(After stating the foregoing facts.)
Must a contract between the county board of education and a person for the transportation of pupils to and from a public school, in a case where the board is authorized to provide such transportation, be reduced to writing, signed by both parties, and spread upon the minutes of such board, in order to be enforceable against such board by the party so contracting with it? It is insisted by the defendants in the court below, who at the time of the institution of this suit were members of such board, and the superintendent of the public schools of the county, that such a contract must be in writing and spread upon the minutes of the board. This contention is based upon section 386 of the Code of 1910, which provides that “All contracts entered into by the ordinary with other persons in behalf of the county must be in writing and entered upon their minutes.” The provision on this subject in the Codes of 1861 and 1868 is in the identical language of the present Code, except that in those Codes the words “justices of the inferior court” are employed where the word “ordinary” appears in the present Code. Code (1861), § 465; Code (1868), § 527. After the adoption of the constitution of 1868, jurisdiction over county matters, which had been vested in the justices of the inferior court, was lodged in the ordinary of each county. Code (1873),. §§ 337, 5101, 5149. So in the Code of 1873 and all subsequent editions thereof this provision stands as it does in the present Code. By its terms this section applies only to all contracts entered into by the ordinary with other persons in behalf of the county. If we adhere to its letter and stick in the bark in its. construction, it would not apply to contracts entered into by any other officer than the ordinary; but this court, in dealing with this section, has applied it to contracts entered into by county commissioners in behalf of the county. Milburn v. Commissioners of Glynn County, 112 Ga. 160 (37 S. E. 178); Jones v. Bank of Cumming, 131 Ga. *754614 (63 S. E. 36); Weathers v. Easterling, 153 Ga. 601 (113 S. E. 153). In the case first cited Chief Justice Simmons used the broad language that this section “requires that all contracts entered into by the county authorities with other. persons, in behalf of the county, must be in writing and entered on their minutes.” In the first headnote of the second case cited it is said that this provision requires that “all contracts entered into by the ordinary (or county commissioners having charge of the county affairs) with other persons in behalf of the county must be in writing and entered on their minutes.” While this point was not directly involved in the first case above cited, was not involved at all in the second case cited, and was not expressly raised in the last case cited, we think the construction placed on this section in those cases is the correct one. We believe that this section should be made applicable to contracts made by any officer who may be substituted by legislative act in the place of the ordinary over county matters. It would not be going too far to apply this section to an officer so substituted in the place of the ordinary in the management of county matters. But we think that we would be invading the province of the legislature in making this section of the Code applicable to contracts made by other county officials, not in behalf of the county, on which the county would not be liable, and on which the county could not bo sued. In no sense is a contract of the kind under consideration one made in behalf of the county. The county is in no sense a party to this contract. The county could not be held liable for its breach, nor could it be sued thereon. The board of education alone is liable upon this contract. The members of the board alone can be sued for its breach. The general county funds could not be reached under a judgment obtained against the board of education for a breach of this contract. The only funds which could be applied to the satisfaction of a judgment’ against such board for such breach would be “the public-school funds of the county derived from the State, or raised by county-wide taxation .as authorized by the constitutional amendment ratified November 3, 1930.” McKenzie v. Board of Education of Floyd County, 158 Ga. 893 (134 S. E. 721).
So we are of the opinion that the only contracts which come within the terms of this section of the Code are contracts made by some county official in behalf of the county, to which the county *755is a party and on which the county would be liable if the contract was broken by it. The contract between the board of education and a person for the transportation of pupils to and from a public school is riot one made in behalf of the county. It is a contract of the board of education, and not of the county. It is made in behalf of a school district. It is a contract of such board. The board is a party to it, and not the county. The board is responsible for its breach, and not the county. Nothing to the contrary of what is said above was ruled in Smith v. Board of Education, 153 Ga. 758 (113 S. E. 147). In that ease this court was defining the meaning of the words, “corporate authority,” as used in the amendment to the constitution of this State proposed by the act of 1919 and adopted November 2, 1920. Acts 1919, p. 66. In that case this court held that the county board of education, in recommending taxation for the maintenance of public schools in a county, acted for and in behalf of such county and through “its corporate authority.” In that case this court was not dealing with the question now under consideration, and that case is not authority for the proposition that a contract made by the county board of education for the transportation of pupils to and from a public school was a contract made in behalf of the county.
