Board of Education v. State ex rel. Wickham

80 Ohio St. (N.S.) 133
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 30, 1909
DocketNo. 11161
StatusPublished

This text of 80 Ohio St. (N.S.) 133 (Board of Education v. State ex rel. Wickham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Board of Education v. State ex rel. Wickham, 80 Ohio St. (N.S.) 133 (Ohio 1909).

Opinion

Spear, J.

There was considerable conflict of testimony as to a number of minor matters concerning which the parties were at issue. It was shown that the *boy was instructed during the summer vacation of 1907 by his parents, both of whom had been teachers, with the purpose of fitting him for admission to the seventh grade, and at one time, Remington, the superintendent, was called into his office by the relator and requested to put questions to the boy which he did. At the conclusion of the talk, as testified by the relator, he spoke of that being the work of the seventh year and they were practically over it, and the superintendent said the [143]*143boy ought to go there and it would be easy for him. This expression of opinion is denied on the stand by Remington, who adds that he was in the office not more than four or five minutes and did not go in for the purpose of making an examination.

The relator, although he disclaimed in his petition knowledge of the Board’s rules, on the stand admitted that he had once been a member of the Board of Education and was somewhat familiar with the current rules. He had easy access to them.

The boy was examined to some extent with other pupils by Remington the day before he left the seventh grade room, and there is sharp conflict as to the extent of that examination and as to what the superintendent said to the boy and to the teacher Teal as to the boy’s proficiency, the boy putting it that Remington said the work would be easy for him in the seventh grade and the superintendent denying it and giving his opinion that the boy was not qualified for that grade, which opinion he reported to the Board at its meeting Thursday evening. To some extent Teal corroborates the statements of the boy respecting Remington’s expression of opinion. It is not shown, however, that Teal examined the boy at all except that he heard some or all of the lessons during the four days he was in the seventh grade room.

There is no conflict respecting the proposition that the boy went to the seventh grade room by the direction of his father and without any authority to go there by the Board or knowledge on the part of the Board, or of the superintendent prior to his seeing the boy in that room. The appearance of the boy in the room of the seventh grade with his books cannot reasonably be treated as an application for [144]*144promotion to that grade since such an application should be made to the Board when in session, and the evidence furnishes no support for the allegation of the petition that the boy applied for admission to the seventh grade. No request was made to either the Board or superintendent, the boy testifies, for leave to go into that room. He also says that when Mr. Remington found him there Friday morning he directed him to go into the sixth grade, but that, in obedience to his father’s direction, he took his. books and went home. The superintendent testifies that he did not expel any from the seventh grade room, and there is nothing in the testimony which warrants the conclusion that the boy was expelled from the seventh grade room as alleged in the petition except in the sense that he was directed to go to the sixth grade room to which he had been promoted.

The testimony also shows that when in the fifth grade the boy was seven years of age although the age of scholars generally was from ten to twelve, averaging eleven years. The teacher in the fifth grade, Miss Gibbs, testifies that her examination of the boy at the end of’ the spring term of 1907 showed that his work was exceedingly good in some branches and in other branches not quite so good. She spoke to him concerning his writing and as tO' mathematics, in which his work was not as high as that of quite a number of the class who were promoted to the sixth grade, and advised that he had best do some work at home to perfect himself in those branches; none were promoted from the fifth grade to the seventh that year; it had been done in former years but only by direction of the Board and the superintendent. In her judgment the boy was. [145]*145not then qualified to enter the seventh grade; she had no personal knowledge of his proficiency after that.

It appears that the superintendent reported to the Board at its meeting Thursday evening (a meeting which he had expected would be held Tuesday evening) that he had made a test of three children, including Terry, and that they were not qualified to enter the seventh grade. The Board took no action and gave no authority in any way for the boy to be promoted to the seventh grade.

Testimony was given by two or three persons who then were or had been teachers, besides Mr. Kiefer, to the effect that they had examined the boy shortly after he left the school and found him, in their judgment, qualified to enter the seventh grade.

These references to the evidence are made not with a view of reviewing all of it, nor for the purpose of attempting to weigh those parts which are in conflict, but for the purpose only of indicating the character of the case presented. It suffices, as conclusion, to say that the trial court’s judgment imports a finding that, upon the whole evidence, the boy was qualified to enter the seventh grade both at the time he attempted to enter and at the time of the trial.

It appears affirmatively and there is no conflict in respect to' it that no request was made of the Board, either by the relator or the son, for the latter’s promotion to the seventh grade, and each knew that his promotion card entitled him to enter only the sixth grade; also that at least the father knew that the rules gave authority for promotion to pass over the sixth grade to the Board and to the Board only. It is also shown without denial that the Board did not [146]*146have pres'ented to it at any time a recommendation from the superintendent, or even from a teacher, to the effect that the pupil was qualified for entrance to the seventh grade, but on the contrary, as herein-before stated, did have before it the expressed opinion of the superintendent that he was not so qualified.

It is manifest from the whole record that the circuit court acted upon the belief that the question whether or no the pupil was fitted to enter the seventh grade, and should have been promoted from the fifth to the seventh, was rightfully to be determined by the court rather than- by the school authorities. But is this the law ?

Section 4017, Revised Statutes, provides that the board shall have the management and control of all the public schools in the district. Section 3985 makes provision for the adoption of rules and regulations as follows: “The board of education of each district shall make such rules and regulations as it may deem necessary for its government and the government of its appointees and the pupils of the schools; and no meeting of a board of education not provided for by its rules or by-laws shall be legal unless all the members thereof have been notified as provided for in section thirty-nine hundred and seventy-eight.”

Following this authority the Board had'made and promulgated rules and regulations as hereinbefore given. These rules seem to well cover the case in hand and to be appropriate to the .objects intended. To us they appear reasonable, and quite well calculated to secure, in their application to the great body of pupils, a good school government, with as liberal treatment to the individual pupil as proper [147]*147discipline will permit.

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Bluebook (online)
80 Ohio St. (N.S.) 133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-education-v-state-ex-rel-wickham-ohio-1909.