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Rose v. Council for Better Education, 790 S.W.2d 186, 60 Ed. Law Rep. 1289 (1989)
Supreme Court of Kentucky.
John A. ROSE, President Pro Tempore of the Senate;
Donald J. Blandford, Speaker of the House of Representatives, Appellants,
v. The COUNCIL FOR BETTER EDUCATION, INC. et al., Appellees.
No. 88-SC-804-TG.
June 8, 1989. As Modified Sept. 28, 1989.
William E. Scent, Karen Scent, Scent & Scent,
PSC, Paducah, for appellants.
Bert T. Combs, Debra H. Dawahare, Wyatt, Tarrant
& Combs, Lexington, Theodore H. Lavit, Lebanon, for appellees.
Philip
M. Lanier, Louisville, for amicus curiae Prichard Committee for
Academic ic Excellence.
Phillip J. Shepherd, Frankfort, for amicus curiae
Prichard Committee for Academic Excellence and Kentuckians for the
Commonwealth.
STEPHENS, Chief Justice.
The issue we decide on this appeal is whether the
Kentucky General Assembly has complied with its constitutional mandate
to "provide an efficient system of common schools throughout
the state." [FN1]
[FN1. Ky. Const. Sec. 183.]
In deciding that it has not, we intend no criticism
of the substantial efforts made by the present General Assembly
and by its predecessors, nor do we intend to substitute our judicial
authority for the authority and discretion of the General Assembly.
We are, rather, exercising our constitutional duty in declaring
that, when we consider the evidence in the record, and when we apply
the constitutional requirement of Section 183 to that evidence,
it is crystal clear that the General Assembly has fallen short of
its duty to enact legislation to provide for an efficient system
of common schools throughout the state. In a word, the present system
of common schools in Kentucky is not an "efficient" one
in our view of the clear mandate of Section 183. The common school
system in Kentucky is constitutionally deficient.
In reaching this decision, we are ever mindful
of the immeasurable worth of education to our state and its citizens,
especially to its young people. The framers of our constitution
intended that each and every child in this state should receive
a proper and an adequate education, to be provided for by the General
Assembly. This opinion dutifully applies the constitutional test
of Section 183 to the existing system of common schools. We do no
more, nor may we do any less.
The goal of the framers of our constitution, and
the polestar of this opinion, is eloquently and movingly stated
in the landmark case of Brown v. Board of Education: "education
is perhaps the most important function of state and local governments.
Compulsory school attendance laws and the great expenditures for
education both demonstrate our recognition of the importance of
education to our democratic society. It is required in the performance
of our most basic public responsibilities, even service in the armed
forces. It is the very foundation of good citizenship. Today it
is a principal instrument in awakening the child to cultural values,
in preparing him for later professional training, and in helping
him to adjust normally to his environment. In these days, it is
doubtful that any child may reasonably be expected to succeed in
life if he is denied the opportunity of an education. Such an opportunity,
where the state has undertaken to provide it, is a right which must
be made available to all on equal terms." Id., 347 U.S. 483,
493, 74 S.Ct. 686, 691, 98 L.Ed. 873 (1954) (emphasis added).
These thoughts were as applicable in 1891 when
Section 183 was adopted as they are today and the goals they express
reflect the goals set out by the framers of our Kentucky Constitution.
I. PROCEDURAL HISTORY
This declaratory judgment action was filed in the
Franklin Circuit Court by multiple plaintiffs, including the Council
for Better Education, Inc. a non-profit Kentucky corporation whose
membership consists of sixty-six local school districts in the state.
Also joining as plaintiffs were the Boards of Education of the Dayton
and Harlan Independent School Districts and the school districts
of Elliott, Knox, McCreary, Morgan and Wolfe Counties. Twenty-two
public school students from McCreary, Wolfe, Morgan and Elliott
Counties and Harlan and Dayton Independent School districts were
also named, suing, respectively, by and through their parents as
next friends.
An averment was made in the original complaint
that the student-plaintiffs were not only suing as individuals but
also representing a class of all similarly situated students attending
so-called "poor" school districts. The requisites of a
class action were pleaded. Civil Rule 23 [hereinafter CR].
The defendants named in the complaint were the
Governor, the Superintendent of Public Instruction, the State Treasurer,
the President Pro Tempore of the Senate, the Speaker of the House
of Representatives and the State Board of Education and its individual
members.
The complaint included allegations that the system
of school financing provided for by the General Assembly is inadequate;
places too much emphasis on local school board resources; and results
in inadequacies, inequities and inequalities throughout the state
so as to result in an inefficient system of common school education
in violation of Kentucky Constitution, Sections 1, 3 and 183 and
the equal protection clause and the due process of law clause of
the 14th Amendment to the United States Constitution. Additionally
the complaint maintains the entire system is not efficient under
the mandate of Section 183.
The relief sought by the plaintiffs was a declaration
of rights to the effect that the system be declared unconstitutional;
that the funding of schools also be determined to be unconstitutional
and inadequate; that the defendant, Superintendent of Public Instruction
be enjoined from further implementing said school statutes; that
a mandamus be issued, directing the Governor to recommend to the
General Assembly the enactment of appropriate legislation which
would be in compliance with the aforementioned constitutional provisions;
that a mandamus be issued, directing the President Pro Tempore of
the Senate and the Speaker of the House of Representatives to place
before the General Assembly appropriate legislation which is constitutionally
valid; and that a mandamus be issued, directing the General Assembly
to provide for an "equitable and adequate funding program for
all school children so as to establish an 'efficient system of common
schools.' "
The answers filed by the various defendants were
basically identical. It was pled that the complaint failed to state
a claim against any of the defendants; that the court had no jurisdiction
because the subject matter is purely a "political" one;
that all school boards should have been joined as parties defendants;
that all members of the General Assembly (1986) should also have
been joined as parties defendant; that all the plaintiffs lacked
standing to bring the action; that, specifically, the plaintiff
Council for Better Education, Inc., had no legal authority to sue;
that the plaintiff school boards similarly had no legal authority
to sue; that the class action was improper; and as would be expected,
the defendants denied all of the alleged constitutional violations
and the facts underlying such alleged violations.
The defendants also filed a self-styled "affirmative
defense" claiming that education reform laws passed by the
General Assembly at a special session in 1985 and various budget
changes and other educational laws passed by the General Assembly
at its 1986 regular session inferentially corrected the situation
alleged in the complaint. Reference was also made to past legislative
efforts of the General Assembly in the education field, presumably
to further demonstrate the General Assembly's compliance with its
constitutional mandate.
In the trial court, the defendants moved for a
summary judgment, based primarily on the claim that no relief could
be granted against the General Assembly because of lack of service
on all 138 members thereof and that the parties lacked standing
or legal capacity to sue. The trial court overruled this motion
in its entirety.
The case was tried by the court without the intervention
of a jury. Evidence was presented by deposition, along with oral
testimony and much documentary evidence. The trial court entered
the first of several orders, findings of fact and judgments on May
31, 1988. [FN2] Generally, that order found Kentucky's
common school finance system to be unconstitutional and discriminatory
and held that the General Assembly had not produced an efficient
system of common schools throughout the state. On October 14, 1988
a final, appealable judgment was entered.
[FN2. An analysis of these documents follows.]
A notice of appeal was timely filed by the present
appellants, John A. Rose, President Pro Tempore of the Senate of
Kentucky and Donald J. Blandford, Speaker of the House of Representatives
of Kentucky.
Upon a motion properly made, we transferred the
appeal to this Court.
II. ANALYSIS OF TRIAL COURT'S FINDINGS OF FACT
CONCLUSIONS OF LAW AND JUDGMENT
Following the trial of this case, the circuit judge,
in three separate documents, prepared extensive findings of fact,
conclusions of law and judgment(s). Because of the length of these
documents, we feel it important to analyze them in some detail.
DOCUMENT NUMBER I
Following the bench trial, and upon proper submission,
the judge on May 31, 1988 entered a document that is styled, "Findings
of Fact, Conclusions of Law and Judgment."
The trial judge identified four issues before him:
(1) The necessity for defining the phrase "an efficient system
of common schools" as contained in Section 183 of the Kentucky
Constitution; (2) Whether education is a "fundamental right"
under our Constitution; (3) Whether Kentucky's current method of
financing its common schools violates Section 183, and (4) Whether
students in the so-called "poor" school districts are
denied equal protection of the laws.
"Efficient," in the Kentucky constitutional
sense was defined as a system which required "substantial uniformity,
substantial equality of financial resources and substantial equal
educational opportunity for all students." Efficient was also
interpreted to require that the educational system must be adequate,
uniform and unitary.
Because of the language of Section 183, the trial
court ruled that education, indeed, is a fundamental right in Kentucky.
In ruling on the issue of whether Kentucky's method
of school financing violates Section 183 and underpinning the point
with extensive findings of fact, the trial court declared that students
in property poor school districts are offered a minimal level of
educational opportunities, which is inferior to those offered to
students in more affluent districts. Such "invidious"
discrimination, based on the place of a student's residence, was
determined to be unconstitutional. The trial court ruled that the
school finance system violates the equal protection guarantees of
Section 1 and 3 of the Kentucky Constitution.
In its judgment, the trial court ruled: (1) The
Kentucky finance "system" of its common schools is unconstitutional
and discriminatory; and (2) The system of common schools is not
efficient within the purview of Section 183 of the Kentucky Constitution.
The Court indicated it would appoint a "small select committee,"
the purpose of which was to review all relevant data, provide additional
analysis, consult with financial experts and propose remedies to
"correct the deficiencies in the present common school financing
system." The Court clearly stated that the Committee's plan,
"when adopted by this Court," would not "intrude"
on the prerogatives of the Executive and Legislative branches of
government. Indeed, the report would only be an aid to serve as
a guide in establishing "the parameters of the Constitutional
requirements of Sections 1, 3 and 183."
In this open ended document, the Court ruled the
school finance system unconstitutional, but gave few guidelines,
or criteria, to guide the General Assembly in any action it might
take to rectify the constitutional failure. The work of the Committee,
if adopted by the Court, was to serve as a guidepost in this murky
area.
DOCUMENT NUMBER II
On June 7, 1988, the trial court, in this document,
appointed the members of the "select committee." Apparently
fearing he would improperly delegate some of his judicial authority
by the creation of this committee, the trial judge emphasized that
its role would be "advisory only" to him. But he noted
that the report would be of "immense benefit" to him in
preparing his final judgment. The Committee was ordered to complete
its work by September 15, 1988.
Modifying
or explaining part of document # I, the court emphatically stated
that there is "no judicial intent to merely re-divide the funds
now available to the common school districts." Moreover, he
emphasized that funds should not be taken away (presumably by the
General Assembly) from any school district to increase the funding
level of more impoverished districts. It is a fair inference from
this statement that the trial court was strongly suggesting that
additional revenues were needed to make the system "efficient."
The defendant State Board of Education was ordered
to pay, out of its funds, all expenses of the Committee.
DOCUMENT NUMBER III
This final order entered on October 14, 1988, and,
cumulated with the first two documents, constitutes the subject
matter of this appeal.
Addressing the committee report, but steadfastly
maintaining that the report adopted was only part of his decision,
the court agreed that the goals set out by the committee for the
establishment of an "efficient" school system were "salutary"
ones. While not technically adopting the report as part of this
final Findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law and Judgment, it is clear
that the trial court did, indeed, adopt certain principles from
the Committee's report.
In his additional Findings of Fact, the judge modified
his previous definition of an "efficient" system of schools.
It is a "... tax supported, coordinated organization, which
provides a free, adequate education to all students throughout the
state, regardless of geographical location or local fiscal resources."
He opined that an efficient system (of schools) must have "substantial"
uniformity.
Ever
broadening the definition and setting non-instructional standards,
the trial court required an efficient school system to provide sufficient
physical facilities, teachers, support personnel, and instructional
materials to enhance the educational process. An adequate school
system must also include careful and comprehensive supervision at
all levels to monitor personnel performance and minimize waste.
If and where waste and mismanagement exist, including but not limited
to improper nepotism, favoritism, and mis-allocation of school monies,
they must be eliminated, through state intervention if necessary.
The General Assembly has all the power necessary to guarantee that
the resources provided by Kentucky taxpayers for schools are spent
wisely.
The trial court thus, with a very broad brush,
included in its constitutional definition of "efficient"
goals to be met by an education and requirements as to school financing,
curriculum, personnel, accessibility to all children, physical facilities,
instructional materials and management of the schools.
Moreover, the trial court made it clear that the
duty--the absolute, unequivocal duty--to provide this system is
solely the responsibility of the General Assembly. The court reiterated
that its judicial power did not extend to specifying to the General
Assembly the methods by which to implement and maintain this efficient
system of education.
Addressing again the question of financing this
massive task, the trial court stated directly what had been implied
previously, that "substantial additional monies" will
have to be raised to provide this constitutional school system.
The court suggested three possible ways of financing: 1) increasing
existing taxes, 2) levying new taxes, or 3) reallocating existing
funds. Since a major reallocation of funds would "cripple"
other government functions, the trial court postulated that the
imposition of new taxes appeared to be the only viable alternative.
The trial judge agreed that the separation of powers
doctrine would prohibit courts from directing the General Assembly
as to how the school system should be financed. But, he reiterated
that the General Assembly must provide an efficient system.
Finally, although the trial court encouraged the
protection of local school boards, he re-emphasized the General
Assembly's authority and responsibility for the establishment and
maintenance of the school system.
In the "judgment," the trial judge retained
continuing jurisdiction over the subject matter for the purpose
of enforcing the judgment. To that effect, he ordered a progress
report be made to him on a day certain.
With this lengthy and dramatic series of documents,
the Franklin Circuit Court brought into sharp focus a problem that
many dedicated citizens of the Commonwealth have "wrestled"
with for many years. It placed the sole responsibility for the establishment
and maintenance of an efficient system on the General Assembly.
It defined "efficient" in an multi-faceted manner, and
directed that all these criteria are not only relevant, but are
essential, if the development of a constitutionally valid system
of common schools is to be had.
The trial court examined the evidence and declared
that the present school system was unconstitutional.
On appeal, this Court must now review the basis
for the trial court's ruling.
III. CONTENTIONS OF THE PARTIES
The two remaining defendants, now appellants before
this Court, raise numerous issues on appeal. They allege that the
Council for Better Education, Inc., does not have either the legal
authority or the standing to maintain this action; that the purported
class action of the student plaintiffs is not proper; that only
5 of the 22 students are properly before the Court; that the complaint
does not state a "cognizable claim" against the two named
legislators; that the trial court erred in finding that the system
of common schools provided by the General Assembly is not efficient;
that the trial court erred in ruling that House Bill 1 and House
Bill 44 are part of an unconstitutional system; [FN3]
that the trial court's definition and standards set for an efficient
school system are at variance with Section 183; that the trial court's
strong reliance on foreign cases was inappropriate; that the trial
court erred in declaring that the school system violates the 14th
Amendment of the U.S. Constitution; that the trial court's judgment
violates the separation of powers provisions of the Kentucky Constitution;
and finally, it is claimed that the trial court erred in directing
the expenses of the select committee to be paid by the Kentucky
Department of Education.
[FN3. H.B. 1 is codified as KRS 160.470 and H.B.
44 is codified in KRS 68.245, 132.010, .020, .023, .027, .690,
other sections of Ch. 32, and 160.470. Throughout this opinion,
the legislation will be referred to as H.B. 1 and H.B. 44.]
Appellees, predictably, defend the trial court's
action.
Prior to dealing with these contentions we believe
it would be beneficial to give a brief history of school financing
in Kentucky, and to review the evidence before us.
