be improper by correctly noting
that in several of those cases, the constitutional language at issue called for
a system of free schools, whereas Indianas Constitution requires that only tuition be
without charge. As explained, however, a system whereby public schools could charge
for all things outside a narrow definition of tuition could in effect render
meaningless the mandate of free tuition, i.e. instruction. We also find instructive
the opinion of the Supreme Court of Kansas in Dick, supra. In
Dick, the plaintiffs claimed that the collection of a tuition fee violated a
provision of the Kansas Constitution which at that time stated, The Legislature shall
encourage the promotion of intellectual, moral, scientific and agricultural improvement, by establishing a
uniform system of commons schools . . . .
See footnote 78 P. at
813 (quoting Kans. Const. Art. 6, Sec. 2). After quoting from several
law dictionaries, the court concluded, We think it follows, therefore, both from authority
and reason, that the phrase common schools was used in the Constitution in
its technical sense, which means free schools . . . .
Id.
at 814. See also Debates, supra, at 1858 (referring to Article 8,
Section 1 as establishing free schools). If common schools are synonymous with
free schools, then the distinction between our constitutional provision calling for common schools
wherein tuition shall be without charge, and those other states whose constitutions call
for free schools, is significantly lessened.
Our conclusion that Indiana public schools are prohibited not only from charging for
tuition, but also for those functions and services which are by their very
nature essential to teaching or instruction, is similar to the conclusion reached in
Paulson and Bond, supra. These cases held that public schools may not
charge for necessary elements of any schools activity, 463 P.2d at 938, or
integral fundamental part[s] of the elementary and secondary education. 178 N.W.2d at
488.
Given our holding, the question remains: does the fee charged by the EVSC
amount to a charge for tuition and those activities and functions essential to
tuition? The Parents specifically complain that the fee is used to pay
for the cost of elementary school counselors, school nurses, media specialists, the coordinator
of student services, the alternative education program, and extra-curricular activities. The parents
also complain that the money generated by the fee is commingled with other
monies in the EVSCs general fund. This general fund is used to
pay for expenses which even under the EVSCs narrow view constitute tuition.
For example, it is undisputed that teachers salaries are paid from the general
fund. According to the Parents, because of the commingling, it is impossible
to tell what the fee is actually being used to pay for, i.e.
tuition or non-tuition related expenses, and therefore the fee necessarily amounts to a
charge for tuition.
In support of their position, the Parents refer to the deposition testimony of
Robert Yeager, the assistant superintendent of personnel and finance for the EVSC.
At the deposition, the Parents counsel questioned Mr. Yeager regarding the money generated
by the fee:
Q. And what exactly is all the student fee used for? Everything its
used for, the student services fee.
A. Well, theres a list of some of the items here. To go
in and define exactly what this dollar went for and that dollar went
for would be an impossibility. What you have to do is look
at the school budget and then look at the line items of the
school budget. Thats the only way you can see how that money
is filtered out to pay for things.
Q. And the school budget then, does it show heres all the money from
the student fees and heres where its going? Is it separated out,
that money?
A. Its not separated out.
Upon appeal, the EVSC does not deny that the funds generated by the
fee are commingled with other monies in the general fund.
See footnote However, the
EVSC claims that the evidence establishes that the EVSC has not used the
fee to offset costs of state mandated education, instruction, or curriculum. It
is true that upon questioning by the EVSCs counsel, Mr. Yeager testified that
the money generated by the fee was not used in any way to
offset any state mandated education, instruction, curriculum or service requirement. App. at
169. Mr. Yeager also testified that the fees were solely and exclusive[ly]
used to contribute to the cost of personnel or services or programs which
are offered by the EVSC in addition to those required by the legislature
and/or the Indiana State Board of Education. App. at 169-70.
First, that the EVSC claims that the money generated by the fee is
used only towards the cost of personnel or services that are in addition
to those required by the Legislature or the Board of Education is not
dispositive of the issue, because under our interpretation of Article 8, Section 1,
the EVSC might very well be prohibited from charging students for costs above
and beyond personnel or services that are required by the State. Those
personnel and services required by the State would indeed be within the ambit
of those necessary expenses for which the EVSC may not constitutionally charge students,
but what is necessary under our analysis to educate students might well go
beyond what is required by the State.
More importantly, however, Mr. Yeagers earlier testimony indicated that it was impossible to
tell whether the money generated by the fee went to fund a specific
activity. The money collected from the fee was not tracked inside the
EVSCs budget. By the practice of commingling and not keeping track of
the money generated by the fee, such funds lost their specific identity.
