fbpx
Wikipedia

DeRolph v. State

DeRolph v. State is a landmark case in Ohio constitutional law in which the Supreme Court of Ohio ruled that the state's method for funding public education was unconstitutional.[1] On March 24, 1997, the Supreme Court of Ohio ruled in a 4–3 decision that the state funding system "fails to provide for a thorough and efficient system of common schools," as required by the Ohio Constitution, and directed the state to find a remedy.[2] The court would look at the case several times over the next 12 years before it relinquished jurisdiction, but the underlying problems with the school funding system remain to this day.[1]

Seal of the Supreme Court of Ohio

Background edit

Following Ohio's 1851 constitutional convention, voters approved a new constitution that included provisions requiring a "thorough and efficient system of common schools throughout the State."[3] In 1923 the Supreme Court defined "thorough" and "efficient" in the landmark Miller v. Korns case.[4]

Historically, Ohio's public schools have been funded with a combination of local property tax revenue and money from the state.[5] This led to disparities in the quality of education in more affluent districts, where high property values led to greater funding, and urban and rural districts,[1] where low property values left students with funding shortfalls and dilapidated facilities.[6]

Funding became even more difficult for districts in 1976, when House Bill 920 went into effect, essentially freezing the revenue from property taxes. A millage tax would usually generate more revenue as the value of property in a district increased, but HB 920 required county auditors to cut the tax rate to bring in the same amount of revenue each year. Even as inflation increased costs for schools, their revenue could not keep up, which forced them to ask voters to approve new levies every few years.[5]

Over the next 30 years, the state's school districts would send nearly 10,000 levies to the ballot.[7] Voters grew weary of the constant campaigns, and unaware of the intricacies of the funding scheme, they often questioned why schools were constantly running out of money.[8]

Districts in both poor and affluent areas found the funding system unsustainable, and in 1988, superintendents from districts in underfunded areas in southeast Ohio formed the Coalition of Rural and Appalachian Schools to work together to address the problem. Lacking the funding to mount a serious legal challenge, they invited districts from around the state to join a new coalition: The Ohio Coalition for Equity & Adequacy of School Funding.[9]

The coalition, a council of governments representing nearly every school district in the state, was formed in 1991. It filed a complaint in the Perry County Court of Common Pleas on December 19, 1991, on behalf of Nathan DeRolph, a 15-year-old freshman at Sheridan High School and 550 school districts in the state.[9] Represented by Bricker & Eckler LLP, the coalition named the state, the Ohio Board of Education, its superintendent, and the Ohio Department of Education as defendants in the suit, which alleged that the funding system did not meet the constitutional standard for thoroughness or efficiency and presented an exhaustive body of evidence demonstrating that the system produced unequal, inefficient, and inadequate results.[10]

The allegations went mostly unchallenged by the state, which in fact produced its own witnesses to testify to the inadequacy of the funding system.[10] Held at the Perry County Courthouse in New Lexington,[11] the case produced a 30-day trial, a transcript more than 5,600 pages long and 450 exhibits before the trial judge, Linton D. Lewis, Jr., ruled on July 1, 1994 that Ohioans had a fundamental right to a state-funded education and that the state’s system for providing that education was unconstitutional. Furthermore, he ordered the board of education to devise a means for the General Assembly to eliminate wealth-based disparities in education.[10]

Although the board voted not to appeal, the attorney general’s office, which represents the state, filed a notice of appeal to the Fifth District Court of Appeals, based in Canton.[10] The appeals court’s 2-1 decision, handed down on August 30, 1995, held that a previous ruling by the state supreme court permitted disparities in education if the state provided for a basic education.[12]

Two months later, the coalition appealed to the Supreme Court of Ohio.[12]

DeRolph I edit

Prologue edit

In the days before the court heard the case, there was uncertainty on both sides as to how the justices would rule. The justices could be pigeonholed on certain issues but on education, their leanings were harder to categorize. Senate President Pro Tempore Richard Finan said that a ruling for the plaintiffs would be a "worst-case scenario" for the legislature because any solution put forward would be challenged as well while William L. Phillis, the director of the coalition, cast the decision as one between educating children for a rapidly evolving world or letting them fall behind.[13]