IV. SCHOOL FINANCING IN KENTUCKY--PAST AND PRESENT
As originally enacted, Section 186 of our Constitution
mandated that school funds appropriated by the General Assembly
be apportioned to each individual local school district on the basis
of a set amount for each child aged 5 through to 17 years. Thus,
state money was given on the basis of a census of school age children--whether
they attended school or not. Differences in populations of the districts
were not perceived as affecting the quality of the education.
In 1930, the General Assembly adopted a law (an
Act approved March 15, 1930, Ch. 36, 1930 Ky. Acts, codified at
KS 4364, 4399a-8, 4434a-14a) which appropriated state money for
an equalization fund designed to increase per-pupil expenditures
in those districts where the standard of education was low. That
legislative effort was invalidated in Talbott v. Kentucky State
Board of Education, 244 Ky. 826, 52 S.W.2d 727 (1932). The basis
of the decision was that the attempt to equalize expenditures violated
the mandate of Section 186--viz., state funds are limited to a per
capita appropriation.
In 1941, Section 186 was amended to permit 10%
of state funds to be used for equalization purposes and in 1944
it was further amended to allow 25% of the funds to be so expended.
In 1952, the constitutional provision requiring per capita expenditures
was eliminated, thus strengthening the role of the General Assembly
in its duty to provide for an efficient system of common schools,
as provided in Section 183.
In an apparent response to that latest constitutional
amendment, and in an attempt to equalize inequities in the educational
efforts and abilities to encourage more financial input and effort
by local school districts, the General Assembly enacted the so-called
Minimum Foundation Program [FN4] [hereinafter MFP].
To qualify as a participant in this program, a district was required
to levy a minimum real property tax of $1.10 per $100 of assessed
value in the district. The maximum tax was set at $1.50 per $100.00
of assessed value (1 1/2 % of the total assessed value of the real
property in the district). Most districts levied the maximum rates,
because the assessed values were very low. The assessments ranged
from 33 1/3 % of the fair cash value of the property to as low as
12 1/2 % of that value. The median statewide assessment rate was
27%.
[FN4. KRS 157.310-.440. Its stated legislative
purpose was "... to assure substantially equal public school
educational opportunities." KRS 157.310. A further description
of the MFP appears, infra.]
As a result of this law and diverse local assessments
of fair cash value, a lawsuit was filed directly attacking this
legislation and the problem of built-in disparity in local school
tax levies. Our Court's predecessor, the Court of Appeals, in the
case of Russman v. Luckett, Ky., 391 S.W.2d 694 (1965), declared
that Section 172 of the Kentucky Constitution requires property
to be assessed at 100% of its fair cash value. The mandate of the
Court directed the Revenue Cabinet to see that all property in the
Commonwealth was so assessed.
The ink was barely dry on this opinion, when, pursuant
to a call for a special session by the Governor, the General Assembly
enacted H.B. 1, known pleasantly as the "rollback law."
Its effect was to countermand and negate the effect of Russman.
This law reduced the tax rates on property proportionately to offset
the increase in assessment required by this Court. It is certainly
arguable that, by enacting the "rollback law," the General
Assembly continued, or even exacerbated, the inequities that Russman
intended to correct. Specifically, H.B. 1 reduced the school, county
and city property tax revenues to the 1965 level, except for "net
assessment growth" resulting from new property. [FN5]
In deference to the education problem, the bill permitted local
school districts to take two (2) one-time only 10% increases in
their tax levies, for their 1967 and 1968 revenues. The bill virtually
froze the revenues available to local school districts and created
the ominous spectacle of different maximum tax rates for the then
180 local school districts in Kentucky.
[FN5. Examples include a vacant lot having a
house built on it or a farm being developed into a subdivision.]
In an attempt to enable more local tax efforts
the General Assembly at its regular session in 1966 enacted legislation
[FN6] which enabled local school districts to levy one
of three specialized permissive taxes: (1) an occupational tax on
wages and profits; (2) a tax on gross utility receipts, and (3)
an excise tax on income. All of these taxes were, however, specifically
permitted to be recalled by the voters. [FN7]
[FN6. KRS 160.597.]
[FN7. The effect of the permissive taxes has
been to create further inequities across the state because, even
if the voters did not veto them, those counties with a high population
and high payrolls would produce many times more revenue than counties
(districts) not so blessed.]
The story continues. At its regular session in
1972, the General Assembly redefined the terms "net assessment
growth" to include not only new property, but also the difference
in the assessed valuation of all property subject to tax in the
previous year, thus boosting total revenues by the tax on property
value inflation.
In 1976, the handling of revenue took another turn.
The General Assembly transferred the levy and collection of the
required local tax effort to the State, to be included as part of
the receipts of the General Fund. [FN8] To provide funds
which would help equalize, to some extent, the disparities in local
financial effort, the General Assembly, also in 1976 passed the
so-called Power Equalization Program [FN9] [hereinafter
PEP].
[FN8. As the trial judge stated, the appearance
that this created additional monies was strictly an illusion;
rather it altered the method of levy and collection. No new funds
were provided to local schools by the state.]
[FN9. KRS 157.545 et seq. The relevant details
of this program (PEP) will be discussed infra.]
In 1979, the then Lieutenant Governor, in the Governor's
absence from the state, called yet another special session of the
General Assembly. At that session, H.B. 44 was enacted. This law
required school districts to reduce their tax rates on real property
each year so that current revenue could not exceed the previous
year's revenue by more than 4%. However, in order to institute any
increase in revenue, H.B. 44 required the elected school board members
to hold a public hearing on the matter. If the proposed increase
(through a tax rate increase) would generate more than the 4% increase,
the voters could force a public referendum on the excess. In other
words, an increase of up to 4% (over the previous year) would not
be approved without a public hearing. If the increase proposed were
more than 4%, the excess thereof was subject to a vote of the public.
The record in this case shows the property tax
rate declined statewide nearly 33% from 1979 to 1981, directly as
a result of H.B. 44. Although the tax base (total assessed value)
has increased, there has been little or no increase in local revenues
for schools.
As can be seen, the state's contribution to the
local school programs (the so-called common schools) arises primarily
from the MFP and the PEP. It is essential to a decision in this
case to give a brief summary of each of these legislative acts.
To qualify as a participant in the MFP, a local
school district must operate and pay its teachers for 185 days per
school year, and it must actually operate its school(s) the same
number of days. The State Superintendent of Public Instruction allots
the classroom units to each district, the number of which depends
on the average daily attendance in each grade. Each district receives
a grant of money from the MFP based on the number of classroom units
assigned to it. The funds may be used for teachers' salaries, current
expenses, capital outlay and transportation of students.
The state also provides financial resources to
local school districts through the PEP. Each year, the Kentucky
Department of Revenue determines the equalized fair cash value of
all taxable property in each local school district. That data is
certified to the Superintendent of Public Instruction. The Superintendent
determines annually the maximum tax rate that the PEP fund will
equalize and then applies an equal rate to all districts. In order
for a local district to receive funds, each local school district
must levy a minimum equivalent tax rate of 25 cents per $100 of
valuation, or the maximum rate supported by the PEP, whichever is
greater. The "minimum equivalent tax rate" is defined
as the quotient derived from dividing the districts' previous year's
income from tax levies by the total assessed property valuation
plus the assessment for motor vehicles.
As pointed out by the trial court, the mandated
underlying tax rate has been so low that the results have been that
only a fraction of the 25 cents local tax is actually equalized
through the PEP. [FN10]
[FN10. Nine cents per hundred in 1985-86, 10
cents per hundred in 1986-87, and 13 cents per hundred thereafter.]
If one were to summarize the history of school
funding in Kentucky, one might well say that every forward step
taken to provide funds to local districts and to equalize money
spent for the poor districts has been countered by one backward
step.
It is certainly true that the General Assembly,
over the years, has made substantial efforts to infuse money into
the system to improve and equalize the educational efforts in the
common schools of Kentucky. What we must decide, based solely on
the evidence in the record as tested by the Kentucky Constitution,
Section 183, is whether the trial court was correct in declaring
that those efforts have failed to create an efficient system of
common schools in this Commonwealth.
V. THE EVIDENCE
As we proceed to summarize the evidence before
us, the legal test we must apply is whether that evidence supports
the conclusion of the trial court that the Kentucky system of common
schools is not efficient. [FN11] It is textbook law
that before an appellate court may overturn the trial court's finding,
such finding must be clearly erroneous. CR 52.01; Yates v. Wilson,
Ky., 339 S.W.2d 458 (1960).
[FN11. Obviously, we will consider (later in
the opinion) as a legal proposition, whether the trial court's
definition of "efficient" within the aegis of Kentucky
Constitution, Section 183 is correct.]
The
evidence in this case consists of numerous depositions, volumes
of oral evidence heard by the trial court, and a seemingly endless
amount of statistical data, reports, etc. We will not unduly lengthen
this opinion with an extensive discussion of that evidence. As a
matter of fact, such is really not necessary. The overall effect
of appellants' evidence is a virtual concession that Kentucky's
system of common schools is under-funded and inadequate; is fraught
with inequalities and inequities throughout the 177 local school
districts; is ranked nationally in the lower 20-25% in virtually
every category that is used to evaluate educational performance;
and is not uniform among the districts in educational opportunities.
When one considers the evidence presented by the appellants, there
is little or no evidence to even begin to negate that of the appellees.
The tidal wave of the appellees' evidence literally engulfs that
of the appellants.
In spite of the Minimum Foundation Program and
the Power Equalization Program, there are wide variations in financial
resources and dispositions thereof which result in unequal educational
opportunities throughout Kentucky. The local districts have large
variances in taxable property per student. Even a total elimination
of all mismanagement and waste in local school districts would not
correct the situation as it now exists. A substantial difference
in the curricula offered in the poorer districts contrasts with
that of the richer districts, particularly in the areas of foreign
language, science, mathematics, music and art.
The achievement test scores in the poorer districts
are lower than those in the richer districts and expert opinion
clearly established that there is a correlation between those scores
and the wealth of the district. Student-teacher ratios are higher
in the poorer districts. Moreover, although Kentucky's per capita
income is low, it makes an even lower per capita effort to support
the common schools.
Students in property poor districts receive inadequate
and inferior educational opportunities as compared to those offered
to those students in the more affluent districts.
That Kentucky's overall effort and resulting achievement
in the area of primary and secondary education are comparatively
low, nationally, is not in dispute. Thirty-five percent of our adult
population are high school drop-outs. Eighty percent of Kentucky's
local school districts are identified as being "poor,"
in terms of taxable property. The other twenty percent remain under
the national average. Thirty percent of our local school districts
are "functionally bankrupt."
Evidence relative to educational performance was
introduced by appellees to make a comparison of Kentucky with its
neighbors--Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Missouri, Tennessee, Virginia,
and West Virginia. It also ranked Kentucky, nationally in the same
areas.
In the area of per pupil expenditures, Kentucky
ranks 6th among the 8 states and ranks 40th, nationally. With respect
to the average annual salary of instructional staff, Kentucky again
ranks 6th among its neighbors and 37th nationally. In the area of
classroom teacher compensation, Kentucky is 7th and 37th. Our classroom
teacher average salary is 84.68% of the national average and our
per pupil expenditure is 78.20% of the national average.
When one considers the use of property taxes as
a percent of sources of school revenue, Kentucky is 7th among our
neighboring states and 43rd nationally. The national average is
30.1% while Kentucky's rate is 18.2%. If any more evidence is needed
to show the inadequacy of our overall effort, consider that only
68.2% of ninth grade students eventually graduate from high school
in Kentucky. That ranks us 7th among our eight adjacent sister states.
Among the 6 of our neighboring states that use the ACT scholastic
achievement test, our high school graduates average score is 18.1,
which ranks us 4th. Kentucky's ratio of pupil-teacher is 19.2, which
ranks us 7th in this region. In spite of the appellants' claim,
at both the trial level and on appeal, that appellees' statistics
are not current, all the above figures are based on a 1986 study,
which was published in 1987.
Numerous well-qualified educators and school administrators
testified before the trial court and all described Kentucky's educational
effort as being inadequate and well below the national effort.
With this background of Kentucky's overall effort
with regard to education and its comparison to other states in the
area, and nationally, we proceed to examine the trial court's finding
relative to inequity and lack of uniformity in the overabundance
of local school districts. We will discuss the educational opportunities
offered and then address the disparity in financial effort and support.
EDUCATIONAL EFFORT
The numerous witnesses that testified before the
trial court are recognized experts in the field of primary and secondary
education. They have advanced college degrees, they have taught
school, they have been school administrators, they have been participants
at a local or state level in Kentucky's education system, and they
have performed in-depth studies of Kentucky's system. Without exception,
they testified that there is great disparity in the poor and the
more affluent school districts with regard to classroom teachers'
pay; provision of basic educational materials; student-teacher ratio;
curriculum; quality of basic management; size, adequacy and condition
of school physical plants; and per year expenditure per student.
Kentucky's children, simply because of their place of residence,
are offered a virtual hodgepodge of educational opportunities. The
quality of education in the poorer local school districts is substantially
less in most, if not all, of the above categories.
Can anyone seriously argue that these disparities
do not affect the basic educational opportunities of those children
in the poorer districts? To ask the question is to answer it. Children
in 80% of local school districts in this Commonwealth are not as
well-educated as those in the other 20%.
Moreover, most of the witnesses before the trial
court testified that not only were the state's educational opportunities
unequal and lacking in uniformity, but that all were inadequate.
Testimony indicated that not only do the so-called poorer districts
provide inadequate education to fulfill the needs of the students
but the more affluent districts' efforts are inadequate as well,
as judged by accepted national standards.
As stated, when one reads the record, and when
one considers the argument of counsel for the appellants, one can
find no proof, no statement that contradicts the evidence about
the existing inequalities and lack of uniformity in the overall
performance of Kentucky's system of common schools.
Summarizing appellants' argument, and without intending
to give it short shrift, it is contended that over the years the
General Assembly has continually enacted such programs as the MFP,
the PEP, and other progressive programs during recent sessions of
the General Assembly. Moreover, uncontroverted evidence is adduced
to show that the overall amount of money appropriated for local
schools has increased by a substantial amount. The argument seems
to be to the effect that "we have done our best." However,
it is significant that all the experts were keenly aware of the
legislative history, including substantive legislation and increased
funding and yet, all of them stated that inequalities still exist,
and indeed have been exacerbated by some of the legislation. Appellants
conceded, the trial court found and we concur that in spite of legislative
efforts, the total local and state effort in education in Kentucky's
primary and secondary education is inadequate and is lacking in
uniformity. It is discriminatory as to the children served in 80%
of our local school districts.
FINANCIAL EFFORT
Uniform
testimony of the expert witnesses at trial, corroborated by data,
showed a definite correlation between the money spent per child
on education and the quality of the education received. As we have
previously stated in our discussion of the history of Kentucky's
school finances, our system does not require a minimum local effort.
The MFP, being based on average daily attendance, certainly infuses
more money into each local district, but is not designed to correct
problems of inequality and lack of uniformity between local school
districts. The experts stated that the PEP, although a good idea,
was and is under-funded.
The disparity in per pupil expenditure by the local
school boards runs in the thousands of dollars per year. Moreover,
between the extreme high allocation and the extreme low allocation
lies a wide range of annual per pupil expenditures. In theory (and
perhaps in actual practice) there could be 177 different per pupil
expenditures, thus leading to 177 different educational efforts.
The financing effort of local school districts is, figuratively
speaking, a jigsaw puzzle.
It is argued by the appellants that the so-called
permissive taxes, [FN12] are at least part of the solution
to equalizing local financial efforts. There are two easy answers
that dispose of this argument. First, the taxes are permissive.
Responding to obvious voter resistance to the imposition of taxes,
89 districts have enacted the tax on gross utility receipts; 5 districts
have enacted the occupational tax; 82 districts have also enacted
a special building tax, normally for a specific project for one
time only, and not affecting teacher pay, instructional equipment,
or any of the specific needs of educational opportunity. As the
nature of the taxes is permissive, in many districts they are not
adopted and therefore do not produce one cent in additional local
revenue.
