Arrington v. Cotton

60 Tenn. 316
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 60 Tenn. 316 (Arrington v. Cotton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arrington v. Cotton, 60 Tenn. 316 (Tenn. 1872).

Opinion

Deaderick, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Martha N. Cotton filed her petition and obtained an alternative mandamus from Hon. Nathaniel Baxter, one of the Circuit Judges of the State, requiring W. J. Arrington, Trustee of Davidson County, to appear and show cause why a peremptory mandamus should not issue, compelling him to pay the petitioner one hundred and seventy-five dollars, the balance due to [317]*317her for five months services, as teacher of a free common-school in 1869, in Civil District number twenty-one of Davidson County. The County Trustee appeared and demurred to the petition, upon the ground that there is no law in force requiring or authorizing him to pay petitioner’s claim out of the County Treasury. The Circuit Judge overruled the demurrer, and ordered a peremptory mandamus to issue. From this judgment the County Trustee has appealed to this Court.

We find in the record a written opinion delivered by Judge Baxter upon overruling the demurrer, in the reasoning and conclusion of which we fully concur. Instead, therefore, of preparing an opinion in the case, we aré content to adopt that of the Circuit Judge as the opinion of this Court.

The judgment of the Court below is, therefore, affirmed.

COPY OP JUDGE BAXTER’S OPINION.

Martha N. Cotton, by her petition, represents that during the year 1869 she was employed to teach a common school in the 21st Civil District of Davidson County, for five months, at forty dollars per month, to be paid to her at the end of each month, or immediately upon the expiration of the term. That she taught the school for five months, to the satisfaction of the proper authorities by whom she was employed ; that she received no pay for her services during the time, but at the end of the term the [318]*318Clerk of the Board of Education gave her an order upon the Superintendent of Education for said county for two hundred dollars, which was approved by the Board of Education, and that she presented it to the Superintendent for the money, and/ the amount of twenty-five dollars was paid her — part thereof — and that was all she had received. That she has demanded payment of the residue from ~W. J. Arrington, County Trustee, and that he refuses to pay the same. She therefore asks for a writ of mandamus to compel him to pay it.

To this petition defendant demurs, and insists that there is no law making it his duty, or giving him authority to pay the same. The question depends on the proper construction of the Acts of the 14th December, 1869, the 5th July, 1870, and the 7th July, 1870. The 9th section of the Act of 1869 provides, that teachers of common schools, who have already been employed as teachers, shall be paid according to contract, out of any moneys due their counties. The first section of the Act of July 5, 1870, provides that Sec. 9, of the Act passed Dec. 14, 1869, in regard to common schools, shall be so construed as to require the County Trustee to pay off all schoolteachers heretofore employed, upon proper vouchers of services rendered, any balance due out of the first school-fund that come into his or their hands. The 74th section of the Act of July 7, 1870, enacts that all laws and parts of laws, inconsistent or in conflict with this Act, . be and the same are hereby repealed, [319]*319and theg. proceeds specially to designate several acts of assembly by tbeir titles and dates, and the Act of the 14th December, 1869, amongst others, but does not mention'the Act of July 5, 1870. If this latter Act remains in force, it is plain that defendant is the proper officer to pay petitioner’s debt. It is insisted, however, that it is repeated by implication. That it is merely a declaratory Act, declaring what is the true and proper construction of the Act of December 9, and that when this Act was repealed the Act of July 5, 1870, so to speak, was “fundus officioThat the repeal of .the Act of 1869 destroyed the force and virtue of the Act of July 5, as the repeal of a statute does the efficacy of a judicial decision construing that Act. I am unable to concur in this view of the case. The Legislature has not the constitutional power to construe a statute, or to give a mandate to the Courts as to how they shall ■ construe them, and, if the Act of the 5th of July was nothing more than such a mandate, it was unconstitutional and void, and would not require to be repealed to render it invalid. The Courts will never construe a statute unconstitutional if it will admit of any reasonable construction consistent with the Constitution. In construing statutes, we look at the objects aimed at by the Legislature, and not to the particular verbiage in which a statute, in some of its parts, may be expressed. If the real object aimed at is within legislative competency, and can be clearly seen from the whole statute taken together, the history of [320]*320the prior legislation upon the same subject, the Court will not be turned aside by particular expressions, which, taken by themselves, might seem to indicate that the Legislature was assuming to transcend its constitutional power, but will give effect to the will of the Legislature thus discovered. In this case, the 9th Section of the Act of 1869 had expressly provided that school-teachers should be paid, but had failed to indicate to what offices they should apply for their money. Additional legislation was necessary to make it plain how these people were to proceed to get their money, and the Act of July 5, 1870, was passed for that purpose. It was not the object of the Legislature to give a mandate to the Courts as to how they should construe the 9th Section of the Act of 1869, for the Courts had never undertaken to construe it, but it was to express more fully and in detail how the teachers who had been employed under the old system should obtain their compensation under the new. Nor was the Act of July 5th repealed by the Act of the 7th of July. 'It is not in conflict nor inconsistent with any provision of said Act, nor is it especially mentioned in one of the Acts intended to be repealed by it. It is not the 9th Section of the Act of 1869, nor is it any part of that Act, but is a substantive independent legislative provision, intended for the preservation of the rights of a certain meritorious class of individuals, for whose rights the Legislature seems to have had a careful regard, and when we bring to [321]*321the aid of this view the moral considerations which rally to its support, it would seem to be invincible. "We can not suppose for a moment that the Legislature intended to repudiate its obligations to pay those teachers, and yet it is not to be found in the Act of the Sth of July, 1870. No other provision has been shown in the agreement for their payment. The office of Superintendent, under whom they were employed, has been abolished, and the funds that were in the hands of the Superintendents have been ordered to be paid over to the Treasurer of the State, and by him to be apportioned to the counties, and paid over to the County Trustees. The teachers can no longer look to the Superintendents for their pay, and the school-funds having been ordered into the hands of the County Trustees, it follows there is no one else to pay but the County Trustees. Again, it is most .manifest that it was not the deliberate intention of the Legislature, by the Act of July 7th, to repeal the Act of July 5th. Both Acts were before the Legislature at the same time, there being but two days difference in their dates.

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Bluebook (online)
60 Tenn. 316, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arrington-v-cotton-tenn-1872.