The case reached the Ohio Supreme Court on September 10, 1996. Chief Justice Thomas Moyer tripled the length of oral arguments, by letting each side present for ninety minutes.[14] Bricker's Nicholas A. Pittner argued for the schools while Solicitor General Jeffrey Sutton defended the state.[15]

Pittner reiterated arguments that unequal funding and dilapidated buildings left some students with less opportunity than others. Sutton conceded that there were problems with the system but argued that they should be fixed locally, not by the court. He said that the state constitution guaranteed students an education for free, not the best possible education for free.[16]

Justices peppered both sides with questions, asking whether anyone should be held to account for funding inadequacies and focusing also on school facilities around the state, which Pittner noted were sometimes in such poor condition that they did not meet even the state's minimum standards for a humane prison.[15][16]

The decision edit

By the time the justices adjourned to deliberate, two justices, Andrew Douglas and Paul Pfeifer, had decided that the funding system was unconstitutional and needed to be changed. Meanwhile, Justice Deborah L. Cook was adamant that the court should not be involved in school funding decisions and "never budged from that position," but neither side had made that claim.[14]

A majority emerged among Justices Douglas, Pfeifer, Alice Robie Resnick, and Francis E. Sweeney, Sr. Meanwhile, Chief Justice Moyer and Justice Evelyn Lundberg Stratton indicated they were likely to join Cook but expressed more flexibility, depending on the language of the majority opinion, which was randomly assigned to Sweeney. Although formal deliberations had lasted about only half an hour, the justices continued to discuss the case one on one, as Sweeney tried to coax Moyer and Stratton into the majority.[14]

However, in the end, the decision was carried by the narrow, 4-3 majority that emerged after oral arguments. The March 24, 1997 ruling did the following:

  • it found the funding scheme for elementary and secondary education to be unconstitutional.
  • It ordered an end to the "school foundation program" and the reliance on property taxes for school funding
  • It provided the state 12 months to solve the problem.
  • It awarded attorney's fees to the plaintiffs.
  • It remanded the case to the trial judge.[17]

Resnick, Pfeifer, and Douglas each wrote separate concurring opinions. For the minority, Moyer's dissent acknowledged problems with school funding but questioned whether they actually violated the state constitution[18] and argued that they were matters for the legislature to handle.[14]

Reaction edit

The next day, Gov. George Voinovich, Senate President Richard H. Finan and House Speaker Jo Ann Davidson called a press conference to denounce the ruling. Voinovich suggested that his administration might defy the decision,[14] and he classified the ruling as "judicial activism" and "a thinly veiled call for a massive, multi-billion tax increase."[19]

Editorial boards at the largest papers in the state joined in, perhaps prodded by the governor's aides[14] who argued that the decision put too much power in the hands of an unknown rural judge,[20] echoing complaints by Republican Party lawmakers.[21] The Plain Dealer wrote that "almost any other outcome would have been preferable."[22] The Columbus Dispatch called the ruling "one highly injudicious lurch" and dismissed claims that most districts in the state were underfunded.[23] The Cincinnati Enquirer went as far as calling for a constitutional amendment that would trump the ruling, saying that otherwise, "education policy for 11 million Ohio residents will be dictated in a rural flyspeck on the state map."[20]

The next week, the state filed a motion to reconsider, asking the court (1) whether property taxes could still be used to fund schools at all, (2) whether school funding debts remained valid even though repayment provisions extended beyond the court's deadline to find a new funding system, and (3) to retain jurisdiction over the case instead of sending it back to the trial court.[24] The coalition opposed the motion, saying that the ruling was clear enough and that the state needed to instead get about the business of providing additional funding.[25]

