Pacheco v. SCHOOL DISTRICT NUMBER 11 OF EL PASO CTY.

MR. JUSTICE KELLEY

dissenting:

The court by dismissing the appeal has avoided deciding the constitutional issue which is, in my opinion, properly before us. By not deciding it now we are only postponing the inevitable.

It is true, as the majority states, that the trial court, under the facts before it, held unconstitutional the proviso of 1965 Perm. Supp., C.R.S. 1963, 123-30-18(2) (hereinafter set out in extracts from the court’s order denying defendants’ motion for new trial), primarily on the basis of Mrs. Pacheco’s indigency. In the findings of fact on which the court’s judgment was premised, the court found:

“6. That Palmer High School students and North Junior High School students are required to purchase activity cards to permit their participation in such activities as athletic contests, dances, plays, concerts, school newspapers, the school annual, and other like activities, unless such activities are paid for on an individual basis, or unless prior arrangements for admission are made with the principal or sponsoring teacher; that the enumerated activities are integral parts of the overall education program provided in those schools;

Based on the foregoing finding of fact, the court concluded:

“1. With regard to any activity which is an integral and fundamental part of the school program, the district is constitutionally required to provide the same ‘gratuitously,’ (Article IX, Section 2 of the Colorado Constitution), at least insofar as the children of indigent parents are concerned,. . . (Emphasis added.)

“3. Despite the fact that participation in the various activities represented by the school activities cards are voluntary, those activities are an important part of the entire school program and are conducted on school property under the supervision of school personnel. This being so, the district has *277an obligation to make those activities available at no cost to children of indigent parents, . . .

“6. In arriving at the foregoing conclusion, the Court is not unmindful of the statutory provisions, Attorney General’s opinion, and case law cited by defendant district, declaring various types of fees and charges to be constitutionally proper. It is the Court’s opinion, however, that where, as here, indigency is shown, even though not pleaded, the plaintiff has established a right on the part of her children to participate in all of the integral parts of the school program without charge or payment of fee.”

The School District filed a motion for new trial or to alter and amend the judgment as to “the issue concerning activity fees,” stating:

“The issue involved is encompassed in Paragraph 6 of the Court’s Findings of Fact and In Paragraphs 3 and 6 of the Court’s Conclusions of Law and the extent said findings and conclusions are included within Paragraph 2 of said judgment.”1

The trial court in a formal order denying the motion for new trial or to alter and amend the judgment made the following conclusions:

“. . . The principal thrust of defendants’ argument seems to be that there was no evidence before the court to substantiate the court’s finding that the activities subject to such fees or covered by the activity cards were integral parts of the overall educational program .... It therefore necessarily follows, argue the defendants, that those activities do not fall within the ‘free public schools’ and gratuitous education requirements of Section 2, Article IX of the Constitution of Colorado. This argument could be answered very easily by pointing out that when during the hearing, plaintiffs offered in evidence Exhibits A, B and C, all purporting to show the *278extent to which the so-called extracurricular activities were in fact a part of the overall school programs, counsel for the defendants conceded that such was the case.

“But beyond the fact of counsel’s stipulation, there is indeed evidence in the record to support a finding that the non-academic activities, for which fees are charged, are a part of the educational programs ....

“The defendants also argue that the court erred in declaring unconstitutional, at least by implication, that part of 123-30-18(2) C.R.S. 1963, as amended, which provides as follows:

‘. . . miscellaneous fees may be collected on a voluntary basis as a condition of participation or attendance at a school sponsored activity or program not within the academic portion of the educational program.’ ”

The defendants had no doubt about the issue on appeal. The opening paragraph of their brief reads:

“The issue before this court is whether or not the trial court committed error in holding that C.R.S. 1963, 123-30-18(2), as amended, is unconstitutional in permitting the collection of miscellaneous fees on a voluntary basis from indigent students for activities or programs not within the academic portion of the educational program.”

It seems clear to me a justiciable issue is before us. I would answer the problem briefly in this manner.

Although the trial court based its conclusion, in part, on the indigency of the plaintiffs, I would conclude that the nature of the educational activity is controlling. This is so because of the constitutional mandate for the establishment and maintenance of a thorough and uniform system of free public schools wherein all residents, between the ages of six and twenty-one years, may be educated gratuitously. If the activities in issue constitute part of the education contemplated by the constitution, then they must be furnished gratuitously to all between the ages of six and twenty-one years.

The general assembly is clothed with plenary power to, *279legislate for all purposes of civil government. This power is subject only to the restraints of the United States and Colorado Constitutions. Unlike the United States Constitution, the Colorado Constitution serves as a limitation on the power of the general assembly rather than as a grant of legislative authority. Alexander v. People, 7 Colo. 155, 2 P. 894 (1883). The general assembly may expand the rights and liberties secured by the Colorado Constitution, but the constitution guarantees that fundamental values may not be eroded by legislative action. In re Kindergarten Schools, 18 Colo. 234, 32 P. 422 (1893).

The question resolves itself into this: Does the education which is to be provided gratuitously under the constitution include both academic and non-academic programs?

In considering the school district’s authority to collect activities fees, it is well settled that the governing body of a school district has only those powers expressly conferred upon it by statutory or constitutional provisions or such powers necessarily incidental to the conferred powers. Big Sandy School District v. Carroll, 164 Colo. 173, 433 P.2d 325 (1967); Union High School District No. 2 v. Paul, 105 Colo. 93, 95 P.2d 5 (1939); School District No. 98 of Adams County v. Pomponi, 79 Colo. 658, 247 P. 1056 (1926). In authorizing school districts to collect miscellaneous fees the general assembly limited its grant of authority to the collection of such fees for activities and programs “not within the academic portion of the educational program. ” By its very grant of authority to collect the fees in question in this case, the general assembly recognized the educational nature of non-academic school sponsored activities and programs.

Because of the derivative nature of the school district’s power to collect the fees authorized by 1965 Perm. Supp., C.R.S. 1963, 123-30-18(2), I conclude that the fees in question may only be assessed for activities and programs which are part of the educational program of the school district. Otherwise the collection of such fees is ultra vires. Union High School District No. 2 v. Paul, supra.

*280Further support for the proposition that non-academic, school sponsored activities and programs are educational in nature is found in the evidence presented to the trial court.

On the record in this case, I would have to affirm the trial court. In view of my interpretation of the constitutional language of Article IX, Section 2,1 would go further than the trial court and hold that the entire educational program is required to be provided to all students “gratuitously.”2 This does not mean that every non-academic activity carried on at the school house must necessarily be a portion of the educational program. If the legislature authorizes a school district to collect fees for non-academic activities which are not a part of the educational program and a school district determined, for instance, that attendance at a football game was not educational, I would abide by the legislative determination.

To this extent I think I am in agreement with the Chief Justice. However, I do not think posture of the present case permits such a conclusion. I, of course, would limit my concession in this respect to reasonable determinations of what is non-educational.

I would affirm.

Paragraph 2 of Judgment:

“The plaintiffs have judgment against defendant school district in the amount of $99.22.”

Although I believe that this conclusion can be supported by the plain language of the constitution, substantial support for this position may be found in the textual changes made in Article IX, Section 2, as it worked its way through the Constitutional Convention. See PROCEEDINGS OF THE CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION. See also HALE, GOVE, and SHATTUCK, EDUCATION IN COLORADO, 1861-1885 (1885).