See Stevens v. Butler, 639 N.E.2d 662, 666-67 (Ind. Ct. App. 1994) (in
context of claim of conversion of money, commingled funds ceased to be a
separate, specifically identifiable chattel and plaintiffs no longer had a property interest in
those specific funds) (citing Kopis v. Savage, 498 N.E.2d 1266, 1270 (Ind. Ct.
App. 1986)), trans. denied. Thus, the Parents have established that the money
generated by the fee is used in some manner to pay for what
amounts to tuition. This amounts to a charge for tuition in violation
of Article 8, Section 1. The trial court erred in concluding otherwise,
and we therefore reverse the judgment of the trial court and remand with
instructions to enter summary judgment in favor of the Parents.
BAILEY, Judge, dissenting
I respectfully dissent from the majoritys determination that the fee policy at issue
violates the Indiana Constitution. In particular, I disagree with the majoritys conclusion
that the word tuition, as used in Article VIII, Section 1 of the
Indiana Constitution, includes the services of a teacher or instruction, as well as
those functions and services which are by their very nature essential to teaching
or tuition. Slip op. at 15-16. The issue before us is
whether the imposition of a student activity feewhich is used to fund the
following expenses: (1) the coordinator of student services; (2) elementary school counselors;
(3) media specialists; (4) school nurses; (5) alternative education; (6) the police liaison
program; and (7) extra-curricular activitiesviolates the Indiana Constitutions mandate that the General Assembly
provide a uniform system of Common Schools, wherein tuition shall be without charge,
and equally open to all. See Ind. Const. art. VIII, § 1.
Resolution of this issue requires us to interpret the constitutional meaning of the
term tuition. In so doing, we are bound by established doctrines of
constitutional construction. A fundamental canon of construction requires that we presume each
word of the Constitution was carefully chosen and intentionally placed, . . .
as though it had been hammered into the instrument. Chandler v. South
Bend Cmty. Sch. Corp., 160 Ind. App. 592, 600, 312 N.E.2d 915, 920
(1974) (quoting Chadwick v. City of Crawfordsville, 216 Ind. 399, 409, 24 N.E.2d
937, 942 (1940)). In addition, we must give words employed in the
Constitution their ordinary meaning, unless it affirmatively appears from the wording of the
entire instrument that a contrary meaning was intended. See Chandler, 160 Ind.
App. at 600-01, 312 N.E.2d at 920.
The term tuition is defined as the act of teaching: the services or
guidance of a teacher: . . . the price of or payment for
instruction. Websters Third New International Dictionary 2461 (2002). This definition does
not encompass expenses such as the salaries of the student services coordinator, elementary
school counselors, media specialists, and school nurses, nor does it extend to the
funding of programs such as police liaison, alternative education, and extracurricular activities.
See Chandler, 160 Ind. App. at 604, 312 N.E.2d at 922 (holding that
the aforementioned definition of tuition does not include textbooks). Because we must
construe words according to their plain and ordinary meaning, I disagree with the
majoritys broad interpretation of the term tuition and, instead, favor the more narrow
construction enunciated in Chandler.
In adopting such an expansive interpretation of the word tuition, the majority appears
to be concerned that under the more narrow definition asserted in Chandler, public
school corporations might place a price tag on education that is beyond the
means of many Hoosiers, i.e., rather than charging an activity fee of $20.00,
school corporations might charge a fee of $200.00, or even $2,000.00. Slip
op. at 15. The majority concludes that [i]t would be a cold
comfort indeed to inform a Hoosier family of limited means that [it] could
send [its] children to public schools without being charged for teachers salaries, but
to say that [it] would be charged for school buildings, heating, electricity, textbooks,
etc. Id.
Undoubtedly, our goal as a society must be to ensure that our children
enjoy the opportunity to obtain an education. In this regard, our legislature
has enunciated the minimum curricula required for all Indiana elementary- and secondary-school students.
See Ind. Code §§ 20-10.1-4-1 to -14. In so doing, the
legislature has charged local school officials with financing the costs associated with this
curriculaincluding but not limited to purchasing textbooks; employing teachers, nurses, and teacher aides
performing non-instructional duties; providing a lunch program; and transporting studentsby levying taxes against
the local citizenry. See Ind. Code § 20-5-2-2; see also Ind. Code
§ 20-5-2-1.2. As such, I believe that, instead of broadening the scope
of the term tuition beyond that intended by the framers of the Indiana
Constitution, we should allow local communities to determine how best to educate their
citizenry, limited only by the constitutional mandate to provide tuition, as defined in
Chandler, free of charge. Ultimately, there are limitations on the amount of
funding (whether it be taxes, sale of admission tickets, activity fees, book fees,
candy sales, or corporate sponsorships to name but a few) that can be
raised to educate the children of any given community. Where there are
limits, choices must be made, and it is for our locally elected officials
to make such choices. See, e.g., Ind. Code §§ 20-5-2-1.2, -2.