[FN12. See supra note 6 and accompanying text.]
Secondly, according to the testimony of the expert
witnesses, even if all the permissive taxes were enacted, the financial
effort would still be inadequate, and because the population of
the districts is in direct proportion to the amount of money that
could and is raised by these taxes, the overall problem of an unequal
local effort would be exacerbated by such action. Clearly, the permissive
taxes are not the solution to the problems. Rather, they contribute
to the disparity of per pupil expenditures.
Additionally, because the assessable and taxable
real and personal property in the 177 districts is so varied, and
because of a lack of uniformity in tax rates, the local school boards'
tax effort is not only lacking in uniformity but is also lacking
in adequate effort. The history of school financing in Kentucky,
certainly corroborates the trial court's finding as to the lack
of uniformity and the lack of adequacy of local and state funding
of education in the state. Based on the record before us, it is
beyond cavil that the trial court's finding was correct.
Having discussed the procedure, the contentions
of the parties, the history of school finance, and having briefly
analyzed the facts, we now proceed to discuss the legal arguments
raised before us by the parties.
VI. DO THE LOCAL SCHOOL BOARDS AND THE COUNCIL
FOR BETTER EDUCATION, [FN13] INC. HAVE THE LEGAL AUTHORITY
TO SUE THE LEGISLATORS AND DO THEY HAVE THE STANDING TO MAINTAIN
THE ACTION?
[FN13. Hereinafter referred to as Council.]
There are two clear and distinct issues to be decided:
(1) Do the Council and the local school districts have legal authority
to sue two members of the General Assembly; and (2) Do those same
plaintiffs-appellees have the legal standing to sue?
In considering these issues, we note again that
the Council is a non-profit corporation, consisting of sixty-six
local school districts. It is a separate, legally constituted authority,
formed under the laws of Kentucky. [FN14] The several
local county and independent school districts are also formed under
Kentucky statutes. [FN15]
[FN14. KRS Ch. 273.]
[FN15. KRS Ch. 160.]
LEGAL AUTHORITY
The main thrust of appellants' argument is that
the local boards of education, being creatures of the state, cannot
sue it. Even though the Council is a non-profit corporation it is
claimed that because the Council's members are all local boards
of education, the Council, whose corporate veil is pierced by some
strained logic, is also a servant who cannot challenge the master.
We disagree.
In creating the local boards of education, the
General Assembly endowed them with broad and specific powers to
enable them to execute their statutory mission. "Each board
of education shall have general control and management of the public
schools in its district...." KRS 160.290(1). It is empowered
to promote public education and "the education and the general
health and welfare of pupils." Id. "... Each board of
education shall be a body politic and corporate with perpetual succession.
It may sue and be sued; and do all things necessary to accomplish
the purposes for which it is created ...." KRS 160.160 (emphasis
added).
This corporate body politic is specifically granted
the power to do "all things necessary " to carry out its
duties and responsibilities, including exercising its right to sue
and be sued. Nowhere in the statutes can one find a restriction
on the right of the local boards to sue. The General Assembly has
not stated that it cannot be sued by local boards. The subject matter
of this lawsuit is whether the General Assembly has complied with
its constitutional duty to provide an "efficient" system
of common schools in Kentucky. Who is better qualified, who is more
knowledgeable, who is more duty-bound, than the local school boards
to raise the question? If the General Assembly is not adequately
meeting its responsibility, how can the local boards meet theirs?
It is sterile logic that says that the local school
boards cannot sue their masters, the General Assembly (or the Commonwealth),
especially when one considers the statutory grants of authority
cited above.
Appellants rely on the case of Board of Education
of Louisville v. Board of Education of Jefferson County, Ky., 458
S.W.2d 6 (1970), to support their argument. In that case, the question
presented was whether the General Assembly had the authority to
distribute the proceeds of a county-wide occupational tax among
the Louisville, Jefferson County and Anchorage Independent school
districts, the effect of which would be that some of the funds raised
in Louisville would be distributed to the County and to Anchorage
Independent districts. The Louisville district argued in that case
that it was a municipal corporation and that its funds could not
be used elsewhere. This Court rejected this argument and upheld
the General Assembly's authority to determine the distribution of
Jefferson County's occupational tax proceeds.
The Court's decision was based on whether the legislation
was "appropriate" under the provisions of Section 183
of the Kentucky Constitution. " 'The General Assembly shall,
by appropriate legislation, provide for an efficient system of common
schools throughout the state.' " Id. at 8 (emphasis added).
We said that legislation is only inappropriate
if it conflicts with some other constitutional provisions of equal
dignity. In declaring the Louisville Board not to be a municipal
corporation, the Court stated: "Thus, though a school district
possesses some of the attributes of a municipal corporation for
some legal purposes ... and though a school district is regarded
as a political subdivision for some legal considerations--a school
district is, nevertheless, an agency of the state subject to the
will of the legislature and existing for one public purpose only--to
locally administer the common schools within a particular area subject
to the paramount interest of the state." Id. at 8-9 (emphasis
added).
Appellants seize upon this language to posit that
local boards are not empowered to sue the state. We do not agree.
This language simply reiterates that the local districts are creatures
of the state, and that when the issue of "appropriate legislation"
is in contention, the state's decision is final, unless violative
of another section of the constitution. The decision does not touch
the issue of whether the state has provided an efficient system,
and it certainly does not declare either directly or inferentially
that a local school board cannot sue the state. Furthermore, appellants
ignore the specific grant of power to local school boards to "sue
or be sued" and to do all things necessary to carry out the
duties of the local school boards.
In Hogan v. Glasscock, Ky., 324 S.W.2d 815 (1959)
we held that a local school board had the power to hire an attorney
when such employment was necessary for their protection and the
accomplishment of the purposes for which they were created. The
attorneys were employed by the local board to defend an attack on
the board members' method of providing public education. This case
clearly reinforces the statutory duty of local school boards to
promote local education and to defend lawsuits challenging their
action, and to do all things which are necessary in the opinion
of the local board to promote public education. KRS 160.160, 160.290(1).
Appellants rely heavily on a case from a sister
state to support their position. In East Jackson Public Schools
v. State, 133 Mich.App. 132, 348 N.W.2d 303 (1984), several local
school districts sought to overturn a legislative scheme of school
financing, claiming a violation of the equal protection clause of
the Michigan constitution. The boards did not claim to enforce any
constitutional rights regarding public education. As the Court stated,
"Education is not a fundamental right under Michigan Constitution
of 1963." Id at 305. The following language seized on by appellants
addressed the school districts' power to sue. "School districts
and other municipal corporations are creatures of the state. Except
as provided by their state, they have no existence, no function,
no rights, and no powers. They are given no power, nor can any be
implied, to defy their creator over the terms of their existence.
They surely have no power to bring suits of such nature on behalf
of residents within their boundaries, or to expend public funds
to finance such litigation of, or on behalf of, private citizens."
Id at 306.
Although the language of this opinion is strong
and unequivocal, it cites no authority for its position, and is
certainly not persuasive in the case at bar. [FN16]
[FN16. Furthermore, there is ample authority
which is contrary to the Michigan case. See Dupree v. Alma School
District No. 30, 279 Ark. 340, 651 S.W.2d 90 (1983); Hornbeck
v. Somerset County Board of Education, 295 Md. 597, 458 A.2d 758
(1983); Board of Education v. Nyquist, 57 N.Y.2d 27, 453 N.Y.S.2d
643, 439 N.E.2d 359 (1982); Seattle School District No. 1 of King
County v. State, 90 Wash.2d 476, 585 P.2d 71 (1978); Washakie
County School District No. 1 v. Herschler, 606 P.2d 310 (Wyo.1980).]
Unlike Michigan citizens, our citizens are given
a fundamental right to education in our Constitution. Ky. Const.
Sec. 183. That fundamental right is reiterated and expanded in our
statutes. KRS 158.010 et seq. Moreover, our General Assembly has
given local districts a perpetual, corporate existence, and has
in two statutes, specifically given local boards virtual unlimited
authority to carry out their duty of promoting local education.
In Reeves v. Jefferson County, Ky., 245 S.W.2d
606 (1951), we declared that KRS 160.160 and KRS 160.290 "place
upon the boards of education, not the taxpayers, the initial responsibility
of maintaining legal actions on behalf of the school districts."
Id. at 608. Perforce a lawsuit to declare an education system unconstitutional
falls within the authority, if not the duty, of local school boards
to fulfill their statutory responsibilities, no matter who the defendants
are.
Even if we had not reached this conclusion as to
the individual county and local independent school districts, it
is beyond cavil that the Council, being an independent, legally
separate, properly formed non-profit corporation, has the legal
authority to sue the General Assembly. We are cited no authority,
and can find none, that would enable us to pierce the corporate
veil and legally cut off the rights of the individual corporate
members.
STANDING
Appellants next argue that the Council and the
local school boards have no standing to join in this lawsuit.
In order to have standing to sue, a plaintiff need
only have a real and substantial interest in the subject matter
of the litigation, as opposed to a mere expectancy. Winn v. First
Bank of Irvington, Ky.App., 581 S.W.2d 21, 23 (1978). And, as we
have said: "It is fundamental that in order to have standing
in a lawsuit a party must have a judicially recognizable interest
in the subject matter of the suit." HealthAmerica Corporation
of Kentucky v. Humana Health Plan Inc., Ky., 697 S.W.2d 946, 947
(1985).
The issue of standing is one which is to be decided
on the facts of each case.
The Council and the local school boards as plaintiffs
in this case are statutorily obligated to promote public education
for their respective constituents--the students in their school
districts. The local districts are part and parcel of a system of
common schools created by the General Assembly, which purports to
be constitutionally efficient. If the system is not efficient, the
local school board's duty is to make every effort to remedy that
situation. Included in that responsibility is the filing of this
lawsuit. The local school board and the Council have a judicially
recognizable interest in a system of efficient common schools, and
we so recognize and declare.
VII. IS THIS A PROPER CLASS ACTION WITH RESPECT
TO THE INDIVIDUAL STUDENT PLAINTIFFS?
Twenty-two student plaintiffs, suing by and through
their parents as next friends, argued to the trial court that they
were entitled to maintain the lawsuit as a class action on behalf
of "all similarly situated students in Kentucky's property-poor
districts." Appellants deny appellees' claim.
CR 23.01 authorizes the filing of a class action
and sets up the requirements therefore. CR 23.03 requires the trial
court, "as soon as practicable after the commencement of an
action brought as a class action" to make a determination "by
order" as to whether a class action may be maintained.
It is clear that when the trial court fails to
make findings of fact and fails to certify the evidence of a class,
within the purview of CR 23, there can be no class action. Brockman
v. Jones, Ky.App., 610 S.W.2d 943 (1980).
No hearing was held by the trial court in this
case, no findings of fact were made by the trial court as to the
propriety of a class action, and none of the requirements of CR
23.01 or 23.03 were followed. In fact, the only reference to a class
action other than in the pleadings appears in Document ## 1, dated
May 31, 1988, in which the court, in its findings of fact identified
some of the plaintiffs as "a number of parents and individual
students representing as a class all similarly situated students
in Kentucky's districts."
For the failure of the trial court to follow the
mandate of CR 23.01 and 23.03, appellants argue there was no class
action. We concur.
However, the absence of, or the failure to create
a proper class, in no way changes the decision of the trial court
or, for that matter, of this Court, with respect to the issue of
the constitutionality of the Kentucky system of common schools.
If a statute (or in this case, a system established by statutes)
is not constitutionally valid, the existence or non-existence of
a class of litigants is immaterial. The constitutional issue has
been raised by the Council, the individual school districts, and
by those individual students properly before this Court. The system
is no more nor no less susceptible to constitutional challenge because
of the lack of a class action. See, e.g., Bright v. Baesler, 336
F.Supp. 527 (E.D.Ky.1971); Kelley v. City of Ashland, Ky., 562 S.W.2d
312 (1978); Moormen v. Morgan, Ky., 285 S.W.2d 146 (1955); Barker
v. Crum, 177 Ky. 637, 198 S.W. 211 (1917).
While we concur with appellants' contention, the
effect of our decision on this legal point is that it is non-dispositive.
VIII. ARE ALL THE TWENTY-TWO INDIVIDUAL STUDENT
PLAINTIFFS BEFORE THE COURT?
This issue is closely akin to the one previously
decided. Twenty-two students were named as individual plaintiffs,
suing by and through their parents as next friends. None of the
parents testified, and only one of the students testified. At trial,
reference was made to four student-plaintiffs by another witness.
Appellants argue only the latter five students
are properly before this court, and that there is no evidence in
the record to show "that either of these five plaintiff-students
has individually suffered a violation of his or her constitutional
rights."
We have previously declared that the Council and
the individual districts are properly before this court. We are
not cited any legal authority for the proposition that a party has
to testify before he or she is properly before the court, and we
know of none. Twenty-two students allege that the Kentucky system
of common schools is violative of Section 183. The fact that all
of the students did not testify is irrelevant. The constitutional
issue presented is clearly before this Court.
IX. DOES THE COMPLAINT STATE A CLAIM AGAINST
THE TWO LEGISLATOR-APPELLANTS?
The remaining appellants in this action are State
Senator John A. Rose, who is President Pro Tempore of the Senate,
and Representative Donald J. Blandford, who is Speaker of the House
of Representatives.
Appellants argue that the declaratory judgment
is a nullity against them. They claim that all 138 members of the
Kentucky General Assembly would have to be joined as parties-defendant
for the relief granted to be valid.
The premises for this argument are as follows:
that the essence of the trial court's decision is that the financing
of the system of common schools by the General Assembly is inadequate;
and it is the entire General Assembly which will be required to
raise more money for the system. Additionally, appellants maintain
that since the General Assembly is not a corporate body, and since
the appellants are not authorized to accept service for the entire
membership, the court is not empowered in this action to direct
the General Assembly to take any action. Lastly, appellants contend
that the trial court's retention of continuing supervision through
an "open-end" type of jurisdiction will lead to the court
improperly attempting to direct the actions of the General Assembly.
The trial court did, as claimed, keep a type of
open-end jurisdiction or supervision of the matter. As will be seen
infra, we believe this to be improper.
Regarding appellants' other assertions we believe
that the appellants do not correctly interpret the trial court's
judgment, and moreover, we believe that the General Assembly, as
a legislative body, is properly before this Court.
To begin with, the issue decided by the trial court,
is that the system of common schools of the Commonwealth is not
efficient, and is not constitutionally valid. The trial court set
out numerous standards by which an "efficient system"
can be judged. We do the same. The trial court emphasized and re-emphasized,
in its three documents, that it was not directing the General Assembly
to enact specific legislation and that it was not directing the
General Assembly to raise taxes. We do the same.
The impact of this decision that the system is
constitutionally deficient will be to set certain standards that
we believe are required by Section 183 for the establishment and
maintenance of an efficient system of common schools. It will be
the responsibility of the General Assembly, using its own judgment
and exercising its own power and constitutional duty, to establish
such a system. Further, the trial court required these two appellants
to, in effect, introduce legislation to correct the constitutional
defect. We do not agree with the trial court here, and we do not
so order the two legislator-appellants.
We do not agree that, in order to bring the Kentucky
General Assembly within the jurisdiction of a court, a plaintiff
must effect service upon all of the individual members thereof.
While we have no Kentucky authority directly on point, we do recognize
a line of cases holding that members of lesser administrative and
legislative bodies must be named individually as parties-defendant
in order to invoke a trial court's jurisdiction. In Lewis v. Board
of Councilmen Of Frankfort, 305 Ky. 509, 204 S.W.2d 813 (1947),
for example, the court affirmed the dismissal of an action for a
writ of mandamus. The plaintiff failed to name individual members
of the Frankfort Board of Councilmen in the complaint; thus the
court determined that the Board was not properly before the court.
