Akin v. Harris

1929 OK 187, 280 P. 291, 138 Okla. 30, 1929 Okla. LEXIS 469
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 30, 1929
Docket18852
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1929 OK 187 (Akin v. Harris) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Akin v. Harris, 1929 OK 187, 280 P. 291, 138 Okla. 30, 1929 Okla. LEXIS 469 (Okla. 1929).

Opinion

REID, C.

Oliver H. Akin, plaintiff in error, was the county superintendent of public instruction of Creek county, and the defendant in error, Mark Harris, was director of a school district in said county. They will be referred to herein as superintendent and director. Certain parties, alleging themselves to be resident taxpayers and patrons of said school district, filed with the superintendent a complaint in writing alleging that the director had failed and refused to perform the duties of his office in certain particulars, and requested his removal. The matter was set for hearing by the superintendent and notice given to the director. It appears that both the director and the complainants were represented by counsel at the hearing. Objection was made by the director to the. jurisdiction of the superintendent to hear the charges. This was overruled and the hearing proceeded. At the conclusion the superintendent made an order finding that the director had failed and refused to perform the duties enjoined upon him by the statutes of the state of Oklahoma, and had not given any time or attention whatever to his duties as such director ; and further found that he had not complied with the duties enjoin'ed upon him by section 10372, C. O. S. 1921, whereupon an order was entered removing the director and appointing his successor. These facts appear from the return on the writ of certiorari which was issued as hereinafter ■shown.

An action was then brought in the district court by the director against the superintendent to review by certiorari the proceedings by which he was removed. The matter was heard in the district court upon the director’s petition for the writ and the return of the superintendent showing all the proceedings had before him, including t'he evidence submitted. And the statement of the court at the conclusion of the erial shows that the only question there tried and determined was whether the superintendent had jurisdiction under t'he Constitution and statutes to hear a proceeding to remove a school director. This is also reflected by that part of the journal entry made in the case as follows:

“It is the opinion of the court that the county superintendent of public instruction of Creek county, Olcla.. was without jurisdiction to remove the said Mark Harris, school director of school District No. 8, and that no authority to remove the said Mark Harris or to declare his office vacant exists or rests with the county superintendent of public instruction of Creek county, Okla., under the Constitution and t'he laws of the state of Oklahoma; that Mark Harris, being a public official, could only be removed under the general removal statutes of Oklahoma, to wit. by grand jury acquisition or by action under the Attorney General’s bill, as provided for in the general laws of the state of Oklahoma, and' that no authority is given under the Constitution and Statutes to the county superintendent of public instruction to remove the - said Mark Harris, or to declare his office vacant.
“It is, therefore, ordered,, adjudged and decreed by the court that the said writ and certiorari herein issued is by this court sustained ; to which action of the court the said defendant, Oliver H. Akin, county superintendent of public instruction, objects, and excepts; which exceptions are by the court allowed.”

There seems but one question for us to decide in this case, and that is the question passed on by the trial court, which is, Did the county superintendent attempt to exercise and 'execute a power not given him under the Constitution and laws of this state?

Counsel each discuss three cases which have come to this court incidentally involving this question, but, in our judgment, in none of these cases is the exact question squarely presented and decided.

In the case of Kiefer v. Peters, 92 Okla. 30, 217 Pac. 469, an action for mandamus was brought by Kiefer, a member of the school board, against the county superintendent, to compel her to certify her' disqualification to hear a proceeding brought under *32 section 10353, supra, to remove Rim as such member. Tbe trial court denied tbe writ and tbis court on appeal amrmea tbe judgment bolding that our statutes did not provide for disqualifying tbe county superintendent for tb'e reasons alleged in tbe petition for tbe writ, wbicb were that tbe superintendent was biased and prejudiced against tbe member.

It will be seen that tbe only question presented in that, case was whether tbe district court by mandamus bad the power to compel tbe superintendent to disqualify from bearing tbe proceedings to remove tbe officer, and that it seems to have be'en assumed by both parties to tbe controversy that tbe superintendent bad jurisdiction to remove tbe school officer under section 10353, supra.

In th’e case of Schaeffer v. Jackson, 106 Okla. 194, 225 Pac. 961, the plaintiff sought by mandamus to compel tbe defendant to deliver td him tbe books, papers, seal and paraphernalia of a consolidated school district, alleging that tbe defendant bad been clerk of said district and had been removed from said office by tbe county superintendent —apparently under authority of section 10353, supra, — and that be, plaintiff, bad thereafter been appointed' clerk of said district, and defendant bad refused to deliver to him the items belonging to said district wbicb he as clerk was entitled to have in his possession. Tbe writ was denied by tbe trial court, and tbis court affirmed tbe judgment, bolding that if it be assumed' that the superintendent bad tbe power to remove tbe district officer and appoint a successor, it was clear that such removal could be made only for tbe causes mentioned in tbe statutes, and for the reason that it was not shown that such order of removal was so made, the judgment of tbe trial court was affirmed.

In the case of Alberty v. Parks, District Judge, et al., 128 Okla. 178, 261 Pac. 940, certain parties brought an action in tbe district court of Adair county to remove two members of a school board, and asked that the court enter an order restraining the members from exercising any duties as such until the further order of the court. Tbe members then filed an original action in this court for a writ of prohibition against the district judge of Adair county and tbe complainants in the first action, prohibiting and restraining them from proceeding and assuming jurisdiction in the action. It is to be observed from tbe opinion that the only question directly presented' to tbis court was whether the member of a school board ccuid be removed in a direct action brought in tbe district court for that purpose by private eitizens, and while the court does call attention to other sections of tbe statutes under wbicb it is suggested bow school officers may be r'emoved, sections 10353 and 10372 are nowhere, considered in tbe opinion, and there is nothing to indicate that this court would not bold that the two -latter sections furnish a cumulative remedy for the r'emoval of school district officers.

It will be seen from the first two mentioned cases that tbis court by implication can reasonably be said to have approved tbe jurisdiction of the superintendent to remove a school board m'ember under section 10353, supra; and that in tbe last case, not being squarely faced with the question we have here, what the court there said as to the method of removal would not exclude the authority of the superintendent to remove ■the member in the manner done in this ease as' an additional method.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1929 OK 187, 280 P. 291, 138 Okla. 30, 1929 Okla. LEXIS 469, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/akin-v-harris-okla-1929.