The plaintiff, Dwight Duncan, a resident of Sioux Falls, was passed1 from eighth grade B to -eighth grade A in the Mark Twain school in said city in June, 1923. At the. beginning of school 'in the autumn of 1923 he applied for admission to the Sioux Falls high -school, but was refused admission upon'the ground that, by the regulations of the school board of the independent school district of Sioux Falls, -he must finish the work of eighth grade A — or one semester of substantially one-half -of a school year- — before he would be -eligible to enter the high school. He applied to the trial court for mandamus to compel his admission to high school, which was granted. . From such ruling, the -defendants, the board of education of the city of Sioux Falls, its members, its city superintendent of schools, and its principal of the high school appeal. There -is no dispute as to the facts. It is the contention of appellants that the trial court drew incorrect conclusions from- the facts.
*156The only ground upon -which the trial court justified its interference with the control of the schools in the independent school district of Sioux Falls by its officials is based -upon section 7517, •Rev. 'Code 1919, as amended by chapter 214, Laws 1921, which reads as follows:
“1. Any pupil who- shall successfully complete the work of the eighth grade as established in the state course of study, and who holds a common school diploma granted by the county superintendent, or other eighth grade diploma endorsed by him, is privileged to continue his school work up to- and including the twelfth grade by attending any public high school or state educational institution of this -state, or adjoining state, furnishing a higher course of study than that offered by his 'home district without payment of any tuition except for laboratory fees or for individual instruction outside of regular school hours. Provided, that the school district or state educational institution in which such pupil is enrolled as a high school student, shall be compensated by the school board o-f his home district for such instruction as hereinafter provided. * * * ”
It appears that respondent in May, 1923, voluntarily took an examination before the county superintendent of schools, and received the common school diploma mentioned in said act from such’ county superintendent. The trial court found as its fourteenth finding of fact:
“That the course o-f stuly in the graded schools of the city of Sioux Falls substantially comply with the state course of study prescribed for rural schools.”
We need go no further in order to demonstrate that mandamus was improvi-dently issued. By the terms of the act above quoted, the 'possession of a common school diploma aloné does not entitle the holder to admission to high school. It is only when the pupil has successfully completed the work of the eighth grade as established in the state course of study, and also possesses the common school ¡diploma, or other eighth grade diploma, that said act purports to have any application. .Respondent had not completed the eighth grade work in Sioux Falls, and, since the trial court found that such work substantially conformed to the state course of study, it is perfectly clear that respondent was' not possessed of the required qualifications for admission to high *157school. The school board was therefore fully justified in refusing such admission, and the trial court erred in granting mandamus.
But said act does not apply, and! does not purport to apply, to independent school districts. Section 7517, Rev. Code 1919, is in that portion of the school law' relating to common school districts. Nor does said act purport to apply to- any district, whether independent or common, where there is provision therein for' education beyond the eighth grade. The clear purport of the act is .to enable an eighth grade graduate of a common school district to obtain further schooling, at the. expense of' his district, in -a “public high school or state educational institution of this state or adjoining state,” outside of his district where the schooling in his district ends with the eighth grade.
The judgment appealed from is reversed, and the cause is remanded to the trial court with directions to dismiss the proceeding.
DILLON, J., not sitting.Note.- — Reported in. 196 N. W. 547. See, Headnotes (1), (2) and (3), American Key-Numbered Digest, Schools and school districts, Key-No. 154, 35 Cyc. 1111.
On discretion of school authorities in excluding pupils for want of proficiency, see note in 50 L. R. A. (N. S.) 268.