The court was concerned with affected parties' ability to defend
themselves and the court's power to enforce a writ, if granted.
While it is certainly true that the named appellants
in the instant case cannot, by themselves, enact any legislation,
they can defend the constitutionality of an act or acts. They have
done so in this case. Furthermore, the trial court did not issue
a writ of mandamus and appellants were not ordered to enact specific
legislation, but to "proceed as rapidly as possible to establish
an efficient system of elementary and secondary public schools within
the guidelines laid down...."
The two appellants in this case are the elected
leaders of the House of Representatives and the Senate. In the Complaint,
they are described as follows. "Defendant, Joseph W. Prather,
is President Pro Tempore of Kentucky's Senate. Defendant, Donald
J. Blandford, is Speaker of Kentucky's House of Representatives.
Those defendants are the presiding officers and are representative
of their respective legislative bodies. They are named in their
official capacities as President Pro Tempore of the Kentucky Senate
and Speaker of the Kentucky House of Representatives, respectively."
(emphasis added).
While the legislative leaders are not named as
official representatives of the General Assembly in the caption
of the complaint, as they should have been, it is clear from the
statement of parties contained within the complaint that appellants
were in fact named in a representative capacity that is sufficient
to indicate the capacity in which they were being sued. See Beverly
v. Highfield, 307 Ky. 179, 209 S.W.2d 739, 741 (1948).
We
are also persuaded by authority from other jurisdictions that further
obviates the need for serving all members of a legislative body.
In Seattle School District No. 1 of King County v. State, 90 Wash.2d
476, 585 P.2d 71 (1978) the Speaker of the House of Representatives
was named as a defendant representing all members of the House and
the President of the state Senate was likewise named as a defendant
representing the entire Senate. In Barkely v. O'Neill, 624 F.Supp.
664 (S.D.Ind., 1981) the plaintiff sued members of the United States
House of Representatives by suing the Speaker of the House and several
members of a special task force. Although the plaintiff lost on
the merits, the House was before the court. See also, Jackson v.
Congress of the United States, 558 F.Supp. 1288 (S.D.N.Y.1983);
cf. Immigration and Naturalization Service v. Chadha, 462 U.S. 919,
103 S.Ct. 2764, 77 L.Ed.2d 317 (1983) (both Houses of Congress found
to be proper parties as interveners in a suit challenging the House's
exercise of legislative veto); Synar v. United States, 626 F.Supp.
1374 (D.D.C.1986) (House Speaker O'Neill and Bipartisan Leadership
Group intervened as defendants to support an Act challenged on constitutional
grounds), aff'd, Bowsher v. Synar, 478 U.S. 714, 106 S.Ct. 3181,
92 L.Ed.2d 583 (1986).
As in several of the above cases, the case at bar
attacks the constitutionality of an act or series of acts of a legislative
body. This case of major statewide importance has been tried and
practiced vigorously by all parties and was decided on the merits
by the trial court. We will not now initiate useless circuity of
action by requiring the cumbersome process of serving all members
of the General Assembly. See Bruner v. City of Danville, Ky., 394
S.W.2d 939, 941 (1965). We believe it is only common sense and practical
to hold that service on both the President Pro Tempore of the Senate
and the Speaker of the House of Representatives, named in their
respective capacities is sufficient to acquire jurisdiction over
the General Assembly in this action.
X. WHAT IS AN "EFFICIENT SYSTEM OF COMMON
SCHOOLS"?
In a few simple, but direct words, the framers
of our present Constitution, set forth the will of the people with
regard to the importance of providing public education in the Commonwealth.
"General Assembly to provide for school system--The General
Assembly shall, by appropriate legislation, provide for an efficient
system of common schools throughout the State." Ky. Const.
Sec. 183.
Several conclusions readily appear from a reading
of this section. First, it is the obligation, the sole obligation,
of the General Assembly to provide for a system of common schools
in Kentucky. The obligation to so provide is clear and unequivocal
and is, in effect, a constitutional mandate. Next, the school system
must be provided throughout the entire state, with no area (or its
children) being omitted. The creation, implementation and maintenance
of the school system must be achieved by appropriate legislation.
Finally, the system must be an efficient one.
It is, of course, the last "conclusion"
that gives us pause and requires study and analysis. What, indeed,
is the meaning of the word "efficient" as used in Section
183?
THE CONSTITUTIONAL DEBATES
A brief sojourn into the Constitutional debates
will give some idea--a contemporaneous view--of the depth of the
delegates' intention when Section 183 was drafted and eventually
made its way into the organic law of this state. It will provide
a background for our definition of "efficient."
Comments of Delegate Beckner on the report which
led to the selection of the language in Section 183 reflect the
framers' cognizance of the importance of education and, emphasized
that the educational system in Kentucky must be improved. Referring
to the education of our children, he admonished the delegates, "do
not let us make a mistake in dealing with the most vital question
that can come before us." III Debates Constitutional Convention
1890 4459 [hereinafter Debates ].
After summarizing other achievements made in the
proposed new Constitution he continued--"If, however, after
accomplishing so much good on these lines--we forget the children,
and, in the slightest degree, fail to appreciate the obligations
of the State to provide sufficient facilities for training them
to be good citizens, we will deserve and receive in the great hereafter
anathema, and not ascription of praise." Id. at 4460.
Incorporating a report made to the Kentucky legislature
in 1822, Beckner quoted (referring to a system of common schools):
" '... It is a system of practical equality in which the children
of the rich and poor meet upon a perfect level and the only superiority
is that of the mind.' " Id. at 4460.
Beckner further declared, "Instruction of
children under the auspices of the State has become the settled
policy of our people." Id. at 4461.
Beckner set out four permanent justifications for
and characteristics of state provided schools: 1) The education
of young people is essential to the prosperity of a free people.
2) The education should be universal and should embrace all children.
3) Public education should be supervised by the State, to assure
that students develop patriotism and understand our government.
4) Education should be given to all--rich and poor--so that our
people will be homogeneous in their feelings and desires.
Id. at 4462-63.
One final passage merits quotation. Since education
provided by the State is no longer an open question, the only thing
that remains is how it shall be made "most valuable and effective."
Let Mr. Beckner's answer be a guidepost for all Kentuckians today
and in the future: "If public schools have come to stay, if
they are a part and parcel of our free institutions, woven into
the very web and woof of popular government; and if they are in
the future to be the dependence of the people of Kentucky for the
instruction of their youth, what is the logic of the situation?
Manifestly to encourage and improve them, to seize every opportunity
to make them more efficient, to treat them with no niggard or stinted
hand, but just in so far as we love our children, to try to make
their training-places fit nurseries of immortal spirits that have
divine purposes to fulfill on earth, and cannot hope to succeed,
unless their intellectual powers be properly developed." Id.
at 4463 (emphasis added).
As if these powerful words were not sufficient
to show the purpose of Section 183, consider those of delegate Moore--"Common
schools make patriots and men who are willing to stand upon a common
land. The boys of the humble mountain home stand equally high with
those from the mansions of the city. There are no distinctions in
the common schools, but all stand upon one level." Id. at 4531
(emphasis added).
It serves no purpose to further lengthen this opinion
with more verbiage from the Constitutional debates. Delegates Beckner
and Moore told their fellow delegates and have told us, what this
section means. --The providing of public education through a system
of common schools by the General Assembly is the most "vital
question" presented to them. --Education of children must not
be minimized to the "slightest degree." --Education must
be provided to the children of the rich and poor alike. --Education
of children is essential to the prosperity of our state. --Education
of children should be supervised by the State. --There must be a
constant and continuing effort to make our schools more efficient.
--We must not finance our schools in a de minimis fashion. --All
schools and children stand upon one level in their entitlement to
equal state support.
This Court, in defining efficiency must, at least
in part, be guided by these clearly expressed purposes. The framers
of Section 183 emphasized that education is essential to the welfare
of the citizens of the Commonwealth. By this animus to Section 183,
we recognize that education is a fundamental right in Kentucky.
LEGAL PRECEDENTS IN KENTUCKY
Although the Court did not specifically comment
on Section 183 in Major v. Cayce, 98 Ky. 357, 33 S.W. 93 (1895),
it did state the essential requirements of a statute which the General
Assembly enacted in compliance with that constitutional provision.
"[U]nder the school law the pupils, all within the age and
resident in the district, are entitled to attend these common schools,
and to receive tuition in all the branches [of learning] prescribed
by the state board of education to be taught therein, free of expenses
..." 33 S.W. at 94.
This decision, very close in time to the adoption
of the present Constitution, recognized a prohibition against any
practice which "impairs the equal benefit of the common-school
system" to all students. Id. at 95.
In City of Louisville v. Commonwealth, 134 Ky.
488, 121 S.W. 411 (1909), the Court held:
"In this state the subject of public education
has always been regarded and treated as a matter of state concern.
In the last Constitution, as well as in the one preceding it, the
most explicit care was evinced to promote public education as a
duty of the state.... In obedience to that requirement, the General
Assembly has provided a system of public schools.... All [schools
throughout the state] have the one main essential--that they are
free schools, open to all the children of proper school age residing
in the locality, and affording equal opportunity for all to acquire
the learning taught in the various common school branches...."
121 S.W. at 412 (emphasis added).
The decision, specifically relying on Section 183,
postulated: public education in the common schools is a duty of
the state; that the General Assembly attempted to obey the mandate
(as it certainly has attempted to do now); and although there are
certain different provisions for different localities, all common
schools must be free, open to all students, and provide equal opportunities
for all students to acquire the same education. In other words,
although by accident of birth and residence, a student lives in
a poor, financially deprived area, he or she is still entitled to
the same educational opportunities that those children in the wealthier
districts obtain. What principle could be more fair, more just,
and more importantly, what would be more consistent with the purpose
of Section 183 and the common school system it spawned?
We further emphasized the mandate of Section 183
in Board of Education of Boyle County v. McChesney, 235 Ky. 692,
32 S.W.2d 26 (1930). Affirming the General Assembly's constitutional
duty to provide for an efficient system, the Court idealistically
observed the citizens' burden. "Onerous taxes are levied annually
and paid willingly by the people for this essential governmental
service." 32 S.W.2d at 28.
In the case of Commonwealth ex rel. Baxter v. Burnett,
237 Ky. 473, 35 S.W.2d 857 (1931), we again emphasized the constitutional
mandate of Section 183, and the great importance of public education.
In addition, the element of "efficiency" was highlighted.
The Court also acknowledged and approved strong, centralized control
(by the state) of the system of common schools. "In the progress
towards the highest degree of efficiency the legislature more and
more has centralized the control of schools and sought uniformity
and equality of advantage for the school children of the state as
a whole." 35 S.W.2d at 859.
Describing the growing centralization as "progress,"
we restated the overall goals of the system as "uniformity
and equality" for the school children of the state "as
a whole." What could be clearer? Since the Constitution acknowledges
the importance of education to this Commonwealth and since the establishment
and maintenance of a system of common schools is a mandated duty
of the General Assembly, it is part and parcel of this overall goal
that the system have the twin attributes of uniformity and equality.
In Wooley v. Spalding, Ky., 293 S.W.2d 563 (1956),
a suit was filed by citizens and taxpayers to prohibit the defendant
superintendent of Marion County schools from expending funds in
alleged illegal ways, to prohibit sectarian instruction from being
given in public schools and to seek the reopening and proper operation
of a high school. The trial court denied the request, but our predecessor
Court reversed and granted the requested injunction. In language
which brings together and re-emphasizes earlier decisions, we said,
"The fundamental mandate of the Constitution and Statutes of
Kentucky is that there shall be equality and that all public schools
shall be nonpartisan and nonsectarian. Uniformity does not require
equal classification but it does demand that there shall be a substantially
uniform system and equal school facilities without discrimination
as between different sections of a district or a county." Id.
at 565 (references omitted).
The lack of uniformity and the unequal educational
opportunity existing in the county was said to constitute "a
violation of both the spirit and intent of Section 183 of our State
Constitution." Id. That reasoning therein applies, a fortiori,
to the entire state system of common schools. Public schools must
be efficient, equal and substantially uniform.
As can be seen, this Court, since the adoption
of the present Constitution, has, in reflecting on Section 183,
drawn several conclusions: 1) The General Assembly is mandated,
is duty bound, to create and maintain a system of common schools--throughout
the state. 2) The expressed purpose of providing such service is
vital and critical to the well being of the state. 3) The system
of common schools must be efficient. 4) The system of common schools
must be free. 5) The system of common schools must provide equal
educational opportunities for all students in the Commonwealth.
6) The state must control and administer the system. 7) The system
must be, if not uniform, "substantially uniform," with
respect to the state as a whole. 8) The system must be equal to
and for all students.
Finally, a Federal Court has stated the financial
burden entailed in meeting these responsibilities in no way lessens
the constitutional duty. Carroll v. Board of Education of Jefferson
County, 410 F.Supp. 234 (W.D.Ky.1976), aff'd 561 F.2d 1 (6th Cir.1977).
"In short, once the citizens of Kentucky made the voluntary
commitment to educate the children of this state in public schools
neither the Kentucky General Assembly nor those individuals responsible
for discharging the duties imposed on them by the state constitution
... can abrogate those duties merely because the monetary obligations
becomes unexpectedly large or onerous." Id. at 238.
The taxpayers of this state must pay for the system,
no matter how large, even to the point of being "unexpectedly
large or even onerous."
Before proceeding, therefore, to a definition of
"efficient" we must address a point made by the appellants
with respect to our authority to enter this fray and to "stick
our judicial noses" into what is argued to be strictly the
General Assembly's business.
Appellants argue and cite several cases to support
their position, that the General Assembly has sole and exclusive
authority to determine whether the system of common schools is constitutionally
"efficient" and that a Court may not substitute its judgment
for that of the General Assembly.
In Prowse v. Board of Education for Christian County,
134 Ky. 365, 120 S.W. 307 (1909), the constitutionality of an act
requiring the fiscal court to enact a tax previously set by the
board of education for local school operation was upheld. We said,
in light of Section 183: "What system will be most efficient
is for the judgment of the General Assembly.... In a matter like
this, resting within the discretion of the General Assembly, the
Court will not substitute its judgment for the judgment of the General
Assembly and it will not interfere with the action of the legislature,
unless a palpable effort to evade the mandate of the Constitution
should appear." 120 S.W. at 308. [FN17]
[FN17. See also, Board of Education of Louisville
v. Board of Education of Jefferson County, Ky., 458 S.W.2d 6,
8 (1970) (determining whether legislation is appropriate is legislative
function); City of Louisville v. Board of Education, 302 Ky. 647,
195 S.W.2d 291, 293 (1946) (General Assembly has authority "to
deal with the common schools in any way it should desire");
Commonwealth v. Griffen, 268 Ky. 830, 105 S.W.2d 1063, 1065 (1937)
(lawmakers have "wide latitude." "What that system
is is ... left wholly to the discretion of the Legislature.");
Madison County Board of Education v. Smith, 250 Ky. 495, 63 S.W.2d
620, 621 (1933) ( "legislative discretion the best method
of providing for an efficient system of common schools.");
Elliott v. Garner, 140 Ky. 157, 130 S.W. 997, 998 (1910) (how
General Assembly shall best accomplish efficient system of common
schools "is purely a matter of legislative discretion").]
It is textbook law that enactments of the General
Assembly have a strong presumption of constitutionality. Jefferson
County Police Merit Board v. Bilyeu, Ky., 634 S.W.2d 414 (1982).
It is also a textbook law that where legislative discretion is present,
the judiciary will be reluctant to interfere. See, e.g., American
Insurance Association v. Geary, Ky., 635 S.W.2d 306 (1982). The
separation of powers doctrine of the Kentucky Constitution underpins
and buttresses these legal theories. Ky. Const. Sec. 27, 28, 29;
Legislative Research Commission v. Brown, Ky., 664 S.W.2d 907 (1984).
