Board of Education of City School District v. Ferguson

39 N.E.2d 196, 68 Ohio App. 514, 35 Ohio Law. Abs. 73, 23 Ohio Op. 238, 1941 Ohio App. LEXIS 761
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 15, 1941
DocketNo 3214
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 39 N.E.2d 196 (Board of Education of City School District v. Ferguson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Board of Education of City School District v. Ferguson, 39 N.E.2d 196, 68 Ohio App. 514, 35 Ohio Law. Abs. 73, 23 Ohio Op. 238, 1941 Ohio App. LEXIS 761 (Ohio Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

OPINION

BY THE COURT:

This is an appeal on questions of law from a declaratory .judgment in favor of plaintiff-appellee. The question presented is one of law as applied to the facts pleaded in the petition and admitted in the answer. It is whether the plaintiff-appellee, which we hereinafter refer to as the Board, in connection with the operation of open air classes for pupils who are found to be susceptible to tuberculosis, has the authority under the school laws of the State of Ohio to furnish and maintain standard and uniform sleeping garments for the use, when needed, of such pupils while in attendance upon such classes and to have them cleaned at reasonable intervals, to provide lunches to members of such classes without charge and to employ necessary personnel to prepare and serve such lunches within the elementary school buildings, and, further — whether the plaintiff board, has the power under the law to provide lunches without cost, as its cafeterias in its junior and senior high schools to pupils in attendance therein whose parents, upon investiga *74 tion, are found to be unable to pay for the lunches.

Many of the particulars under which the open air classes have been established and operated in the city of Cleveland and the cost thereof appear in the petition and the cost of serving free lunches to pupils in the junior and senior high schools, whose parents are unable to pay for their meals, is set up as $66,021.50 during the school year of 1938-1939. It appears that there were 4,314 pupils, approximately 7 per cent of the total number of pupils in the aforesaid schools, served under this latter plan in the year 1938-1939.

The Bill of Rights, Art. I, ¶7 of the Ohio Constitution enjoins upon the citizens the obligation to encourage schools and the means of instruction. Article VI in its entirety is devoted to the subject of education but no provision in the constitution respecting schools is self-executing and the authority and power of school boards is determined solely and exclusively from the acts of the General Assembly.

State ex Clarke v Cook, 103 Oh St 485, states the rule that: “Boards of Education, and other similar governmental bodies are limited in the exercise of their powers to such as are clearly and distinctly granted. State er Tocher, Prosecuting' Attorney v Meaning, 95 Oh St 97, approved and followed.”

The authority of boards of education is derived solely-from the statutes, both duties and authority being clearly defined by legislation and is limited strictly to such powers as are expressly granted or clearly implied. 36 O. Jur. 188, 189; Hudson v Board of Education, 41 Oh Ap 403, Perkins v Bright, 109 Oh St 14, Board of Education v Volk, 72 Oh St 469. Reed v Muhlenberg Township Board of Education, 6 O. N. P. (N.S.) 526, Board of Education v Best, 52 Oh St 138, Board of Education v Brown, 81 Oh St 528, Board of Education v Griffith, 74 Oh St 80.

The principal section under which the plaintiff claims the authority which it seeks to have this court declare it possesses is §7620 GC, which provides that:

“The board of education of any district may build, enlarge, repair and furnish the necessary schoolhouses, purchase or lease sites therefor, or rights of way thereto, or purchase or lease real estate to be used as playgrounds for children or rent suitable schoolrooms, either within or without the district and provide the necessary apparatus and make all other necessary provisions for the schools under its control. It also shall provide fuel for. schools, build and keep in good repair fences enclosing such school houses, when deemed desirable plant shade and ornamental trees on the school grounds, and make all other provisions necessary for the convenience and prosperity of the schools within the sub-districts.”

If the board has the authority which it claims, it must be found in that part of the statute which we have emphasized. If the language, so stressed, is given its widest general application it would be broad enough in terms to support the claim of the board. However, the language which we have emphasized must be read in the light of the rule of ejusdem generis which is to the effect that in the construction of laws, general conditions following an enumeration of specific things are usually restricted to things of the same kind as those specifically enumerated. The section, 7620 GC, is directed to the physical properties constituting schools and not to those persons who attend or the pupils. School is a place where instruction is imparted to the young, an institution for learning, an eductional establishment, a place for acquiring knowledge and mental training, although we recognize that in instances it may include the institution and the teachers and the pupils. Smith v Donahue, 195 N. Y. S. 715. If we break down the section it appears that it relates to the building, the enlarging, the repairing, the furnishing of the neces *75 sary sciioolhouses, the leasing of real estate to be used as playgrounds for children and the rental of suitable schoolrooms for the pupils and in the furtherance of these specific authorizations to provide necessary apparatus and make all other necessary provisions for the schools under its control. This section is not broad enough in the general language which we have quoted to authorize the board to provide special care, attention and treatment for ■those pupils who are diseased or are Susceptible to disease.

The conclusion that the quoted section does not clothe boards of education with the power to afford specialized health treatment is strengthened by the fact that there are so many specific sections authorizing the establishment of schools and special attention for certain afflicted or diseased pupils. If the general language of §7620 GC can be given the broad application insisted upon by the board then all of the special legislation to which we hereinafter refer would be unnecessary. The fact that the legislature has deemed it appropriate to enact such legislation and grant authority by specific provision is convincing that it was not intended that the general terms of the language employed in §7620 GC was meant to grant the power contended for. Some of the specific legislation to which we refer is found in the following sections.

Sec. 7644-1 GC provides that the board of education may establish special elementary schools for youth afflicted with tuberculosis, cause their exclusion from the regular school and pay for their transportation to the special schools. Of course, there is a distinction between the pupils here specially under consideration who merely have a susceptibility to tuberculosis and those who are afflicted therewith but it is probable that the treatement, in the main, for both classes of pupils would be the same.

Sec. 1885-1 GC provides that the director of education may provide for further and higher education for certain blind pupils and §7755 GC authorizes the director of education to grant permission to any local board of education to establish and maintain a class or classes for the instruction of deaf or blind persons over the age of 3 and crippled persons over the age of 5 and §7755-4 GC provides for the teaching of crippled children in their home, if unable to attend school with the aid of transportation.

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Bluebook (online)
39 N.E.2d 196, 68 Ohio App. 514, 35 Ohio Law. Abs. 73, 23 Ohio Op. 238, 1941 Ohio App. LEXIS 761, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-education-of-city-school-district-v-ferguson-ohioctapp-1941.