School Dist. No. 3 of Maricopa County v. Dailey
Decision Date | 19 June 1970 |
Docket Number | No. 9883,9883 |
Citation | 471 P.2d 736,106 Ariz. 124 |
Parties | SCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 3 OF MARICOPA COUNTY, Appellant, v. B. B. DAILEY, George R. Sorenson and Carolyn K. Sorenson, husband and wife, Appellees. George R. SORENSON and Carolyn K. Sorenson, husband and wife, Cross-Appellants, v. SCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 3 OF MARICOPA COUNTY, Cross-Appellee. |
Court | Arizona Supreme Court |
Moise Berger, Maricopa County Atty., Albert I. Firestein, Chief Civil Deputy County Atty., Phoenix, for appellant and cross-appellee.
Andrews, Marenda & Moseley, by M. B. Moseley, Phoenix, for appellees and cross-appellants.
George and Carolyn Sorenson lived in Phoenix, Arizona with their three minor children. They wanted their children to attend school in Tempe Arizona's School District #3 without having to pay tuition. To do so, they had to find a way to avoid the fiat of A.R.S. § 15--302 which provides that children who do not reside in the district may be admitted upon such terms as the governing board may prescribe. To accomplish their purpose, they relied upon A.R.S. § 15--449, subsec. B which provides that:
'The residence of the person having legal custody of the pupil shall be considered the residence of the pupil * * *.'
From this provision they concluded that by having a Tempe resident appointed guardian of their children, they could ipso facto change the children's residence to Tempe, thus making them eligible to attend school there, tuition-free. The parents therefore, procured the appointment of plaintiff, B. B. Dailey, as guardian of the children. Dailey's petition to be appointed guardian, alleged that he had been informed by the children's parents that the Tempe school system had 'more to offer' than the system in which the children resided; that therefore it was to their best interests to be permitted to attend school in Tempe; and that if the guardianship were consummated, his residence in Tempe would become the children's residence. The consent of the parents was attached to the petition, and Dailey was appointed guardian of the children on April 11, 1968.
Though Dailey became their guardian, the appointment was in name only and the children continued to reside with, and to be under the control of, their parents. It was, however, the guardian's position that although the parents retained physical custody of the children, the guardianship gave him 'legal custody' of them, and that the Tempe school system was thereby required to accept the children without charging any tuition.
The school district did not agree. In order to attain the desired end, the guardian brought this mandamus action against the school district. The district filed a third-party complaint against the parents asking judgment for tuition. The case was tried upon an agreed statement of facts which included the following items: One child attended a Tempe school 1965--1967, and another attended it 1966--1967. Both of them attended the school 1967 to April 29, 1968. In the school year 1968--1969 the third child would become of school age. Attendance of the two children during the above periods took place without the Tempe school district's knowledge that the children resided in Phoenix. When it discovered this fact, it demanded tuition for the period from April 29 to the end of the school year, and the two months' tuition was paid under protest.
The district refused to allow any of the children to attend its school for the 1968--1969 school year unless the parents paid over $1,700 back tuition. It was admitted that the sole purpose of the guardianship was to get the children into the Tempe school system without paying any tuition.
The trial court issued the writ requiring the district to accept the children tuitionfree, and the school district appealed.
The pertinent portions of §§ 15--449 and 15--304, A.R.S., the statutes here applicable, read as follows:
* * *.'
* * *.'
* * *.'
The guardian contends that subsec. B of § 15--449, supra, is unambiguous. We cannot entirely agree.
Sections 1 and 2 of Chapter 134, Laws of 1964, amended §§ 15--304 and 15--449, respectively. Obviously they relate directly to the one subject of 'tuition for children attending a common or high school outside of their residence', as expressed in the title. Therefore they must be read together to determine the relationship of one to the other.
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