Board of Education of Independent School District Number One v. Clendenning

1967 OK 96, 431 P.2d 382
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 18, 1967
Docket42131
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 1967 OK 96 (Board of Education of Independent School District Number One v. Clendenning) 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
Board of Education of Independent School District Number One v. Clendenning, 1967 OK 96, 431 P.2d 382 (Okla. 1967).

Opinion

WILLIAMS, Justice.

There is raised for our determination by the within pleadings and set of circumstances the question of whether the trial court erred in affirming orders of the County Superintendent of Schools of Tulsa County transferring some 28 grade and high school pupils from plaintiff school district to other nearby school districts for the school year 1966-1967.

Plaintiff school district has requested this Court to assume original jurisdiction of the cause of action stated in its petition herein wherein it seeks writs of certiorari and prohibition directed to respondent judge respectively directing him to certify *384 the record of a hearing before himself.to this Court for its consideration and commanding him to desist and refrain from enforcing his orders so transferring the children to whom we have referred.

We have accepted jurisdiction under the authority conferred upon this Court pursuant to Oklahoma Constitution, Article VII, § 2.

The parties have agreed to forego the formality of issuance of a writ of cer-tiorari. The record of the proceedings before defendant judge has been forwarded to us and the parties have made an oral presentation and filed their briefs herein.

In defendant judge’s first proposition, the contention is made of effect that the hearing before such judge pursuant to 70 O.S.1961, § 8-2 is in the nature of an appeal as distinguished from a trial de novo, citing In re Gruber, 89 Okl. 148, 214 P. 690, and Duncan v. Askew, 207 Okl. 542, 251 P.2d 515.

From this hypothesis, defendant in effect argues that the duty devolved upon plaintiff district to demonstrate by competent evidence to the defendant judge that the county superintendent of schools had erred in making the subject transfers; that the plaintiff district had made no official, timely protest against the transfers and that plaintiff could not now be heard to contest the county superintendent’s orders

The defendant judge in hearing conducted before him ruled that that hearing would be in the nature of an appeal as distinguished from a trial de novo, but then announced that the parties might produce such evidence as they cared to present (except possibly the evidence of the parents of the children involved). Thereupon the trial judge permitted the representative of plaintiff and the county superintendent both to testify and allowed cross-examination. The trial judge also received in evidence photocopies of the original applications of the parents of the respective children addressed to the county superintendent and permitted the latter to tell the special circumstances related by various ones of the parents to him in person or over the telephone in support of the applications made in behalf of their respective children.

Section 8-2 of Title 70 O.S.1961, after providing the procedure for the filing of application for a transfer with the county superintendent and the time and manner in which such official shall make his determination concerning the requested transfer, continues by providing as follows:

“ * * * Provided that at any time before June 20th, the board of education of either district or the parent or guardian of the child may appeal, in writing, from the action of the County Superintendent of Schools to the district court of the county in which the child resides, and such appeal shall be heard, and a decision rendered thereon, not later than June 30th, and such decision shall be final.”

As earlier noted herein, it is the contention of defendant judge that the word “appeal” in the above quoted statutory provision, restricts the district court to a review of the transcript of the proceedings had before the county superintendent and does not allow the court to conduct a trial de novo. We do not agree with this contention.

This question is apparently one of first impression in this Court. In School District No. 22, Osage County v. Worten, Okl., 289 P.2d 150, 151, this Court, in reciting what occurred before the district court in an appeal under § 8-2, supra, stated that “the matter was heard on appeal and after hearing statements and arguments of the respective parties the District Court reversed the order of the County Superintendent and granted the transfers.”

In Huebert v. Keen, 190 Okl. 655, 127 P.2d 180, we reviewed a decision of a district court rendered on an appeal from a school annexation proceeding. The appeal in such proceeding is provided for in what is now 70 O.S.1965 Supp. § 7-1, and there *385 the procedure on appeal as is the case under 70 O.S.1961, § 8-2, is not delineated.

In commenting on the duties of the district court on such appeal from an annexation proceeding, we stated, at p. 183:

“ * * * The court must review the whole record including the final order, and may consider any proper evidence offered, in order to ascertain whether all parties concerned, including the superintendent, have substantially complied with the act; and in determining that question the functions of the court are wholly judicial in character.”

In Duncan v. Askew, supra, which involved our review of a district court’s decision in an appeal to it under 70 O.S.1961, §§ 8-1, 8-2 and 8-3, we merely noted that “petitioners gave notice of appeal from the order of the County Superintendent of Schools and perfected their appeal by filing a transcript of the proceedings had in the District Court * *

None of the above quoted language from School District No. 22, Osage County v. Worten, supra, Huebert v. Keen, supra, or Duncan v. Askew, supra, constitutes a decision by this Court of the issue presented herein.

Defendant judge calls our attention to our language in In Re Gruber, supra, wherein we stated, 214 P. at p. 692:

“Owing to the diversity of statutory provisions relating to appellate jurisdiction in the several states, the word ‘appeal’ is used in many different senses. The term is sometimes used to denote the nature of the appellate jurisdiction, without regard to the particular mode by which a cause is transmitted from one tribunal to another, as in the instant statute, and is sometimes used in its old ‘civil-law1 and ‘common-law’ significance.

The fundamental idea of the word, without reference to any particular statute, involves the idea of a review of the proceedings in a trial which has already been had, and not the trial de novo of the case. State v. Williams, 40 S.C. 373, 19 S.E. 5; State v. Brown, 14 S.C. 380; Caldwell v. State, 12 Wyo. 206, 74 P. 496.”

We further stated, 214 P. at p. 692:

“ ‘Under statute giving the right of appeal no case can be tried de novo in the appellate court unless such statute expressly permits or directs such a course to be pursued.’ 4 C.J. 726, note IS.”

However, this decision was interpreting the provisions now incorporated in 11 O. S.1961, § 381, which provide, in applicable part, that a person feeling aggrieved by a decision of a fireman’s pension and relief board could appeal to the district court “by giving written notice, of his intention to appeal, to the Clerk of such City and by filing with the Court Clerk a transcript of the proceedings had before such Pension Board”.

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