In this context, we review the question before
us. The ultimate issue is whether the system of common schools in
the Commonwealth established by the General Assembly, with respect
to the mandate of Section 183, is in compliance with the constitution.
Specifically, we are asked--based solely on the evidence in the
record before us--if the present system of common schools in Kentucky
is "efficient" in the constitutional sense. It is our
sworn duty, to decide such questions when they are before us by
applying the constitution. The duty of the judiciary in Kentucky
was so determined when the citizens of Kentucky enacted the social
compact called the Constitution and in it provided for the existence
of a third equal branch of government, the judiciary.
The issue before us--the constitutionality of the
system of statutes that created the common schools--is the only
issue. To avoid deciding the case because of "legislative discretion,"
"legislative function," etc., would be a denigration of
our own constitutional duty. To allow the General Assembly (or,
in point of fact, the Executive) to decide whether its actions are
constitutional is literally unthinkable.
We believe that what these several cases cited
as controlling by appellants mean is that great weight should be
given to the decision of the General Assembly. We believe they mean
that the presumption of constitutionality is substantial. We believe
that they mean that legislative discretion--in this specific matter
of common schools--is to be given great weight and, we do so in
this decision. We do not question the wisdom of the General Assembly's
decision, only its failure to comply with its constitutional mandate.
In so doing, we give deference and weight to the General Assembly's
enactments; however, we find them constitutionally deficient.
[FN18]
[FN18. This Court did, in fact, address the constitutionality
of a statute under the mandate of Section 183 in Trustees of Graded
Free Colored Common Schools v. Trustees of Graded Free White Common
Schools, 180 Ky. 574, 203 S.W. 520 (1918).]
The judiciary has the ultimate power, and the duty,
to apply, interpret, define, construe all words, phrases, sentences
and sections of the Kentucky Constitution as necessitated by the
controversies before it. It is solely the function of the judiciary
to so do. This duty must be exercised even when such action serves
as a check on the activities of another branch of government or
when the court's view of the constitution is contrary to that of
other branches, or even that of the public.
OTHER AUTHORITY
In our sister and adjoining state of West Virginia,
the state Constitution requires that "The legislature shall
provide, by general law, for a thorough and efficient system of
free schools." W.Va. Const, Art. XII, Sec. 1.
In the landmark case of Pauley v. Kelly, 162 W.Va.
672, 255 S.E.2d 859 (1979) the West Virginia Supreme Court faced
a lawsuit similar to the one before us. The trial court found that
one county's school system was inadequate, in comparison with four
other local systems. Although the West Virginia Supreme Court remanded
the case for further evidentiary hearings it courageously spoke
out in defining the "thorough and efficient" clause of
Section 1 of its constitution.
The Court engaged in extensive historical analysis,
in which it carefully interpreted other states' constitutional mandates
with regard to public education. [FN19] The court rejected
the contention that legislative discretion in public school system
matters is determinative.
[FN19. We recommend a study of this opinion for
those who are interested in the historical background of similar
constitutional provisions. We are persuaded that the history and
reasoning expressed in the Pauley case is applicable and persuasive
in the decision of the case before us.]
"So, on the threshold question: no court has
been hesitant to affirm legislation; many have required specific
actions by local boards to bring them to compliance with the constitutional
mandate; and legislation has been declared unconstitutional because
it failed the mandate. There is ample authority that courts will
enforce constitutionally mandated education quality standards."
Id. at 874 (emphasis added).
In turning to the definition of "efficient"
the Court, began with definition which was "lexically"
founded. "... (T)he mandate, ... becomes a command that the
education system be absolutely complete, attentive to every detail,
extending beyond ordinary parameters, and further, it must produce
results without waste." Id. at 874.
Following an analysis of the admitted plethora
of legal precedent, the West Virginia Supreme Court adopted a definition
of "thorough and efficient." " We may now define
a thorough and efficient system of schools: It develops, as best
the state of education expertise allows, the minds, bodies and social
morality of its charges to prepare them for useful and happy occupations,
recreation and citizenship, and does so economically." Id.
at 877.
The
court continued by recognizing areas in which each child educated
in the system should develop to full capacity: 1) literacy; 2) mathematical
ability; 3) knowledge of government sufficient to equip the individual
to make informed choices as a citizen; 4) self-knowledge sufficient
to intelligently choose life work; 5) vocational or advanced academic
training; 6) recreational pursuits; 7) creative interests; 8) social
ethics. Support services, such as good physical facilities and instructional
resources, and state and local monitoring for waste and incompetence
were considered to be implicit in the definition of "a thorough
and efficient system." Id.
We cite Pauley, and quote from it at some length
to show that Courts may, should and have involved themselves in
defining the standards of a constitutionally mandated educational
system. [FN20]
[FN20. We invite the interested reader to consider
cases in other jurisdictions, which have been instructive and
helpful to us. See also Dupree v. Alma School District No. 30
of Crawford County, et al., 279 Ark. 340, 651 S.W.2d 90 (1983);
Horton v. Meskill, 172 Conn. 615, 376 A.2d 359 (1977); Robinson
v. Cahill, 69 N.J. 449, 355 A.2d 129 (1976); Washakie County School
District v. Herschler, 606 P.2d 310 (Wyo.1980).]
We consider foreign cases, along with our constitutional
debates, Kentucky precedents and the opinion of experts in formulating
the definition of "efficient" as it appears in our Constitution.
OPINIONS OF EXPERTS
Numerous well-qualified experts testified in this
case. They were all well educated, experienced teachers, educators,
or administrators; and all were familiar with the Kentucky system
of common schools and with other states' and national school issues.
Dr. Richard Salmon testified that the concept of
efficiency was a three part concept. First, the system should impose
no financial hardship or advantage on any group of citizens. Further,
local school districts must make comparable tax efforts. Second,
resources provided by the system must be adequate and uniform throughout
the state. Third, the system must not waste resources.
Dr. Kern Alexander opined that an efficient system
is one which is unitary. It is one in which there is uniformity
throughout the state. It is one in which equality is a hallmark
and one in which students must be given equal educational opportunities,
regardless of economic status, or place of residence. He also testified
that "efficient" involves pay and training of teachers,
school buildings, other teaching staff, materials, and adequacy
of all educational resources. Moreover, he, like Dr. Salmon, believed
that "efficient" also applies to the quality of management
of schools. Summarizing Dr. Alexander's opinion, an efficient system
is unitary, uniform, adequate and properly managed.
The definitions of "efficient" were documented
and supported by numerous national and local studies, prepared and
authorized by many of the giants of the education profession.
The primary expert for the appellees was a local
school superintendent who felt that an efficient system is one which
is operated as best as can be with the money that was provided.
We reject such a definition which could result in a system of common
schools, efficient only in the uniformly deplorable conditions it
provides throughout the state.
In summary the experts in this case believed that
an "efficient" system of common schools should have several
elements: 1) The system is the sole responsibility of the General
Assembly. 2) The tax effort should be evenly spread. 3) The system
must provide the necessary resources throughout the state--they
must be uniform. 4) The system must provide an adequate education.
5) The system must be properly managed.
DEFINITION OF "EFFICIENT" We now hone
in on the heart of this litigation. In defining "efficient,"
we use all the tools that are made available to us. In spite of
any protestations to the contrary, we do not engage in judicial
legislating. We do not make policy. We do not substitute our judgment
for that of the General Assembly. We simply take the plain directive
of the Constitution, and, armed with its purpose, we decide what
our General Assembly must achieve in complying with its solemn constitutional
duty.
Any system of common schools must be created and
maintained with the premise that education is absolutely vital to
the present and to the future of our Commonwealth. As Herbert Spencer
observed, "Education has for its object the formation of character."
H. Spencer, Social Studies pt. 1, ch. 2, p. 17 (1851). No tax proceeds
have a more important position or purpose than those for education
in the grand scheme of our government. The importance of common
schools and the education they provide Kentucky's children cannot
be overemphasized or overstated.
The sole responsibility for providing the system
of common schools is that of our General Assembly. It is a duty--it
is a constitutional mandate placed by the people on the 138 members
of that body who represent those selfsame people.
The General Assembly must not only establish the
system, but it must monitor it on a continuing basis so that it
will always be maintained in a constitutional manner. The General
Assembly must carefully supervise it, so that there is no waste,
no duplication, no mismanagement, at any level.
The system of common schools must be adequately
funded to achieve its goals. The system of common schools must be
substantially uniform throughout the state. Each child, every child,
in this Commonwealth must be provided with an equal opportunity
to have an adequate education. Equality is the key word here. The
children of the poor and the children of the rich, the children
who live in the poor districts and the children who live in the
rich districts must be given the same opportunity and access to
an adequate education. This obligation cannot be shifted to local
counties and local school districts.
As we have indicated, Section 183 requires the
General Assembly to establish a system of common schools that provides
an equal opportunity for children to have an adequate education.
In no way does this constitutional requirement act as a limitation
on the General Assembly's power to create local school entities
and to grant to those entities the authority to supplement the state
system. Therefore, if the General Assembly decides to establish
local school entities, it may also empower them to enact local revenue
initiatives to supplement the uniform, equal educational effort
that the General Assembly must provide. This includes not only revenue
measures similar to the special taxes previously discussed, but
also the power to assess local ad valorem taxes on real property
and personal property at a rate over and above that set by the General
Assembly to fund the statewide system of common schools. [FN21]
Such local efforts may not be used by the General Assembly as a
substitute for providing an adequate, equal and substantially uniform
educational system throughout this state.
[FN21. See text on page 216.]
Having declared the system of common schools to
be constitutionally deficient, we have directed the General Assembly
to recreate and redesign a new system that will comply with the
standards we have set out. Such system will guarantee to all children
the opportunity for an adequate education, through a state system.
To allow local citizens and taxpayers to make a supplementary effort
in no way reduces or negates the minimum quality of education required
in the statewide system.
We do not instruct the General Assembly to enact
any specific legislation. We do not direct the members of the General
Assembly to raise taxes. It is their decision how best to achieve
efficiency. We only decide the nature of the constitutional mandate.
We only determine the intent of the framers. Carrying-out that intent
is the duty of the General Assembly.
A child's right to an adequate education is a fundamental
one under our Constitution. The General Assembly must protect and
advance that right. We concur with the trial court that an efficient
system of education must have as its goal to provide each and every
child with at least the seven following capacities: (i) sufficient
oral and written communication skills to enable students to function
in a complex and rapidly changing civilization; (ii) sufficient
knowledge of economic, social, and political systems to enable the
student to make informed choices; (iii) sufficient understanding
of governmental processes to enable the student to understand the
issues that affect his or her community, state, and nation; (iv)
sufficient self-knowledge and knowledge of his or her mental and
physical wellness; (v) sufficient grounding in the arts to enable
each student to appreciate his or her cultural and historical heritage;
(vi) sufficient training or preparation for advanced training in
either academic or vocational fields so as to enable each child
to choose and pursue life work intelligently; and (vii) sufficient
levels of academic or vocational skills to enable public school
students to compete favorably with their counterparts in surrounding
states, in academics or in the job market. [FN22]
[FN22. In recreating and redesigning the Kentucky
system of common schools, these seven characteristics should be
considered as minimum goals in providing an adequate education.
Certainly, there is no prohibition against higher goals--whether
such are implemented statewide by the General Assembly or through
the efforts of any local education entities that the General Assembly
may establish--so long as the General Assembly meets the standards
set out in this Opinion.]
The essential, and minimal, characteristics of
an "efficient" system of common schools, may be summarized
as follows:
1) The establishment, maintenance and funding
of common schools in Kentucky is the sole responsibility of the
General Assembly.
2) Common schools shall be free to all.
3) Common schools shall be available to all Kentucky
children.
4) Common schools shall be substantially uniform
throughout the state.
5) Common schools shall provide equal educational
opportunities to all Kentucky children, regardless of place of
residence or economic circumstances.
6) Common schools shall be monitored by the General
Assembly to assure that they are operated with no waste, no duplication,
no mismanagement, and with no political influence.
7) The premise for the existence of common schools
is that all children in Kentucky have a constitutional right to
an adequate education.
8) The General Assembly shall provide funding
which is sufficient to provide each child in Kentucky an adequate
education.
9) An adequate education is one which has as
its goal the development of the seven capacities recited previously.
XI. IS THE PRESENT SYSTEM "EFFICIENT"?
We have described, infra, in some detail, the present
system of common schools. We have noted the overall inadequacy of
our system of education, when compared to national standards and
to the standards of our adjacent states. We have recognized the
great disparity that exists in educational opportunities throughout
the state. We have noted the great disparity and inadequacy, of
financial effort throughout the state.
In spite of the past and present efforts of the
General Assembly, Kentucky's present system of common schools falls
short of the mark of the constitutional mandate of "efficient."
When one juxtaposes the standards of efficiency as derived from
our Constitution, the cases decided thereunder, the persuasive authority
from our sister states and the opinion of experts, with the virtually
unchallenged evidence in the record, no other decision is possible.
XII. DID THE TRIAL COURT'S JUDGMENT VIOLATE
THE SEPARATION OF POWERS PROVISION OF THE KENTUCKY CONSTITUTION?
Appellants assert that the trial court's judgment
violates the separation of powers doctrine in that it exceeded the
authority of the court in "dictating" to the General Assembly,
and it exceeded the authority of the court by creating a type of
open-ended judgment which required legislator-defendants to report
their progress to the trial court.
Our constitutional provisions which relate to separation
of powers between the three separate and independent branches of
government were authored by Thomas Jefferson. They are as follows:
"Sec. 27. The powers of the government of the Commonwealth
of Kentucky shall be divided into three distinct departments, and
each of them be confined to a separate body of the magistracy, to-wit:
Those which are legislative, to one; those which are executive,
to another; and those which are judicial, to another." "Sec.
28. No person or collection of persons, being of one of those departments,
shall exercise any power properly belonging to either of the others,
except in the instances hereinafter expressly directed or permitted."
Section 29 vests the legislative power in the General
Assembly, and Section 109 grants the judicial power to the Court
of Justice.
Because of the specific wording of the Constitution,
we have previously noted the strength of the separation of powers
doctrine in this state: "Our present Constitution contains
explicit provisions which, on one hand, mandate separation among
the the three branches of government, and on the other hand, specifically
prohibit incursion of one branch of government into the powers and
functions of the other. Thus, our constitution has a double-barreled,
positive-negative approach...." Legislative Research Commission
v. Brown, Ky., 664 S.W.2d 907, 912 (1984) (emphasis added).
Moreover, in Brown, we reiterated that the doctrine
of separation of powers must be "strictly construed."
Id.
Simply stated, we have declared that the power
to legislate belongs to the General Assembly, and the power to adjudicate
belongs to the judiciary. It is our goal to honor both the letter
and spirit of that constitutional mandate. "Our functions are
to determine the constitutional validity and to declare the meaning
of what the legislative department has done. We have no other concern."
Johnson v. Commonwealth, 291 Ky. 829, 165 S.W.2d 820, 825 (1942).
With these principles to guide us, we now address
appellants' contentions.
It is argued that the trial court directed the
General Assembly to enact specific legislation and to raise taxes
and that such is a violation of the separation of powers. We do
not agree that that is what the judgment of the trial court does.
The trial judge did define "efficient," he did declare
that a common school education is a fundamental constitutional right
in this state, and he did say that any educational system to be
"efficient," must have certain characteristics. He commented
on the possible methods of financing the system of common schools
in Kentucky and did, of course, opine that additional money would
be required. This later conclusion was based on an abundance of
virtually uncontested and unchallenged evidence in this record.