Later that month, the court issued a ruling clarifying that property taxes could still be used if they were not the primary revenue source for school funding, debts remained valid, and the case would return to the trial judge, but appeals of his decision would bypass the Court of Appeals and go directly back to the Ohio Supreme Court.[26][27]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Stephens, Scott (March 23, 2007). . The Plain Dealer. Cleveland, Ohio. Archived from the original on March 15, 2012. Retrieved January 31, 2009.
  2. ^ "The DeRolph Decision and Educational Adequacy". Supporters of Thorough and Efficient Public Schools. Retrieved January 31, 2009.
  3. ^ (Press release). The Supreme Court of Ohio. October 25, 2006. Archived from the original on November 20, 2008. Retrieved January 31, 2009.
  4. ^ Hignett, Christen (2005). "Ohio's Public School Funding System: The Unanswered Questions and the Unresolved Problems of Derolph". Capital University Law Review 33 (739): 744.
  5. ^ a b (PDF), The Governor's Blue Ribbon Task Force on Financing Student Success, February 2005, p. 60, archived from the original (PDF) on September 29, 2006, retrieved January 31, 2009
  6. ^ . Newark, N.J.: Institute on Education Law and Policy. Archived from the original on January 17, 2016. Retrieved January 31, 2009.
  7. ^ Starzyk, Edith (January 29, 2009). "Gov. Ted Strickland's school plan earns praise". The Plain Dealer. Cleveland, Ohio. Retrieved January 31, 2009.
  8. ^ . Cleveland, Ohio: Cuyahoga County Treasurer's Office. Archived from the original on December 24, 2008. Retrieved January 31, 2009.
  9. ^ a b James, Drew (June 17, 2001). "Coalition legal fees $3.6M and growing Ohio taxpayers foot bills for Columbus firm's work". The Toledo Blade. Toledo, Ohio. Retrieved January 31, 2009.
  10. ^ a b c d O'Brien, Molly T. (October 2003), "At the Intersection of Public Policy and Private Process: Court-Ordered Mediation and the Remedial Process in School Funding Litigation", Public Law & Legal Theory Working Paper Series, University of Akron School of Law, Social Science Research Network, p. 49, doi:10.2139/ssrn.461023, hdl:1811/77056, SSRN 461023
  11. ^ Thrane, Susan W. County Courthouses of Ohio. Bloomington: Indiana UP, 2000, 119.
  12. ^ a b . Columbus, Ohio: Campaign for Ohio's Future. 2007. Archived from the original on May 7, 2008. Retrieved January 31, 2009.
  13. ^ Brown, T.C.; Joe Hallett (September 9, 1996). "Court's leaning hard to predict; justices to decide if school funding is fair". The Plain Dealer. Cleveland, Ohio. p. 1A.
  14. ^ a b c d e f Hallett, Joe (March 18, 2007). "What went on in the Supreme Court". The Columbus Dispatch. Columbus, Ohio. Retrieved January 31, 2009.[permanent dead link]
  15. ^ a b Leonard, Lee (September 8, 1996). "School funding case to open in high court". The Columbus Dispatch. Columbus, Ohio. p. 1C.
  16. ^ a b Hulsey, Lynn; Tim Miller (September 11, 1996). "School funding: Court hears arguments". Dayton Daily News. Dayton, Ohio. p. 1A.
  17. ^ "The decision in brief". The Columbus Dispatch. Columbus, Ohio. March 25, 1997. p. 1A.
  18. ^ St. Clair, Duane (March 25, 1997). "4-3 ruling ends fight begun in '91". The Columbus Dispatch. Columbus, Ohio. p. 1A.
  19. ^ Miller, Tim (March 26, 1997). "Voinovich lashes edict". Dayton Daily News. Dayton, Ohio. p. 1A.
  20. ^ a b . The Cincinnati Enquirer. Cincinnati, Ohio. March 25, 1997. Archived from the original on July 25, 2011. Retrieved February 9, 2009.
  21. ^ Hallett, Joe (March 30, 1997). "School ruling furor begins to settle down". The Plain Dealer. Cleveland, Ohio. p. 1A.
  22. ^ "Now what? Supreme Court wants school-finance system remade, but the specifics - and the logic - are lacking". The Plain Dealer. Cleveland, Ohio. March 25, 1997. p. 10B.
  23. ^ "Judicial lawmaking: High court wreaks havoc on Ohio schools". The Columbus Dispatch. Columbus, Ohio. March 25, 1997. p. 14A.
  24. ^ Candinsky, Catherine (April 4, 1997). "Guidance asked on school ruling". The Columbus Dispatch. Columbus, Ohio. p. 1A.
  25. ^ Bradshaw, James (April 11, 1997). "School ruling needs no clarification, coalition says". The Columbus Dispatch. Columbus, Ohio. p. 2C.
  26. ^ Miller, Tim (April 26, 1997). "Court returns case to judge". Dayton Daily News. Dayton, Ohio. p. 1B.
  27. ^ Leonard, Lee (April 26, 1997). "Judge keeps school-funding case; school loans can go ahead". The Columbus Dispatch. Columbus, Ohio. p. 1A.