Was the county board of education of Houston County legally authorized to make with the plaintiff the contracts set out in the petition in this case? This question is raised by a ground of the defendant’s demurrer which challenges the power and authority of such board to enter into these contracts. The board is authorized to provide means for the transportation of pupils and teachers to and from any school which it is authorized to establish, whenever such board deems it for the best interest of such school. Code of School Laws, Acts 1919, pp. 288, 327, § 93; McKenzie v. Board of Education, supra. Such board can pay for such means of transportation “from the public-school funds of the county derived from the State, or raised by county-wide taxation as authorized by the constitutional amendment ratified November 2, 1920. Ga. Laws 1919, p. 66, Park’s Code Supp. 1922, § 6579.” McKenzie v. Board of Education, supra. Did the board of education have authority to consolidate the schools mentioned in plaintiff’s petition with the school at Perry? By the act of September 26, 1889 (Acts 1889, p. 1295), provision was made for the estab*756lishment of a public school system in the Town of Perry. By section 9 of this act it was provided “that the board of education of Houston County shall not establish or open any school within the corporate limits of Perry.” The Code of School Laws declares that it is “substituted for the existing school laws of this State, and all laws and parts of laws in conflict herewith are hereby repealed.” Acts 1919, p. 288, 8 Park’s Code (1922 Supp.), p. 295. This Code further declares that nothing therein contained shall be construed to annul or repeal any local law now of force in any city or county of this State providing for the organization and maintenance of public schools in such city or county. Acts 1919, p. 340, § 128, 8 Park’s Code Supp. 1922, § 1438(1). Under this local law the board of education of Houston County is without authority to establish and maintain any common or public school in the City of Perry. It can not accomplish this end by consolidating other district schools with the school established under the above local act in Perry, or by establishing a public or common school independently of such municipality. It seems to be the general policy of the State to keep independent municipal school systems and the county system of public or common schools separate and distinct. Certainly this is so under the above local act providing for the establishment and maintenance of a common or public school in the City of Perry.
It may be said that under the following acts, to wit, the act of August 18, 1919 (Acts 1919, p. 287), for the establishment and maintenance of one or more consolidated public schools in each county of this State, and the act of August 15, 1921 (Acts 1921, p. 178), which are found in 8 Park’s Code Supp. 1922, § 1437 (r), the county board of education is authorized to provide for the high school training of rural boys and girls at any consolidated school in the county, where, in the judgment of the board, the best facilities are provided and where such school may be most accessible to the pupils attending; and that this board of education could furnish the means of transportation of pupils to and from such school. We do not think that these acts authorize the board of education of Houston County to consolidate rural schools with the school established and maintained in the City of Perry by that municipality. Whether this board under these acts could consolidate rural public schools with a school established and 'maintained *757by it in the City of Perry to furnish “high school training of the rural boys and girls” of said county is not now for decision by this court.
So we are of the opinion that the board of education was without authority to make the contracts sued on, and could not expend the county educational funds for the purpose of transporting pupils to and from the school at Perry. It follows that the county funds could not be expended by the board in providing means for transportation of pupils to and from such school. Pace v. County Board of Education, 150 Ga. 777; Board of Education v. Butler, 154 Ga. 569 (115 S. E. 10); Glenn v. Trion Co., 157 Ga. 639 (122 S. E. 52).
But it is insisted that the law of this case has been fixed by the decision of the Court of Appeals in the case of Board of Education v. Hunt, 29 Ga. App. 665 (116 S. E. 900), and that this law must now be followed, although the decision of that court may be incorrect. The Court of Appeals in that case did not rule that the plaintiff was entitled to recover under the facts set forth in his petition. The only ruling made in that case by the Court of Appeals was that “A county board of education is not a body corporate with authority to sue and be sued, in the ordinary sense.” So we do not think that the Court of Appeals held that the plaintiff was entitled to recover on the contracts sued on in that ease and involved in this case.
Applying the above rulings, we do not think that the petition set forth a cause of action, and the demurrer thereto should have been sustained. These rulings make it unnecessary to determine whether there was a misjoinder of parties and of causes of action. Judgment reversed.
All the Justices concur.