While most of us would prefer a luxury ride, most of us can
afford only basic transportation.
Should parents and taxpayers become disillusioned over the academic, athletic, or extracurricular offerings
or the level of funding allocated to a particular program, they can confront
their local officials and insist upon appropriate changes. If local school and
community officials determine, for example, that athletic equipment is more important than the
advancement of a foreign language program, or that the construction of a multi-million
dollar athletic facility is more vital to the schools curricula than a computer
lab, the local community, via the democratic process, will respond by either affirming
the corporations decisioni.e., retaining the local school and community officialsor by opposing the
decisioni.e., voting the officials out of office. Though we, as a judiciary,
may disagree with a communitys decision to affirm or oppose the school corporations
policy, we must leave that choice to the wisdom of the local community.
Moreover, I believe that community control of education is consistent with our constitutional
history, which was well developed by the majority opinion. Slip op. at
9-13. From this history, it is clear that the framers understood the
benefits derived from allowing the citizenry to voice its opinion on education.
Indeed, Article VIII, Section 1 of the Indiana Constitution was enacted to ensure
an educated democratic society. Providing the appropriate educational opportunities for the decision
makers of the future is imperative to preserve our democratic traditions. However,
expanding the definition of tuition beyond that intended by the framers of our
Constitution will not achieve this goal. To the contrary, expanding the definition
will merely permit local school and community officials to demand more funding from
the State for tuition, thereby, providing some cover from the difficult choices required
of them when confronted with a finite budget. Therefore, deciding whether to
buy more books or basketballs, hire more teachers or trainers, or build more
science labs or soccer fields should rest with the local authorities, and so
too should the costs. Choose wrong today and the decision makers of
tomorrow will be ill-equipped to fend off the modern day Music Man.
See footnote
Put another way, local control of education should equate to local costs.
Our state legislature has determined the minimum standards required for educating our children
and has provided funding accordingly. See Ind. Code §§ 20-10.1-4-1 to -14.
Costs over and above these minimum requirements should be funded locally through
property taxes and fees, not through a subterfuge based upon an expanded definition
of tuition. Unless the mechanism for funding public education in Indiana is
revamped, there will continue to be a disparity of educational opportunities between the
various socio-economic communities in our State. Ultimately, the responsibility to remedy these
perceived disparities rests with the legislature. Accordingly, I would affirm the trial
courts grant of summary judgment on this issue.
On cross-appeal, EVSC also contends that the trial court erroneously granted summary judgment
to the Parents on their claim that the EVSCs fee policy violates the
Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United State Constitution.
Specifically, the trial court determined that the imposition of the twenty-dollar fee on
students in the free or reduced lunch and textbook programs violates the students
Fourteenth Amendment substantive due process rights. The Fourteenth Amendment to the United
States Constitution provides that no person shall be deprived of life, liberty, or
property without due process of law. U.S. Const. amend. XIV,
§ 1.
Substantive due process under the Constitution prohibits state action that deprives one of
life, liberty, or property without a rational basis for the deprivation. Parks
v. Madison County, 783 N.E.2d 711, 724 (Ind. Ct. App. 2002), trans. denied.
To determine whether the state action at issue, i.e., the fee policy,
violates the United States Constitution, we first determine whether a fundamental right is
affected. Id. In the instant case, the parties concede that the
fee policy does not involve a fundamental right. Where, as here, no
fundamental right is implicated, EVSC will prevail upon a showing that the policy
bears a rational relationship to a legitimate state interest. Id.
In the present case, although EVSC has a legitimate interest in funding education
and education-related services, its policy of charging a twenty-dollar fee to every student,
regardless of the students means and ability to pay such fee, is not
rationally related to its superlative interest in educating its students. Indeed, for
such a fee policy to survive constitutional scrutiny, it must contain, at the
very least, a waiver provision for those students who cannot afford to pay
the mandatory fee, potentially including but not limited to those students deemed eligible
to participate in other financially subsidized programs, i.e., free or reduced lunch and
textbook programs. Accordingly, I would affirm the trial courts determination that imposing
the mandatory fee on students who cannot afford to pay such fee is
not rationally related to EVSCs interest in raising money for school funding purposes.
See footnote
For these reasons, I respectfully dissent from the majoritys opinion.