External links edit

  • Supreme Court opinion in Derolph I
  • Supreme Court opinion in Derolph II
  • Supreme Court opinion in Derolph III
  • Supreme Court opinion in Derolph IV
  • The Ohio Coalition for Equity & Adequacy of School Funding
  • Governor's Blue Ribbon Task Force Report[permanent dead link]
  • Chronology of DeRolph v. State of Ohio

derolph, state, landmark, case, ohio, constitutional, which, supreme, court, ohio, ruled, that, state, method, funding, public, education, unconstitutional, march, 1997, supreme, court, ohio, ruled, decision, that, state, funding, system, fails, provide, thoro. DeRolph v State is a landmark case in Ohio constitutional law in which the Supreme Court of Ohio ruled that the state s method for funding public education was unconstitutional 1 On March 24 1997 the Supreme Court of Ohio ruled in a 4 3 decision that the state funding system fails to provide for a thorough and efficient system of common schools as required by the Ohio Constitution and directed the state to find a remedy 2 The court would look at the case several times over the next 12 years before it relinquished jurisdiction but the underlying problems with the school funding system remain to this day 1 Seal of the Supreme Court of Ohio Contents 1 Background 2 DeRolph I 2 1 Prologue 2 2 The decision 2 3 Reaction 3 References 4 External linksBackground editFollowing Ohio s 1851 constitutional convention voters approved a new constitution that included provisions requiring a thorough and efficient system of common schools throughout the State 3 In 1923 the Supreme Court defined thorough and efficient in the landmark Miller v Korns case 4 Historically Ohio s public schools have been funded with a combination of local property tax revenue and money from the state 5 This led to disparities in the quality of education in more affluent districts where high property values led to greater funding and urban and rural districts 1 where low property values left students with funding shortfalls and dilapidated facilities 6 Funding became even more difficult for districts in 1976 when House Bill 920 went into effect essentially freezing the revenue from property taxes A millage tax would usually generate more revenue as the value of property in a district increased but HB 920 required county auditors to cut the tax rate to bring in the same amount of revenue each year Even as inflation increased costs for schools their revenue could not keep up which forced them to ask voters to approve new levies every few years 5 Over the next 30 years the state s school districts would send nearly 10 000 levies to the ballot 7 Voters grew weary of the constant campaigns and unaware of the intricacies of the funding scheme they often questioned why schools were constantly running out of money 8 Districts in both poor and affluent areas found the funding system unsustainable and in 1988 superintendents from districts in underfunded areas in southeast Ohio formed the Coalition of Rural and Appalachian Schools to work together to address the problem Lacking the funding to mount a serious legal challenge they invited districts from around the state to join a new coalition The Ohio Coalition for Equity amp Adequacy of School Funding 9 The coalition a council of governments representing nearly every school district in the state was formed in 1991 It filed a complaint in the Perry County Court of Common Pleas on December 19 1991 on behalf of Nathan DeRolph a 15 year old freshman at Sheridan High School and 550 school districts in the state 9 Represented by Bricker amp Eckler LLP the coalition named the state the Ohio Board of Education its superintendent and the Ohio Department of Education as defendants in the suit which alleged that the funding system did not meet the constitutional standard for thoroughness or efficiency and presented an exhaustive body of evidence demonstrating that the system produced unequal inefficient and inadequate results 10 The allegations went mostly unchallenged by the state which in fact produced its own witnesses to testify to the inadequacy of the funding system 10 Held at the Perry County Courthouse in New Lexington 11 the case produced a 30 day trial a transcript more than 5 600 pages long and 450 exhibits before the trial judge Linton D Lewis Jr ruled on July 1 1994 that Ohioans had a fundamental right to a state funded education and that the state s system for providing that education was unconstitutional Furthermore he ordered the board of education to devise a means for the General Assembly to eliminate wealth based disparities in education 10 Although the board voted not to appeal the attorney general s office which represents the state filed a notice of appeal to the Fifth District Court of Appeals based in Canton 10 The appeals court s 2 1 decision handed down on August 