Moreover, the trial judge specifically denied that
he was directing the General Assembly to enact any specific legislation,
including raising taxes. His mandate to the General Assembly was
to bring the system of common schools into compliance with Section
183 of our Constitution. He did as we have done, established certain
criteria, standards and goals which must be met to so comply. It
is clear that the specifics of the legislation will be left up to
the wisdom of the General Assembly. Clearly, no "legislating"
is present in the decision of the trial court, and more importantly,
as we have previously said, there is none present in the decision
of this Court. We do not agree with appellants.
However, we agree with appellants that the decision
of the trial court to require the appellants to report to him on
their progress is a clear incursion, by the judiciary, of the functions
of the legislature.
The implications of such an open-ended judgment
are very clear. The trial court retains jurisdiction and supervision
of the General Assembly's effort to provide a constitutional system
of common schools. Under such an order, the General Assembly, in
theory if not in practice, would literally have to confer, report,
and comply with the judge's view of the legislation proposed to
comply with the order. The legislation would be that of the joint
efforts of the General Assembly and the trial court, with the latter
having the final word. This is, without doubt, the type of action
that was eschewed when the framers of the four constitutions of
this state placed the separation of powers doctrine in the organic
law of this state.
Our job is to determine the constitutional validity
of the system of common schools within the meaning of the Kentucky
Constitution, Section 183. We have done so. We have declared the
system of common schools to be unconstitutional. It is now up to
the General Assembly to re-create, and re-establish a system of
common schools within this state which will be in compliance with
the Constitution. We have no doubt they will proceed with their
duty.
The enactments of the General Assembly, in this
subject area, or in any area, is always subject to the scrutiny
of the Court of Justice, under the authority described in Brown,
supra, and Johnson, supra.
One last point must be disposed of. We are referred
by appellees to several federal cases where federal courts maintained
continuing supervision over its own order--e.g., supervision of
prisons, court ordered busing, etc. The United States Constitution
has no separation of powers provision within it. The separation
of powers doctrine in the Federal area, has been recognized in federal
common law. We on the other hand, are faced with a strongly written,
definitive constitutional scheme. We must, perforce, follow our
constitution. The federal cases and situations referred to are clearly
not even persuasive here.
We reverse the decision of the trial court with
respect to the requirement that the General Assembly, or any of
the defendants in the trial court, further report to the trial court.
XIII. DID THE TRIAL COURT ERR IN DIRECTING THE
DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION TO PAY THE EXPENSES OF THE SELECT COMMITTEE?
We find no authority that would justify the appointment
of the "special committee" which was to advise the trial
court. While the purpose of the committee was undoubtedly an admirable
one, and while the members of the committee did an excellent job,
their work product essentially is not a proper tool in the formulation
of a judicial decision. A judge must make his or her own decision,
and must use only the evidence in the record, and the available
legal precedents. A judge may not delegate part of his or her authority
to non-judicial persons or institutions. We therefore hold the appointment
of the committee was improper, and, obviously the assessment of
the committee expenses against the Board of Education was improper
as well.
SUMMARY/CONCLUSION
We have decided this case solely on the basis of
our Kentucky Constitution, Section 183. We find it unnecessary to
inject any issues raised under the United States Constitution or
the United States Bill of Rights in this matter. We decline to issue
any injunctions, restraining orders, writs of prohibition or writs
of mandamus.
We have decided one legal issue--and one legal
issue only--viz., that the General Assembly of the Commonwealth
has failed to establish an efficient system of common schools throughout
the Commonwealth.
Lest there be any doubt, the result of our decision
is that Kentucky's entire system of common schools is unconstitutional.
There is no allegation that only part of the common school system
is invalid, and we find no such circumstance. This decision applies
to the entire sweep of the system--all its parts and parcels. This
decision applies to the statutes creating, implementing and financing
the system and to all regulations, etc., pertaining thereto. This
decision covers the creation of local school districts, school boards,
and the Kentucky Department of Education to the Minimum Foundation
Program and Power Equalization Program. It covers school construction
and maintenance, teacher certification--the whole gamut of the common
school system in Kentucky.
While individual statutes are not herein addressed
specifically or considered and declared to be facially unconstitutional,
the statutory system as a whole and the interrelationship of the
parts therein are hereby declared to be in violation of Section
183 of the Kentucky Constitution. Just as the bricks and mortar
used in the construction of a schoolhouse, while contributing to
the building's facade, do not ensure the overall structural adequacy
of the schoolhouse, particular statutes drafted by the legislature
in crafting and designing the current school system are not unconstitutional
in and of themselves. Like the crumbling schoolhouse which must
be redesigned and revitalized for more efficient use, with some
component parts found to be adequate, some found to be less than
adequate, statutes relating to education may be reenacted as components
of a constitutional system if they combine with other component
statutes to form an efficient and thereby constitutional system.
Since we have, by this decision, declared the system
of common schools in Kentucky to be unconstitutional, Section 183
places an absolute duty on the General Assembly to re-create, re-establish
a new system of common schools in the Commonwealth. As we have said,
the premise of this opinion is that education is a basic, fundamental
constitutional right that is available to all children within this
Commonwealth. The General Assembly should begin with the same premise
as it goes about its duty. The system, as we have said, must be
efficient, and the criteria we have set out are binding on the General
Assembly as it develops Kentucky's new system of common schools.
As we have previously emphasized, the sole responsibility
for providing the system of common schools lies with the General
Assembly. If they choose to delegate any of this duty to institutions
such as the local boards of education, the General Assembly must
provide a mechanism to assure that the ultimate control remains
with the General Assembly, and assure that those local school districts
also exercise the delegated duties in an efficient manner.
The General Assembly must provide adequate funding
for the system. How they do this is their decision. However, if
ad valorem taxes on real and personal property are used by the General
Assembly as part of the financing of the redesigned state system
of common schools, the General Assembly has the obligation to see
that all such property is assessed at 100% of its fair market value.
Russman v. Luckett, Ky., 391 S.W.2d 694 (1965). Moreover, because
of the great disparity of local tax efforts in the present system
of common schools, the General Assembly must establish a uniform
tax rate for such property. In this way, all owners of real and
personal property throughout the state will make a comparable effort
in the financing of the state system of common schools.
This decision has not been reached without much
thought and consideration. We do not take our responsibilities lightly,
and we have decided this case based on our perception and interpretation
of the Kentucky Constitution. We intend no criticism of any person,
persons or institutions. We view this decision as an opportunity
for the General Assembly to launch the Commonwealth into a new era
of educational opportunity which will ensure a strong economic,
cultural and political future.
Because of the enormity of the task before the
General Assembly to recreate a new statutory system of common schools
in the Commonwealth, and because we realize that the educational
process must continue, we withhold the finality of this decision
until 90 days after the adjournment of the General Assembly, sine
die, at its regular session in 1990.
COMBS, GANT, LAMBERT and WINTERSHEIMER, JJ., concur.
GANT and WINTERSHEIMER, JJ., file separate concurring
opinions.
LEIBSON and VANCE, JJ., file separate dissenting
opinions.
GANT, Justice, concurring.
I concur in that portion of the majority's decision
which holds that the Kentucky General Assembly has failed to comply
with Section 183 of the Kentucky Constitution and has not provided
for "an efficient system of common schools throughout the State."
[FN1] The majority accurately acknowledges that this
Court has a constitutional duty to make such a holding. However,
the Court's constitutional duty is not fulfilled merely by declaring
that the common school system in Kentucky is constitutionally deficient.
This Court must take the additional step of directing the Trial
Court to issue appropriate writs to compel correction of this constitutional
deficiency.
[FN1. I also join in the majority's ruling on
the procedural issues concerning the parties to this action.]
The Governor, the Superintendent of Public Instruction,
and members of the State Board of Education and General Assembly,
all of whom are parties to this litigation, swore to "support
the Constitution of the United States and the Constitution of this
Commonwealth...." Ky. Const. ?228. The majority finds that
the General Assembly has failed to perform a major mandatory duty
imposed on it by ?183 of the Constitution, yet it grants appellees
no remedy for the grievous wrongs they suffer from this dereliction
of duty. To declare the right but withhold a remedy is to shirk
the Court's own duty. It is the province of the courts to protect
private rights under the Constitution. Constitutional guaranties
would amount to nothing if there was no way to protect them ...
where it is plain that the Constitution has been violated, it is
the duty of the courts to say what the law is, and to protect private
rights. Otherwise, the Constitution may be disregarded, and power
may be exercised by the Legislature in a case where, under the Constitution,
it is without power to act at all, while those whose rights are
thus destroyed would be left without remedy.
Zimmerman v. Brooks, 118 Ky. 85, 80 S.W. 443, 447
(1904).
It is well within the power of the courts to issue
a writ of mandamus compelling performance of a "plain duty"
required by the Constitution. Wooley v. Spalding, Ky., 293 S.W.2d
563, 565 (1956). [FN2] The Governor's obligation to
report the findings of this Court to the General Assembly and to
call an Extraordinary Session of the General Assembly to rectify
the constitutional deficiency in the Commonwealth's school system,
and to recommend corrective measure, is such a duty. ?79 of the
Kentucky Constitution requires the Governor to "give to the
General Assembly information of the state of the Commonwealth, and
recommend to their consideration such measures as he may deem expedient."
On "extraordinary occasions," the Governor may convene
the General Assembly for a Special Session. Ky. Const. ?80. Undoubtedly,
a ruling that the entire common school system in Kentucky is constitutionally
deficient is such an extraordinary occasion.
[FN2. Therein the Marion County Board of Education
was compelled to establish a high school system "that will
afford all children in Marion County equal educational opportunities."
Wooley v. Spalding, 293 S.W.2d at 568 (1956).]
Although the Governor's power to convene the General
Assembly for an Extraordinary Session is discretionary, Kentucky
courts have the authority to compel the exercise of a discretionary
duty. See McKinstry v. Wells, Ky.App., 548 S.W.2d 169, 174 (1977);
Evans v. Thomas, Ky., 372 S.W.2d 798, 800 (1963), cert. denied,
376 U.S. 934, 84 S.Ct. 705, 11 L.Ed.2d 653 (1964); Kaufman v. Humphrey,
Ky., 329 S.W.2d 575, 576 (1959).
In dividing the powers of their government into
"legislative, executive and judicial departments," Ky.
Const. ?27, the citizens of Kentucky established a government of
checks and balances. Each department must play its constitutional
role if confrontation and stalemate are to be avoided.
This Court has neither the expertise nor the power
to instruct the General Assembly as to how the constitutional deficiency
should be corrected. See McKinstry v. Wells, supra. Corrective measures
are for the executive department to recommend and for the legislative
department to adopt.
The majority's description of the magnitude of
the problem is well stated: "Kentucky's entire system of common
schools is unconstitutional." (Emphasis supplied.) The importance
and complexity of the task forbids postponing the finality of the
Court's decision until the adjournment of the 1990 General Assembly.
The Court must do more than describe, albeit eloquently,
the tasks faced by the Executive and Legislative Departments. This
decision has provided the Executive and Legislative branches of
our government with a rare opportunity to start with a clean slate;
to utilize the expertise of its members and others (both inside
and outside the state) to study other jurisdictions which have faced
a similar problem and successfully solved it; and to stamp a distinguished
impression upon the pages of the history of this Commonwealth. Although
adequate and additional funding is a necessary part of the contemplated
procedure, money alone is not the answer. Efficiency of administration,
curriculum, facilities, the ravages of inflation, and many other
problems are extant and pleading for cure.
This action should be remanded to the Franklin
Circuit Court with direction to immediately issue writs of mandamus
requiring the Governor to call an Extraordinary Session of the General
Assembly; requiring the Governor, the Superintendent of Public Instruction,
and members of the State Board of Education to recommend appropriate
corrective measures; and requiring the General Assembly to enact
legislation necessary to bring the Kentucky school system into compliance
with ?183 of the Kentucky Constitution.
WINTERSHEIMER, Justice, concurring.
I concur with the majority opinion only to the
extent that it holds that an efficient system of common schools
has not been provided throughout the state. The General Assembly
has not yet succeeded in achieving the constitutional goal directed
by Section 183.
I further specifically agree that the majority
does not require the General Assembly to pass any law or authorize
the adoption of any regulation. All that the General Assembly must
do is comply with the constitutional direction to provide, through
appropriate legislation, an efficient system of common schools throughout
the state. I also agree with the majority that a class action is
not properly before this Court. CR 23. I further concur with the
opinion to the degree that it does not endorse the so-called Corns
plan and that it condemns the use of the committee report and any
payments in connection therewith. I concur that this Court does
not retain any open-ended continuing jurisdiction.
I agree that the finality of this decision should
be withheld because to do otherwise would result in educational
chaos to the degree that the system of common schools is unconstitutional.
However, I would not give the General Assembly any particular deadline
with the understanding that adjournment sine die contemplates adjournment
without any future date being designated for resumption. This situation
can easily be addressed procedurally by the legislature.
I agree with the majority opinion when it cites
Prowse v. Bd. of Education of Christian Co., 134 Ky. 365, 120 S.W.
307 (1909), in that a system that will be most efficient is for
the judgment of the General Assembly. For similar statements of
the law see City of Louisville v. Board of Education, 302 Ky. 647,
195 S.W.2d 291 (1946); Elliott v. Garner, 140 Ky. 157, 130 S.W.
997 (1910); Madison County Board of Education v. Smith, 250 Ky.
495, 63 S.W.2d 620 (1933). Such a matter is within the sound discretion
of the General Assembly, and the Court will not substitute its judgment
for that of the legislature and will not interfere with the actions
of the legislature.
My principal area of departure from the majority
opinion relates to the matter of service on the members of the General
Assembly. I do not believe that service on two members of the General
Assembly acts as service on the remaining 136 members. The holding
of the majority must be strictly limited to the unique circumstances
presented in this case.
This action is unique because this Court has not
been asked to declare a single act of the legislature unconstitutional.
Relief is sought by means of a declaration that the system is unconstitutional
because it is not efficient.
Clearly this Court does not have any authority
to order the other members of the General Assembly to take any action
when they have not been properly summoned before any court or been
given an opportunity to be heard in regard to this proceeding. Obviously
the two members who have been properly served have presented a comprehensive
defense and it would not serve the ends of judicial economy in this
voluminous litigation to remand the case solely because of the failure
to join the members of the General Assembly individually. I believe
this Court can only express an advisory opinion regarding the matter
of an efficient system of common schools throughout the state as
to the members of the legislature other than Rose and Blandford.
In one sense, too much emphasis has been placed
on the role of the legislature in the entire educational framework
of the Commonwealth. We must keep in mind that the primary responsibility
for the education of children is with the parents. The rights and
responsibilities of the parents must always be recognized. The fractured
fabric of the family is one of the prime causes for educational
failure. Obviously money alone cannot heal such a break. The lack
of scholastic success is not just the fault of the system. Education
is a joint venture in which the parents, students and school must
be committed to cooperation rather than conflict. As the child advances
in age, the educational system must respond by meeting different
needs tailored to the specific circumstances of the child. Consequently,
the involvement of the state public common school system must be
different as needed in each educational situation. Our concern should
be primarily focused on the common schools at the primary level.
The circuit court ruling is far too broad and undisciplined
as to its conclusions regarding education as a fundamental right.
What is a right is what has been promulgated in the 1890 Constitution,
that is an efficient system of common schools throughout the state.
The majority decision does not order the General Assembly to do
anything, however, great care must be taken that independent lawsuits
should not be frivolously spawned by such a decision. "Scarcely
any political question arises in the United States," Alexis
de Tocqueville wrote long ago in Democracy in America, "that
is not resolved sooner or later, into a judicial question."
Proper use of the judicial system is inherent in our system of representative
democracy under law, however, great care must be taken to avoid
an abuse of the system particularly so that it would not lead to
disillusionment and frustration.
Although the majority opinion declares the entire
system of education unconstitutional, it should be obvious to any
student of government that an overwhelming percentage of the laws
now in place must be reenacted by the legislature to provide any
form or substance to the system in Kentucky.
