Armitage v. Board of Education

122 Misc. 586
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 122 Misc. 586 (Armitage v. Board of Education) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Armitage v. Board of Education, 122 Misc. 586 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1924).

Opinion

Edgcomb, J.

The petitioner, Edith E. Armitage, a teacher in one of the Auburn grade schools, brings this proceeding for a peremptory mandamus order to compel the board of education of that city to adopt a resolution fixing her annual salary for the school year 1923-1924 at $1,600, pursuant to what she claims is the mandatory provision of article 33-B of the Education Law.

The case turns on the construction to be given to section 888 of that law. Briefly stated, the question involved is whether that section, as now amended, compels the various boards of education in cities of the third class to increase the salaries of teachers by an increment of seventy-five dollars for each year of service, not more than eight, performed prior to 1919, when said act took effect. Petitioner claims that it does. The board of education of Auburn, and the state education department, which has intervened, because this is a test case, and the decision will affect the salaries paid to the supervising and teaching staff in the various cities of the third class and the union free school districts of the state, take the opposite view.

To properly determine this question it becomes necessary to briefly review the statutory history of that portion of the Education Law upon which the petitioner relies. Prior to 1917 the boards of education of the various cities, with a few exceptions, made such contracts with their teachers as they thought proper, unhampered by any legislative requirements. They derived their [588]*588authority from city charters and special acts. In 1917 article 33-A was added to the Education Law by chapter 786 of the Laws of that year. This article created boards of education in each city of the state, and authorized such bodies, among other things, to create, abolish and maintain such teaching and supervising positions as in their judgment were necessary for the proper and efficient administration of their work. Subdivision 6 of section 872 provided that the salaries of all teachers should continue to be on the same basis and regulated and increased in the same manner and by the same provisions of law and under the same conditions as when the article went into effect. The annual salaries of the teachers in the public schools of Auburn, therefore, continued to be fixed, as they had for years previous, by such contracts as the teachers and the board of education saw fit to make.

About this time the teachers in our public schools, like all other salaried people, began to feel the effect of the increased cost of living and the impossibility of making two ends meet on the meagre salary they were receiving. A crisis arose in the educational world, and many a competent teacher was compelled by necessity to seek a livelihood along other lines. Numerous municipalities were unable to pay sufficient salaries to retain competent teachers, and the schools were suffering because of their loss. Then it was that the state stepped in, and adopted a policy of forcing the payment of a living wage to teaching and supervising staffs of the public schools, by increasing and fixing the minimum salary to be paid to persons holding such positions. State aid was • given to the several cities and districts to enable them to pay the required increases. It was recognized that a teacher of experience was worth more and entitled to greater compensation than a novice, and so it was decided to fix the minimum salary to be paid for the first year of service at a certain sum, and to provide for an increase in each of the eight succeeding years in the form of annual increments. Consequently in 1919 article 33-B, fixing the salaries of the members of the teaching and supervising staffs, was inserted in the Education Law. Section 882 required the board of education of each city of the state to adopt by-laws establishing uniform schedules of salaries for all members of supervising and teaching staffs in each city. Section 886, as originally passed, fixed the salaries of teachers of kindergarten and first to eighth year classes in cities of the third class for the first year of service at not less than $720, and the number of annual increments at not less than eight, but failed to specify the amount of such annual increment, leaving that question to the discretion of the board of education of each particular city. Section 888 provided that a teacher [589]*589serving under a schedule which provided for annual increments should receive for any given year of service the salary and the increment provided in said schedule for the year which corresponds to his year of service, unless his services for the year immediately preceding had been declared to be unsatisfactory by the board of education.

In 1920 section 886 was amended by changing the minimum salary for the first year of service from $720 to $1,000, and by adding section 888-b, the provisions of which pertain to union free school districts. Laws of 1920, chap. 680.

Section 886 was again amended by chapter 851 of the Laws of 1923, by fixing the annual increment to be paid to teachers in the elementary schools of cities of a population of less than 50,000 at seventy-five dollars. The act now provides that on and after the 1st day of August, 1923, the salaries of teachers in the elementary schools of cities of the third class shall not be less than one thousand dollars for the first year of service, and the annual increment shall be not less than seventy-five dollars and the number of annual increments shall be not less than eight.

Miss Armitage has been a competent and faithful teacher in the elementary schools in the city of Auburn for upwards of twelve years last past. She claims to be entitled to at least the $1,000 provided as the minimum salary for teachers in her class for the first year of service, and an increase at the rate of $75 a year for at least eight years of her service, although three of those eight years antedated the passage of the act upon which she now relies, making a total of $1,600. She puts a literal construction on section 888, and insists that “ year of service ” means year of service whenever performed. She says that had it been otherwise the legislature would have used some appropriate expression, like “ commencing with the year said schedule has been fixed,” or some similar phrase.

The cardinal rule governing the construction of statutes is to ascertain, if possible, the intent of the legislature, and having ascertained the purpose and aim of that body, the language of the statute must yield thereto. Farmers’ Bank v. Hale, 59 N. Y. 53, 57; People ex rel. McNeile v. Glynn, 128 App. Div. 257. It appears to me that nothing can be more plain than that the legislature never intended to recognize service performed prior to 1919, the date of the passage of the original act.

Prior to the enactment of article 33-B, Auburn was not required to adopt or file schedules of salaries of its teachers. Section 888 only applies to “ a member of a supervising and teaching staff in such schools serving under a schedule which provides for annual increments.” “Any given year of service as used in that section means any year of service under the schedule. Prior to 1919 the [590]*590petitioner was not serving under any schedule which provided for annual increments, because no such schedule was adopted until that year.

It will be noted that section 888 provides for the yearly increase in pay of the teacher

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Bluebook (online)
122 Misc. 586, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/armitage-v-board-of-education-nysupct-1924.