Board of Public Instruction v. State Ex Rel. Taylor

24 So. 2d 99, 156 Fla. 708, 1945 Fla. LEXIS 977
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedDecember 21, 1945
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 24 So. 2d 99 (Board of Public Instruction v. State Ex Rel. Taylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Board of Public Instruction v. State Ex Rel. Taylor, 24 So. 2d 99, 156 Fla. 708, 1945 Fla. LEXIS 977 (Fla. 1945).

Opinion

THOMAS, J.:

At the instance of certain “citizens, residents and taxpayers” in Special Tax School District number 3, 4, 5, 14, and 15 of Lafayette County, a peremptory writ of mandamus was issued commanding the Board of Public Instruction to appoint teachers and principals for certain schools in districts numbered 3, 5, 14, and 15 and to reopen said schools for the year 1945-1946; also to repay to the funds of these four districts moneys theretofore transferred from them. This writ was rendered 25 August 1945; the alternative writ preceded it about three months. Parenthetically, as the history of the litigation develops it will be apparent why District 4, though *709 represented by two of the parties instituting the suit, was not mentioned in the final judgment.

The chronicle of events leading eventually to the order to activate the schools of the four districts and to reimburse their funds to the extent of moneys drawn from them will now be given.

From the preliminary writ it appears that in the year 1944 an election was held in all the districts we have described, except the one numbered 15, to determine whetherthey should be consolidated, and a majority of the voters registered a choice against the plan. The reason for reference to this election is, for the moment, rather vague, but will be explained in our comment following the summary of the evidence. The schools located at Riverside and Airline in districts numbered 3 and 5 were later closed and pupils who would normally have attended there were transported to a school in Mayo, the county seat, situated in District 4. The school at Antioch in District 14 was opened, but subsequently discontinued, and the pupils there were also transferred to “other districts.” District 15 was not affected by the election; nevertheless its schools too were closed and the pupils sent elsewhere for instruction. It was recited that large sums of money had been transferred from the districts where no schools were maintained to “other county school funds outside [the] . . . districts.” It was charged in the writ that the facilities of the Mayo schools had become over-burdened because of the attendance of students from Districts 3 and 5; and that its funds, part or all of which had been raised by a tax on property within the district, were being used to educate pupils from the other districts.

It was represented that the trustees in the respective districts had made no nominations of members of the instructional staffs to serve during the present term.

In reply to the allegations of the alternative writ the respondents denied that they had actually closed the schools of districts numbered 3 and 5, but explained that they had caused the pupils of those schools to be transferred to the schools in District 4 when it developed that teachers were not available in the former two districts for the year 1944-1945. They *710 averred that the school in District 14 (Antioch) had opened for the year 1944-1945, but during the term the principal became a member of the armed forces of the United States, and no competent successor could be found, whereupon it was agreed between the respondents and the trustees of that.district that the eight pupils be taught at “other districts” in the county. They further answered that there were but six pupils in District 15 (Cook’s Hammock), and because services of a teacher could not be procured these also were transferred elsewhere. The respondents admitted that there had been transfers of certain sums of money from districts numbered 3, 5, 14, and 15 to the general school fund. Their answer contained .an itemized statement of the amounts paid from the general school fund for the transportation of pupils in the various districts and the amount transferred from the funds of the respective tax school districts to offset these expenses of conveyance. In three of the districts the transportation cost was more than the corresponding amounts transferred, and in the fourth, slightly less.

It will have been noted that there was much in the writ with reference to the failure of the school officials to maintain certain schools in the year 1944-1945, and, in the answer, about the difficulties, apparently insurmountable, of securing teachers.

It is but fair to repeat that it was specifically set out in the writ “that the Defendants [had] not appointed teachers and principals for said Districts 5, 3, 14 and 15 for the school year of 1915-1916, tho the school year for 1944-1915 [had] long since closed.” (Italics supplied.) This language was doubtless employed because of the provisions of the Florida School Code, Section 230.23, (7) (c), Florida Statutes, 1941, and F.S.A., for the appointment by the county board of members of the instructional staffs of special school districts where no nominations have been made by the trustees within certain periods computed from “the close of school” for the preceding term.

It is equally fair to emphasize the significant allegation of the answer that “respondents (had) caused diligent, but hitherto unsuccessful inquiry to be made for principals and *711 teachers for said schools for the year 1945-1946, but [had] been unable to the present time to procure the services of qualified teachers and principals who [were] willing to teach in said schools.” (Italics supplied.)

So far we have devoted our discussion to the situation appearing from the pleadings in the cause. We now resort to the record of the testimony taken before the judge in substantiation and elaboration of the position of the respondents. It should be said at the outset of the summary of the testimony that no witnesses whatever were introduced by the relators, either in chief or rebuttal, and we may assume, then, that the story as related by the witnesses for the respondents presents substantially the conditions prevailing in Lafayette County at relevant times preceding the issuance of the peremptory writ of mandamus.

The County Superintendent of Public Instruction and secretary of the board, during the year 1944, testified that no affirmative action had been taken to close the schools in District 3 (Riverside) and 5 (Airline), but that these schools were not opened because no teachers could be obtained. He testified that he was instructed by the board to make every effort to provide instructors, and then related the extent of his activities to that end. He communicated with the State Department of Education, which issues bulletins monthly containing the names of applicants for positions, and wherever possible he got in touch with these candidates. He also said that he got in touch with Gulf Teachers Agency, located in Gaines-ville, Florida, and often corresponded with Florida State College for Women. Some applications were received from Southern Teachers Agency, and many prospective teachers were reached by telephone. He related how he tried to get instructors from “as far as the New England states” and observed that it was “a matter of common knowledge that teachers [had] been very scarce during the past two or three years.” This former oficial recounted that the school in District 3 (Riverside) was supposed to open; that he had employed a teacher for it whom the trustees had chosen, and a short time before she was to begin her duties she resigned and entered the employ of P. K.

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National Education Ass'n v. Lee Co. Bd. of Pub. Instr.
260 So. 2d 206 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1972)
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Bluebook (online)
24 So. 2d 99, 156 Fla. 708, 1945 Fla. LEXIS 977, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-public-instruction-v-state-ex-rel-taylor-fla-1945.