The school system is based on many detailed statutes
and regulations, none of which have been specifically challenged
and many of which have no constitutional impact. Local effort cannot
be destroyed; such a conclusion would not be efficient by any definition
and is well beyond the scope of the relief sought in this action.
It is beyond question that educational opportunity
should be equal for all Kentucky children. The General Assembly
has the constitutional responsibility of providing a minimum level
of opportunity by establishing an efficient system of common schools
throughout the state. Under no circumstances does that mandate preclude
local school districts from supplementing the funds received from
the state by specific local effort. Although such local taxes may
now be considered as state taxes, Cullinan v. Jefferson County,
Ky. 418 S.W.2d 407 (1967), they should be treated as trust funds
and scrupulously attributed to the local district involved. The
General Assembly might wish to make such treatment a statutory reality.
The total independence and authority of local school districts to
supplement any state effort should be carefully preserved.
The only concern we might have is to what specific
areas the legislature will change. Such a determination is totally
within their authority. It may be that they will properly determine
that they must only fine-tune certain aspects of the system. Obviously
they should not throw out the good with the bad without careful
thought and particular attention to detail. My concern is that the
language of the majority is too sweeping when it asserts that the
result of the decision is that the entire system of common schools
is unconstitutional. We must leave it to the good common sense of
the legislature to develop an appropriate system of legislation.
Great care must be taken to differentiate the holding
of the majority from dicta that arises from the many words used
in the opinion. As an example, references to adequacy, a unitary
system and definitions of efficiency are not binding on the General
Assembly in any sense.
I concur with the majority in again emphasizing
that the sole responsibility for providing a system of efficient
common schools throughout the state lies with the General Assembly.
That is the sole holding of this case.
VANCE, Justice, dissenting.
I respectfully dissent. I believe the majority
opinion is inherently inconsistent in that it says that our system
of common schools, to be constitutionally efficient, must provide
substantially equal educational opportunity for children throughout
the Commonwealth, yet it actually permits the continuation of a
system which does not provide substantially equal educational opportunity.
I believe this is so because the opinion expressly
holds that individual school districts may continue to levy taxes
for school purposes to be used solely within the district.
[FN1] Primarily, it is the levy of these taxes by local school
districts, which produces greatly disparate revenues in richer counties
than in poorer ones, that has caused the great disparity in school
funding per child in the various districts throughout the Commonwealth.
[FN1. The taxes levied by local school districts
are local in the sense that they are levied upon property within
the district, but this court has held on many occasions that these
taxes are in fact state taxes which have been authorized by the
General Assembly to fulfill the requirements of ?183 of the Kentucky
Constitution. Cullinan v. Jefferson County, Ky., 418 S.W.2d 407
(1967); Board of Education v. City of Louisville, 288 Ky. 656,
157 S.W.2d 337 (1941); Commonwealth v. Louisville National Bank,
220 Ky. 89, 294 S.W. 815 (1927).]
Although there are factors other than the amount
of money available per child that must be considered when determining
the equality of educational opportunity, I submit that this whole
case is predicated upon the proposition that children who reside
in districts where the amount of funding available per child is
disproportionately less than is available in other districts will
be denied an educational opportunity which is equal to the educational
opportunity afforded in districts with vastly greater resources.
Because the value of taxable property is so much
greater in some districts than others, the continued levy of school
taxes for use within individual districts, even if levied at a uniform
rate throughout the state and property is assessed at 100 percent
of its value, will continue to produce much more revenue in richer
counties than in poorer ones. It follows that the continuation of
such a tax policy will leave us exactly where we are now, and the
school system will not provide substantially equal educational opportunity
throughout the Commonwealth, but will in fact, result in better
educational opportunity for those who reside in the wealthier sections
of the state.
The majority seems to envision that the General
Assembly can provide a dually funded educational system, one to
be funded by the state which will be applied uniformly throughout
the state, the second to be funded locally wherein there is no limit
to the amount which local districts can enhance the funding in their
district above the level of funding provided by the state. This
overlooks the fact that the majority has defined an "efficient"
common school system as one which uniformly provides an equal educational
opportunity throughout the state. As the majority opinion states,
"The children of the poor and the children of the rich, the
children who live in the poorer districts and the children who reside
in the rich districts must be given the same access to an adequate
education." A school system provided by the General Assembly
which is funded partially by the state and supplemented by local
districts to the extent that it results in any significant difference
in funding per child in the richer and poorer districts will not
be constitutionally "efficient" under the definition of
the term as set forth in the majority opinion.
Although the constitution requires the General
Assembly to provide, through appropriate legislation, for an "efficient"
system of common schools throughout the Commonwealth, the debates
of the delegates to the Constitutional Convention shed very little
light upon what the delegates had in mind by the use of the word
"efficient." None of the delegates debated the meaning
of the word efficient in the sense that it was used.
There was a general agreement among the delegates
that common school education should be a state rather than a local
responsibility. There was much discussion concerning the advantages
to children of a common school education and the advantage to the
state of having an educated populace.
The primary thrust of the debate went to the equality
of educational opportunity; that a system of common schools throughout
the state should provide alike for the sons of the poor and the
sons of the rich; and provide alike for the children who reside
in rural areas as well as for those who reside in centers of population.
There was much concern that if education in the common schools throughout
the state were not made a constitutional responsibility of the Commonwealth,
it would simply become or remain a local matter, and the children
of the wealthy and those who reside in the cities would be afforded
greater educational opportunity than the children of the poor and
those who reside in rural areas. The primary concern was that the
opportunity be equal for all children throughout the Commonwealth.
It is because of this universal concern expressed
by the delegates to the convention that I conclude that the word
"efficient" as used by them must include not only its
dictionary definition but must also be construed to include the
requirement of substantial equality of educational opportunity.
I do not concur with the majority that the present
system of common schools has, on the basis of the record before
us, been shown to be constitutionally under-funded or inadequate.
While there is a constitutional requirement, I
think, as to equality of educational opportunity, I can find no
such requirement as to the level of funding. In a sense, of course,
any system so inadequately funded that any money put into it is
simply a waste of resources is, of necessity, not an efficient system,
and to this extent there may be said to be a constitutional mandate
as to the minimum level of funding.
During the constitutional debates an amendment
was offered to the committee report on education by Mr. Becker,
who is quoted in the majority opinion. He offered to amend Section
1 of the committee report to require that the General Assembly provide
an adequate and efficient system of common schools throughout the
Commonwealth. So far as I can determine from reading the constitutional
debates, Mr. Becker was the only member of the delegation who spoke
in favor of this amendment. His support was hardly fervent. He simply
said that in his opinion it would not be inappropriate to require
the system of common schools to be "adequate" as well
as "efficient." The word "adequate" did not
make it into the present constitution, however.
As was noted in the majority opinion, this court
has always granted a great degree of deference to the discretion
of the General Assembly in the manner of operation of the system
of common schools. In City of Louisville v. Board of Education,
302 Ky. 647, 195 S.W.2d 291 (1946) we said: "Section 183 of
the constitution is as broad as it is possible to frame an authority
to the legislature to deal with the common schools in any way it
should desire."
In Elliot v. Garner, 140 Ky. 157, 130 S.W. 997
(1910), we said: "The constitution requires the General Assembly
to provide an efficient system of common schools throughout the
state; and how it shall best accomplish this object is purely a
matter of legislative discretion."
Section 183 of the Constitution of Kentucky leaves
to the legislative discretion the best method of providing for an
efficient system of common schools. Madison County Board of Education
v. Smith, 250 Ky. 495, 63 S.W.2d 620 (1933). Legislative discretion
cannot be extended to such limits as to allow the legislature, in
its discretion, to fail to meet its constitutional mandate, but
I do not believe it is within the province of this court to interfere
with legislative discretion as to the level of school funding unless
it clearly appears from the record that the level of funding is
so low that it cannot reasonably accomplish basic educational necessities.
Not all academic failure is the result of under-funding.
I cannot agree with the majority that the constitution
requires the General Assembly to monitor the school system to insure
that schools are operated with no waste, mismanagement, or political
influence. It is not possible for the General Assembly to oversee
the day-to-day operation of schools. In my view, the General Assembly
has discharged its duty when it has provided by law for a school
system which, if properly administered, will result in substantially
equal educational opportunity throughout the Commonwealth. The administration
of the school system is not a legislative responsibility, and if
the system, because of waste, mismanagement, or political influence,
fails in its purpose, the failure is not to be charged to the General
Assembly.
Above the minimum level of funding that is constitutionally
required for a system of common schools to be efficient, there is
room for unlimited enhancement of educational opportunity. The range
of this enhancement of educational opportunity above the minimum
requirements must be left to the General Assembly. The General Assembly
is the representative of the people and is the proper branch of
government to determine public policy. The question of how much
enhancement there should be of educational opportunity above the
minimum requirements is a matter of public policy.
Whether the General Assembly will provide a system
of common schools of the highest order or one which barely meets
the minimum requirements is a burden which must be placed squarely
upon the shoulders of the General Assembly, where the constitution
places it. It does not rest with the courts, and indeed the doctrine
of separation of powers prohibits judicial interference with legislative
prerogative. If we do not exercise restraint in this matter, I fear
that every theoretical defect in the educational system will be
escalated into litigation to determine the constitutional efficiency
of the system.
The system of common schools is created by many
statutes, none of which have been directly attacked. Since we have
not been asked to declare any statute unconstitutional, I fail to
see how we can, in effect, declare them all unconstitutional.
The majority has heaped upon the General Assembly
a monumental task with little guidance. It is confronted with a
necessity to create a new system of common schools without being
told specifically what is wrong with the old one. The majority has
not declared any specific statute unconstitutional and, in effect,
I think has condoned the continuation of a system which, in all
likelihood, will not result in equal educational opportunity throughout
the Commonwealth.
There is now imposed a requirement that the system
be adequately funded, but no specific standards have been established
to determine the adequacy of funding. Instead, it is held that the
school system must be funded adequately so as to achieve seven goals,
each of which is expressed in the most general terms. Those goals
are: "to provide each and every child with at least the seven
following capacities: (i) sufficient oral and written communication
skills to enable students to function in a complex and rapidly changing
civilization; (ii) sufficient knowledge of economic, social, and
political systems to enable the student to make informed choices;
(iii) sufficient understanding of governmental processes to enable
the student to understand the issues that affect his or her community,
state, and nation; (iv) sufficient self-knowledge and knowledge
of his or her mental and physical wellness; (v) sufficient grounding
in the arts to enable each student to appreciate his or her cultural
and historical heritage; (vi) sufficient training or preparation
for advanced training in either academic or vocational fields so
as to enable each child to choose and pursue life work intelligently;
and (vii) sufficient levels of academic or vocational skills to
enable public school students to compete favorably with their counterparts
in surrounding states, in academics or in the job market."
How will the General Assembly be able to know if
the legislation it enacts will provide each and every student throughout
the Commonwealth with a sufficient grounding in the arts to enable
that student to appreciate his cultural or historical heritage?
This goal, like the other seven, is so vague that regardless of
what legislation is enacted by the General Assembly the door has
been opened for another group or groups of students to sue the General
Assembly ad infinitum, claiming that in some respects the General
Assembly has failed to provide a system of common schools which
achieves the seven goals of an efficient system. I fear it will
be the courts rather than the General Assembly, which will end up
monitoring the common school system.
I am willing to declare, on the basis of this record,
that the system of common schools throughout the state does not
meet the constitutional imperative of substantially equal educational
opportunity for all children. I would go no further. It is the duty
of the General Assembly to abide by its constitutional responsibility,
but in my opinion, because of the failure to name all of the members
of the General Assembly as parties to this action, and to serve
them with process or otherwise secure their appearance, we are powerless
at this time and in this litigation to mandate any action on the
part of the General Assembly or to place the school system in limbo
absent some legislative action.
LEIBSON, Justice, dissenting.
Respectfully, I dissent.
I agree in principle with the majority's opinion
that the General Assembly has failed thus far to, "by appropriate
legislation, provide for an efficient system of common schools throughout
the State." [FN1] Ky. Const., ?183. Nevertheless,
this case should be reversed and dismissed because it does not present
an "actual" or "justiciable" controversy. See
KRS 418.040; Black's Law Dictionary, 5th ed. 1979, p. 777.
[FN1. By "throughout" I do not mean
everywhere, but simply not in all school districts. For examples
to the contrary: Woodford County has been praised as a "model"
district; Jefferson County has been recently televised nationally
as an example of a successful program.]
An "actual controversy" for purposes
of adjudication requires three things: (1) a justiciable issue (2)
involving the legal rights (3) of adverse parties. Revis v. Daugherty,
215 Ky. 823, 287 S.W. 28 (1926); Veith v. City of Louisville, Ky.,
355 S.W.2d 295 (1962).
An actual controversy is one admitting of specific
relief through a decree conclusive in character. A judicial pronouncement
in the present case where there are public questions of the utmost
importance but no such justiciable controversy will cause more problems
than it will solve. Worse yet, it opens the doors of the courthouse
to a host of new lawsuits by litigants seeking a forum to argue
questions of public policy which are incapable of specific judicial
resolution. In line with the legal truism that "bad cases make
bad law," we can expect this case to be cited as precedent
in a new wave of litigation involving issues that should be debated
in the forum of public opinion, and then legislated rather than
litigated.
To qualify as a judicial controversy the issues
must touch legal relationships of parties having adverse legal interests,
clearly definable, concrete, and admitting of specific resolution.
The Declaratory Judgment Act, KRS 418.040, was never intended for
advisory opinions. As the late great wordsmith, Judge Gus Thomas,
so aptly said: "[C]ontroverted questions are justiciable ones,
and ... do [] not include abstract legal questions designed merely
to furnish information to the inquirer and which, if jurisdiction
was taken, would convert courts into a sort of law school for the
instruction of the inquisitive mind." Oldham County v. Arvin,
244 Ky. 551, 51 S.W.2d 657, 658-59 (1932).
I. THE PROBLEMS RELATED TO THE ISSUES
Baker v. Carr, 369 U.S. 186, 82 S.Ct. 691, 7 L.Ed.2d
663 (1962), provides a framework for considering the problems related
to the issues. First, as to justiciability: "[T]he Court's
inquiry necessarily proceeds to the point of deciding whether the
duty asserted can be judicially identified and its breach judicially
determined, and whether protection for the right asserted can be
judicially molded." 369 U.S. at 198, 82 S.Ct. at 700.
Then, as to nonjusticiability: "The nonjusticiability
of a political question is primarily a function of the separation
of powers. 369 U.S. at 210 [82 S.Ct. at 706]. .... Prominent on
the surface of any case held to involve a political question is
found a textually demonstrable constitutional commitment of the
issue to a coordinate political department; or a lack of judicially
discoverable and manageable standards for resolving it; or the impossibility
of deciding without an initial policy determination of a kind clearly
for nonjudicial discretion." 369 U.S. at 217 [82 S.Ct. at 710].
Viewed objectively, the issues in this case fail
to qualify under the standards for justiciability in Baker v. Carr,
falling instead squarely within its description of a nonjusticiable
case: there is (1) in our Kentucky Constitution a "textually
demonstrable ... commitment of the issue to a coordinate political
department," viz., the General Assembly; (2) "a lack of
judicially discoverable and manageable standards"; and (3)
"the impossibility of deciding without an initial policy determination
of a kind clearly for nonjudicial discretion." Id.
The case as presented to us neither asks for nor
is amenable to specific relief through a decree conclusive in character.
The appellees have made it painfully clear throughout that they
do not want our Court to declare any particular statute or group
of statutes unconstitutional, including the system of local school
districts, local financing and local administration now in place.
Yet, the Majority Opinion decides otherwise: "Lest there by
any doubt, the result of our decision is that Kentucky's entire
system of common schools is unconstitutional...--all its parts and
parcels. This decision applies to the statutes creating, implementing
and financing the system and to all regulations, etc., pertaining
thereto. [Emphasis original].