30 1995 held that a previous ruling by the state supreme court permitted disparities in education if the state provided for a basic education 12 Two months later the coalition appealed to the Supreme Court of Ohio 12 DeRolph I editPrologue edit In the days before the court heard the case there was uncertainty on both sides as to how the justices would rule The justices could be pigeonholed on certain issues but on education their leanings were harder to categorize Senate President Pro Tempore Richard Finan said that a ruling for the plaintiffs would be a worst case scenario for the legislature because any solution put forward would be challenged as well while William L Phillis the director of the coalition cast the decision as one between educating children for a rapidly evolving world or letting them fall behind 13 The case reached the Ohio Supreme Court on September 10 1996 Chief Justice Thomas Moyer tripled the length of oral arguments by letting each side present for ninety minutes 14 Bricker s Nicholas A Pittner argued for the schools while Solicitor General Jeffrey Sutton defended the state 15 Pittner reiterated arguments that unequal funding and dilapidated buildings left some students with less opportunity than others Sutton conceded that there were problems with the system but argued that they should be fixed locally not by the court He said that the state constitution guaranteed students an education for free not the best possible education for free 16 Justices peppered both sides with questions asking whether anyone should be held to account for funding inadequacies and focusing also on school facilities around the state which Pittner noted were sometimes in such poor condition that they did not meet even the state s minimum standards for a humane prison 15 16 The decision edit By the time the justices adjourned to deliberate two justices Andrew Douglas and Paul Pfeifer had decided that the funding system was unconstitutional and needed to be changed Meanwhile Justice Deborah L Cook was adamant that the court should not be involved in school funding decisions and never budged from that position but neither side had made that claim 14 A majority emerged among Justices Douglas Pfeifer Alice Robie Resnick and Francis E Sweeney Sr Meanwhile Chief Justice Moyer and Justice Evelyn Lundberg Stratton indicated they were likely to join Cook but expressed more flexibility depending on the language of the majority opinion which was randomly assigned to Sweeney Although formal deliberations had lasted about only half an hour the justices continued to discuss the case one on one as Sweeney tried to coax Moyer and Stratton into the majority 14 However in the end the decision was carried by the narrow 4 3 majority that emerged after oral arguments The March 24 1997 ruling did the following it found the funding scheme for elementary and secondary education to be unconstitutional It ordered an end to the school foundation program and the reliance on property taxes for school funding It provided the state 12 months to solve the problem It awarded attorney s fees to the plaintiffs It remanded the case to the trial judge 17 Resnick Pfeifer and Douglas each wrote separate concurring opinions For the minority Moyer s dissent acknowledged problems with school funding but questioned whether they actually violated the state constitution 18 and argued that they were matters for the legislature to handle 14 Reaction edit The next day Gov George Voinovich Senate President Richard H Finan and House Speaker Jo Ann Davidson called a press conference to denounce the ruling Voinovich suggested that his administration might defy the decision 14 and he classified the ruling as judicial activism and a thinly veiled call for a massive multi billion tax increase 19 Editorial boards at the largest papers in the state joined in perhaps prodded by the governor s aides 14 who argued that the decision put too much power in the hands of an unknown rural judge 20 echoing complaints by Republican Party lawmakers 21 The Plain Dealer wrote that almost any other outcome would have been preferable 22 The Columbus Dispatch called the ruling one highly injudicious lurch and dismissed claims that most districts in the state were underfunded 23 The Cincinnati Enquirer went as far as calling for a constitutional amendment that would trump the ruling saying that otherwise education policy for 11 million Ohio residents will be dictated in a rural flyspeck on the state map 20 The next week the state filed a motion to reconsider asking the court 1 whether property taxes could still be used to fund schools at all 2 whether school funding debts remained valid even though repayment provisions extended beyond the court s deadline to find a new funding system and 3 to retain jurisdiction over the case instead of sending it back to