Board of School Com'rs v. Hahn

22 So. 2d 91, 246 Ala. 662, 1945 Ala. LEXIS 222
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedMay 10, 1945
Docket1 Div. 232.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 22 So. 2d 91 (Board of School Com'rs v. Hahn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Board of School Com'rs v. Hahn, 22 So. 2d 91, 246 Ala. 662, 1945 Ala. LEXIS 222 (Ala. 1945).

Opinion

BROWN, Justice.

This appeal is from an interlocutory decree overruling the demurrer of the defendant to the bill filed by appellee against the appellant to enforce specific performance of a contract entered into by appellants with the appellee on the 26th of May, 1943, employing appellee as a teacher in the Mobile Public Schools, from September 1, 1943, to May 31, 1944, at a salary of $1540 —a period of one hundred and eighty-three days.

The bill alleges that the complainant has been continuously employed as a teacher from 1932 until the end of 1943-44 session of said public schools by appellants. That her qualifications and eligibility continues and still exists, and that, “the Board of School Commissioners of Mobile County refuses and denies her the right to continue to teach or serve as a teacher in the public schools of Mobile County, Alabama, for the present 1944-45 session thereof, although no notice in writing was given her by said board on or before the last day of the term of the 1943-44 session of said public schools of Mobile County, and not later than the first day of May 1944, of the termination of her employment as a teacher in said public schools of said County.” She pleads the provisions of Chapter 13, Tit. 52, Code 1940, as extending her tenure of service as a matter of law, and alleges that, “Complainant is now and has always been ready, able and willing to comply with her -contract of employment as aforesaid, and does now, as she has heretofore, offer to do so.”

The demurrer takes the point that the bill does not state a cause of action (is without equity); that it shows the term of her employment ended before the bill was filed; that the legislation relied on by complainant does not govern the Board of School Commissioners of Mobile County, because of the provisions of Section 270 of the Constitution of 1901.

The circuit court overruled the demurrer, hence this appeal.

Said Section 270 is incorporated in, and a part of, Article XIV of the Constitution of 1901, beginning with Section 256 and concluding with Section 270, imposing on the legislature the duty to “Establish, organize, and maintain a liberal system of public schools throughout the state for the benefit of the children thereof- between the ages of seven and twenty-one years.”

The pertinent provisions of said Section 270 relied on are: “The provisions of this article and of any act of the legislature passed in pursuance thereof to establish, organize, and maintain a system of public schools throughout the' state, shall apply to Mobile county only so far as to authorize and require the authorities designated by law to draw the portions of the funds to which said county shall be entitled for school purposes and to make reports to the superintendent of education as may be prescribed by law; and all special incomes and powers o;f taxation as now authorized by law for the benefit of public schools in said county shall remain undisturbed until otherwise provided by the legislature; * * [Italics supplied.]

By an act of “The Senate and Rouse of Representatives of the. state of Alabama,” approved January 10, 1826, provisions were made for establishing and maintaining “schools in the County of Mobile” and set up a board of commissioners denominated the “Mobile School Commissioners,” constituting it a body corporate with “full power and authority to establish and regulate schools and to devise, put in force, and execute such plans and devises for the increase of knowledge, educating youth, and promoting the cause of learning in said county, as to them may appear expedient.” Said act conferred on said board all land grants and immunities already conferred or which may hereafter be conferred on the inhabitants of said county or of any city, town or township therein, for the purposes of education, either by the United States or the State, and placed such grants and immunities under *664 the direction, management and control of said commissioners. Said act also conferred on said commissioners the control of the revenues accruing to the treasurer of said county from, “An Act concerning the revenue of Mobile County” passed at the “sixth annual session of the General Assembly, from fines, penalties, and forfeitures, other than those arising under 'An Act concerning roads, highways, bridges, and ferries in Mobile County’; from the tax-fee of Two Dollars on all suits in the circuit and county courts of said county; together with twenty-five per centum of the ordinary county tax of said county”; set apart as the special fund for the endowment and support of the schools in the said County of Mobile. Said Commissioners were authorized "to select certain lands situated in Mobile County in lieu of others covered by “private claims under grants of the Spanish Government, and to procure the location of the section so selected.” The act conferred on the commissioners powers to select officers, including a treasurer, and fixed the number of commissioners at twenty-five. It named the commissioners and fixed their tenure at five years, and provided for their successors to be appointed by the succeeding general assemblies, and conferred on the majority of the commissioners power to fill vacancies. Section 6 of said act provides, inter alia: “* * * and the board shall have power to make, and put in force, such by-laws and regulations, not inconsistent with the laws of this State or of the United States, as to them may appear expedient, and the same to revoke, and alter, and to prosecute all suits and actions in their corporate name, in the same manner as private persons.” Acts of Alabama, 1825-26, pp. 35 and 36 [Italics supplied.]

“The Senate and House of Representatives of the State of Alabama, in General Assembly convened,” by the act approved February 15, 1854, provided for the establishment and maintenance of a system of free public schools in Alabama, and in ■Section 6 of said act provided for the election in each county by the qualified voters of two persons, who, with the judge of probate, constituted the commissioners of such schools in such county, and made provision for the administration of said system of public schools through the commissioners so established, conferring on the commissioners, among others, the following powers: “The said commissioners are also authorized to receive and take charge of any moneys, funds, or property or proceeds of any character which may be raised in their respective counties by county taxation, or may accrue to them or to the county from gift, grant, bequest, devise, endowment or otherwise — to be used in aid of or in connection with the funds set apart and appropriated by this act; etc. * * Acts of Alabama, 1853-54, Art. II, § 8, pp. 8 to 18, inclusive.

In Article VI, § 2, said last above named act provides: “As the county of Mobile now has established a public school system of its own, the provisions of this act shall apply to that county, only so far as to authorize and require its school commissioners to draw the portion of the funds to which that county will be entitled under this act, and to make the reports of the superintendent herein required.”

In the Constitution of 1875, the substance of Article VI, § 2 of the Act of 1853-54, quoted above, was incorporated as § XI, Article XIII, and in the language as now' expressed in Article XIV, § 270 of the Constitution of 1901.

After the adoption of the Constitution of 1875, which took effect on December 6, 1875 (White v. White, 230 Ala. 641, 162 So.

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Bluebook (online)
22 So. 2d 91, 246 Ala. 662, 1945 Ala. LEXIS 222, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-school-comrs-v-hahn-ala-1945.