If this verbiage is taken literally, local school
districts who are the members of the Council for Better Education,
the moving force behind this lawsuit may be eaten up by the monster
they created when they invited the courts into the dialogue about
how to improve the public school system. The statutes that create
them have now been declared unconstitutional. Unable to rationalize
an opinion that declares nothing unconstitutional, we seem to have
declared everything unconstitutional.
Elsewhere, the Opinion states that "individual
statutes are not herein addressed specifically or considered and
declared to be facially unconstitutional." But our "school
system" is nothing more and nothing less than the statutes,
individually and collectively, structuring its existence and providing
for its financing. The system does not exist apart from the statutes,
and cannot be declared unconstitutional without specifying which
of its components, in whole or in part, make it so.
At oral argument appellees' counsel conceded that,
in asking that we declare the system unconstitutional but not the
statutes, they were presenting us with a "Gordian" knot.
But ask they did, thus presenting us with an insolvable, nonjusticiable
dilemma. And, we have responded with what could be expected when
you open Pandora's box, an Opinion which at the same time declares
everything unconstitutional and nothing unconstitutional. This is
more than just a vain act or a bad precedent. This result may well
create havoc in the educational process. It adds to the General
Assembly's burden in seeking to improve our educational system rather
than lightening the load.
The lawsuit filed in Franklin Circuit Court, carefully
analyzed, does no more than ask the courts to demand that the Governor
and the General Assembly proceed to improve the public school system,
specifically by telling the executive and legislative branch to
propose and enact new taxes. While for the most part the trial court's
response, like ours, was limited to advice and comments rather than
judicial decision-making, its decision went further by granting
specific relief in two areas: (1) a mandate to the General Assembly
to impose additional new taxes and (2) an order to the President
Pro Tempore of the Senate and the Speaker of the House of Representatives
to return to Franklin Circuit Court to report on the General Assembly's
progress. Both of these, the only concrete or specific "relief"
granted, are invalidated by our decision, and rightly so, recognizing
they are orders that exceed the power of the judiciary.
As to funding, we state only that "[t]he General
Assembly must provide adequate funding for the system. How they
do this is their decision."
As to Judge Corns' Order to the leadership of the
General Assembly to report to him on its progress, we declare this
"a clear incursion, by the judiciary, of the functions of the
legislature."
On the other hand, in our Opinion we ordered nothing
specific, only that the General Assembly comply with the Constitution,
which, of course, it is already duty bound to do.
I say this with one major reservation, because
there is one portion of our Opinion that seems to do more than simply
encourage the General Assembly to enact legislation to improve the
school system. It states: "[B]ecause of the great disparity
of local tax efforts in the present system of common schools, the
General Assembly must establish a uniform tax rate for such property."
[Emphasis original.]
If this sentence means what it says, we have done
what we were not asked to do, declare unconstitutional the statutes
permitting local school districts to set local tax rates within
certain guidelines. Destroying the power presently assigned by statute
to local school districts to set local school tax rates may or may
not work an improvement. Either way, certainly, it is beyond the
scope of the relief sought by the appellees. It is the last thing
they would want done, as they have said in no uncertain terms. Yet
it is the only thing of a judicial nature that we have decided in
our Majority Opinion, and it is beyond the parameters of this lawsuit.
[FN2]
[FN2. The Response to the Petition for Rehearing
filed by the appellee, Council for Better Education, requests
us to add this clarification to the Majority Opinion: "The
record in this case clearly shows that no school district in Kentucky
is overfunded. No district is funded to the level of the National
average. Therefore, to take money from one district and give it
to another would be a step toward a mediocre system statewide.
This would violate Section 183 of the constitution and would not
be approved by this Court." Perhaps, since we are prepared
to enter the political arena, we should be prepared to go this
extra mile.]
We were only asked to decide one issue in this
lawsuit: whether the General Assembly has responded adequately to
its constitutional responsibility. This is a political question,
pure and simple. We have undertaken to "enter upon policy determinations
for which judicially manageable standards are lacking." Baker
v. Carr, supra, 369 U.S. at 226, 82 S.Ct. at 715. Without such standards,
a case is not justiciable. It is not enough to decide that Kentucky
does not have an "efficient system of common schools throughout
the State," as Section 183 of the Constitution requires, without
specifying what statutes are unconstitutional, and why. Yet, the
former is not asked, and the latter is not possible. I repeat, this
case is not justiciable.
II. THE PROBLEMS RELATED TO THE PARTIES
Essentially, the plaintiffs comprise two groups,
one consisting of sixty-six local school districts represented through
the Council for Better Education plus seven more school districts
specifically named, and a second consisting of twenty-two public
school students suing as individuals.
Turning first to the school districts, it should
be obvious from a legal standpoint that these school districts have
no authority to sue the General Assembly, their creator, over the
circumstances of their existence. As stated in Board of Ed. of Louisville
v. Board of Ed. of Jefferson County, Ky., 458 S.W.2d 6, 8-9, (1970),
quoted but disregarded in the Majority Opinion: "Certainly
there are no constitutional guarantees that local school districts,
which are purely creatures of the legislature in their creation
and alteration, must be regarded by the legislature as autonomous
fiefdoms for all purposes, particularly in face of the plenary power
vested in the legislature by section 183 of the Constitution of
Kentucky as regards the common schools of the state. Id. at 8.
This
would seem to be conclusive of the matter. But if a case factually
to the point is needed, East Jackson Public Schools v. State, 133
Mich.App. 132, 348 N.W.2d 303 (1984), should be persuasive. In a
suit seeking to declare Michigan's school financing unconstitutional
because it produced unequal per student funding between districts,
the Michigan court held, inter alia, that the school districts did
not have standing "to defy their creator over the terms of
their existence... [o]r to expend public funds to finance such litigation."
348 N.W.2d at 306. We should hold the same. Cases from other jurisdictions
cited to the contrary, and footnoted in our Majority Opinion, are
without exception fundamentally unsound as judicial precedents because
they fail to address this question. They also fail to deal with
the inherent limitations upon the scope of judicial activity and
the constitutional limitations mandated by the doctrine of separation
of powers.
The next group of parties-plaintiff is twenty-two
students, suing by and through their parents as next friends, who
most certainly would have standing to sue, but who had no right
to relief unless and until first they pleaded and proved they had
been damaged in some specific manner by a named defendant's violation
of their constitutional rights. No evidence was presented that such
was the case.
Only five of the students were even mentioned in
the proof, and only one of these five testified, a ninth grade student
in the Dayton Independent School District system who said there
were computer courses she would like to take if available, and that
only Spanish, not French or Latin, were offered in her school. Certainly
this evidence falls short of proving a case on her behalf. There
is no evidence at all to sustain the claims of the remaining plaintiffs.
The fundamental error in the trial court, and in
our Court, is that the claims of these individual students were
treated as a vehicle for a class action on behalf of the entire
student body of Kentucky seeking declarative judgment relief against
the General Assembly. The students were given relief of a nature
appropriate to a class action, not to the violation of their individual
rights. These students never legally represented anybody but themselves.
None of the requirements for a class action were followed. Nevertheless,
the trial court referred to the students and their parents as "representing
as a class all similarly situated students in Kentucky's districts."
Our Majority Opinion acknowledges that the trial
court erred, that "there was no class action." But, as
in the trial court, in our Majority Opinion the relief granted was
of a type appropriate to a class action, but wholly inappropriate
to a suit by an individual student seeking a judicial remedy for
a specific deprivation of rights. There was no proof supporting
their claim as individuals and they had no right to relief as representatives
of the class.
The problems with parties-defendant are even more
glaring and insurmountable. The case below included as defendants
the Governor, the Superintendent of Public Instruction, the State
Treasurer, and the State Board of Education, as well as the President
Pro Tempore of the Senate and the Speaker of the House of Representatives.
The Governor, the Superintendent of Public Instruction, the State
Treasurer, and the State Board of Education, although appearing
in the suit below, took no appeal from the final judgments, presumably
because their authority was not seriously challenged nor were they
required to do anything specific by its terms. John A. Rose, President
Pro Tempore of the Senate, and Donald J. Blandford, Speaker of the
House of Representatives, are the only parties-defendant on this
appeal. [FN3]
[FN3.
The judgment is final as to the Governor, whether meaningless
or not. Nevertheless, Justice Gaunt's Opinion suggests that the
case "should be remanded to the Franklin Circuit Court with
direction to immediately issue writs of mandamus requiring the
Governor to call an Extraordinary Session of the General Assembly."
This shows how far one's thinking can go once we forget we are
confined to the limitations of a justiciable controversy.]
The
fundamental problem is, of course, how does one sue the General
Assembly, a legislative body but not a body corporate, to force
them to take action, or to declare unconstitutional their actions
or non actions not embodied in any specific legislation. The General
Assembly does not exist as a legal entity apart from its specific
legislative acts. Our Majority Opinion cites as authority Seattle
Such. Dist. No. 1 of King Catty. v. State, 90 Wash.2d 476, 585 P.2d
71 (1978), but this case never discussed by what authority the legislature
of the State of Washington can be sued by naming the Speaker of
the House and President of the Senate. On the other hand, the Dissenting
Opinion by Justice Rosalind in the State of Washington case, joined
by two others, does address the problem: "The real and only
party against whom relief is demanded is the legislature and that
body is one which is not amenable to suit... [T]he people have seen
fit to protect the members of their legislature from harassment
by litigants while they are in session (Const. art. 2, ?16). [Note:
Our Kentucky Constitution does likewise in ?43; see Wiggins v. Stuart,
Ky.App., 671 S.W.2d 262 (1984) ]. When they are not in session,
they are not a legislature. The legislature is not a corporate body,
and its officers are not authorized to accept service on behalf
of their fellow members. Furthermore, it is contrary to the nature
of our representative form of government to permit interference
by the court with the internal functioning of the legislature."
[Emphasis added.] 585 P.2d at 127.
Using a very liberal procedural construction, our
Majority Opinion reaches the conclusion that the President Pro Tempore
and Speaker of the House "were in fact named in a representative
capacity." The question is, representing who? Certainly not
the individuals who will serve in the next General Assembly. This
Court cannot assert power over these future legislators to direct
their future actions or to punish them for contempt if they fail
to legislate in response to our mandate in a manner that we deem
appropriate.
In
Legislative Research Comm' v. Brown, Ky., 664 S.W.2d 907 (1984),
wherein it was the General Assembly trying to expand the nature
of its legislative function rather than the judiciary seeking to
direct it, we stated: "The Kentucky General Assembly is not
one of continuous session... A legislative body ceases to exist
at the moment of its adjournment." 664 S.W.2d at 915.
The Speaker of the House and the President Pro
Tempore of the Senate were elected to preside at the last legislative
session. They cannot be designated as representatives of a body
that "ceases to exist." Under our Constitution the House
of Representatives and the Senate have power to choose officers
anew "biannually." Ky. Const. ?34. This means they must
be elected anew every two years, when the General Assembly regenerates
and reorganizes as provided for in the Kentucky Constitution ?36.
Who is the legal representative for the next General Assembly between
sessions when it has no official existence? For that matter, who
is to say that an order entered against the leadership while in
session is binding upon the members of the General Assembly?
In sum, it is pure fiction, not legal fiction,
to hold that the President Pro Tempore and the Speaker of the House
at the last legislative session represent the General Assembly,
or that the General Assembly is before this Court in this case for
purposes of adjudication. This is a lawsuit with no defendants.
It is one thing to order a school district to take some specific
actions required by the constitution or statutes, or to desist from
actions contrary thereto, as was done in Wooley v. Spalding, Ky.,
293 S.W.2d 563 (1956), and quite a different thing to declare unconstitutional
the action of legislators as individuals or as a body in failing
to enact "appropriate legislation" to "provide for
an efficient system of common schools throughout the State [Ky.
Const. ? 183]," particularly when we have not been asked to
designate any specific legislation as constitutionally inappropriate.
A school district is a legal entity created by statute with a corporate
existence. Its actions as a body may be judicially reviewed and
it may be ordered as a body by a court to take certain specific
actions that the law requires. Such is not the case with our General
Assembly.
Finally, there is one further procedural problem
when we undertake to order legislators what to do. The manner in
which legislative power is exercised, like judicial power, is discretionary.
It is fundamental premise of mandamus against public officials in
the exercise of legislative or judicial power, that mandamus will
not lie to compel the exercise of a discretionary power in any particular
way. Fannin v. Keck, Ky., 296 S.W.2d 226 (1956); Childers v. Stephenson,
Ky., 320 S.W.2d 797 (1959); Kaufman v. Humphrey, Ky., 329 S.W.2d
575 (1959). Thus, even had we the power to order the General Assembly
to enact new or different legislation on the subject of school financing
or management of the public school system, it is beyond our power
to suggest what the remedial legislation should be.
We have exceeded the judicial power vested in the
Court of Justice by Section 109 of the Constitution and violated
the doctrine of separation of powers constitutionalized in Sections
27 and 28 of the Kentucky Constitution.
At the heart of this case is the problem created
by the uneven tax base for support in a public school system that
is built on local property taxes. This problem is not unique to
our state. Supreme courts from several of our sister states, confronted
with this problem and caught up in a rush of judicial activism,
have attempted to intervene judicially in the legislative process.
None have undertaken to intervene where the issues were as nonspecific
as presented here, and thus as incapable of judicial resolution.
Further, as subsequent cases from West Virginia and New Jersey attest,
when they intervened in the process their initial rulings were just
the beginning of a long-running dialogue. They have been confronted
with complex sequels to original decisions that did not improve
matters significantly in the first place. They have been inundated
with subsequent litigation.
An appreciation of the difference between legislative
and judicial lawmaking is essential to maintaining constitutionally
mandated separation of powers. Speaking to the constitutional limitations
inherent in the separation of powers doctrine, in Valley Forge College
v. Americans United, 454 U.S. 464, 472, 102 S.Ct. 752, 758, 70 L.Ed.2d
700, 709 (1982), the United States Supreme Court explains that the
"actual controversies" principle: "at an irreducible
minimum ... requires the party who invokes the court's authority
to 'show that he personally has suffered some actual or threatened
injury as a result of the putatively illegal conduct of the defendant,'
[Citation omitted], and that the injury 'fairly can be traced to
the challenged action' and 'is likely to be redressed by a favorable
decision,' [Citation omitted].... [J]udicial power [is limited]
'to those disputes which confine ... courts to a rule consistent
with a system of separated powers and which are traditionally thought
to be capable of resolution through the judicial process.' "
[Emphasis added.]
The case now before us fails to meet this "irreducible
minimum" necessary to invoke judicial power.
This same concept is thus explained by legal historian
G. Edward White of the University of Virginia School of Law in his
recent book, The American Judicial Tradition, 2d ed., p. 461 (1988):
"The power of judges pertains only to those matters peculiarly
'legal,' as distinguished from political.... [T]he burden of judicial
opinion-writing, then, has been to show that a decision has not
been grounded on other than 'legal' considerations, and that within
that ambit it analyzes legal issues in an intelligible fashion."
Since publication of the initial Majority Opinion
three months ago, the predominant reaction from the public, the
press, and the politicians, has been that our decision provides
the Governor and General Assembly an unprecedented opportunity to
reform a deficient state educational process. The operative word
is "opportunity," not "power," because the General
Assembly has always had the same "power" it has now to
reform the system. We have not enhanced its power. Unfortunately,
providing opportunities at the expense of the integrity of the judicial
process is not a traditional item on the judicial agenda, nor in
my view an appropriate role for the courts.
Our Majority Opinion is fundamentally unsound,
not because there is no problem but because the case does not present
issues capable of judicial resolution. We have now become part of
the problem when we intend to be part of the solution.
The text of this case is
a legal decision and thus lies in the public domain. |