the trial court 24 The coalition opposed the motion saying that the ruling was clear enough and that the state needed to instead get about the business of providing additional funding 25 Later that month the court issued a ruling clarifying that property taxes could still be used if they were not the primary revenue source for school funding debts remained valid and the case would return to the trial judge but appeals of his decision would bypass the Court of Appeals and go directly back to the Ohio Supreme Court 26 27 References edit a b c Stephens Scott March 23 2007 School funding suit brought changes but challenges remain The Plain Dealer Cleveland Ohio Archived from the original on March 15 2012 Retrieved January 31 2009 The DeRolph Decision and Educational Adequacy Supporters of Thorough and Efficient Public Schools Retrieved January 31 2009 Supreme Court Upholds Constitutionality of State Law Authorizing Charter Schools Press release The Supreme Court of Ohio October 25 2006 Archived from the original on November 20 2008 Retrieved January 31 2009 Hignett Christen 2005 Ohio s Public School Funding System The Unanswered Questions and the Unresolved Problems of Derolph Capital University Law Review 33 739 744 a b Building a Better School Funding System PDF The Governor s Blue Ribbon Task Force on Financing Student Success February 2005 p 60 archived from the original PDF on September 29 2006 retrieved January 31 2009 IELP Resources Ohio Newark N J Institute on Education Law and Policy Archived from the original on January 17 2016 Retrieved January 31 2009 Starzyk Edith January 29 2009 Gov Ted Strickland s school plan earns praise The Plain Dealer Cleveland Ohio Retrieved January 31 2009 Funding Our Schools Cleveland Ohio Cuyahoga County Treasurer s Office Archived from the original on December 24 2008 Retrieved January 31 2009 a b James Drew June 17 2001 Coalition legal fees 3 6M and growing Ohio taxpayers foot bills for Columbus firm s work The Toledo Blade Toledo Ohio Retrieved January 31 2009 a b c d O Brien Molly T October 2003 At the Intersection of Public Policy and Private Process Court Ordered Mediation and the Remedial Process in School Funding Litigation Public Law amp Legal Theory Working Paper Series University of Akron School of Law Social Science Research Network p 49 doi 10 2139 ssrn 461023 hdl 1811 77056 SSRN 461023 Thrane Susan W County Courthouses of Ohio Bloomington Indiana UP 2000 119 a b 10th Anniversary of DeRolph v State of Ohio Columbus Ohio Campaign for Ohio s Future 2007 Archived from the original on May 7 2008 Retrieved January 31 2009 Brown T C Joe Hallett September 9 1996 Court s leaning hard to predict justices to decide if school funding is fair The Plain Dealer Cleveland Ohio p 1A a b c d e f Hallett Joe March 18 2007 What went on in the Supreme Court The Columbus Dispatch Columbus Ohio Retrieved January 31 2009 permanent dead link a b Leonard Lee September 8 1996 School funding case to open in high court The Columbus Dispatch Columbus Ohio p 1C a b Hulsey Lynn Tim Miller September 11 1996 School funding Court hears arguments Dayton Daily News Dayton Ohio p 1A The decision in brief The Columbus Dispatch Columbus Ohio March 25 1997 p 1A St Clair Duane March 25 1997 4 3 ruling ends fight begun in 91 The Columbus Dispatch Columbus Ohio p 1A Miller Tim March 26 1997 Voinovich lashes edict Dayton Daily News Dayton Ohio p 1A a b Wrong branch of government The Cincinnati Enquirer Cincinnati Ohio March 25 1997 Archived from the original on July 25 2011 Retrieved February 9 2009 Hallett Joe March 30 1997 School ruling furor begins to settle down The Plain Dealer Cleveland Ohio p 1A Now what Supreme Court wants school finance system remade but the specifics and the logic are lacking The Plain Dealer Cleveland Ohio March 25 1997 p 10B Judicial lawmaking High court wreaks havoc on Ohio schools The Columbus Dispatch Columbus Ohio March 25 1997 p 14A Candinsky Catherine April 4 1997 Guidance asked on school ruling The Columbus Dispatch Columbus Ohio p 1A Bradshaw James April 11 1997 School ruling needs no clarification coalition says The Columbus Dispatch Columbus Ohio p 2C Miller Tim April 26 1997 Court returns case to judge Dayton Daily News Dayton Ohio p 1B Leonard Lee April 26 1997 Judge keeps school funding case school loans can go ahead The Columbus Dispatch Columbus Ohio p 1A External links editSupreme Court opinion in Derolph I Supreme Court opinion in Derolph II Supreme Court opinion in Derolph III Supreme Court opinion in Derolph IV The Ohio Coalition for Equity amp Adequacy of School Funding Governor s Blue Ribbon Task Force Report permanent dead link Chronology of DeRolph v State of Ohio DeRolph filings Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title DeRolph v State amp oldid 1197347629, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.