Brown v. Board of Education

6 Ohio N.P. 411
CourtCuyahoga County Common Pleas Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1899
StatusPublished

This text of 6 Ohio N.P. 411 (Brown v. Board of Education) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Board of Education, 6 Ohio N.P. 411 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1899).

Opinion

Disseite, J.

This is an action brought by the plaintiff against the Board of Education of the city of Cleveland, and the School Director, and the School Council of the city cf Cleveland, and L. H. Jones, Superintendent of Instruction. The case was heard in the latter part cf May of this vear, and the opinion of the court for good and sufficient reasons has been delayed until the present time. The plaintiff alleges that she has pursued the course of instructions in the public schools through all the grades to the last one called the normal school, which she entered in September last, and from which she was excluded by defendants in February of the present year. She complains that she was excluded for no reason, but that the defendants had concluded that she was not adapted to the profession of teaching. She says, that the normal school, so-called, is a branch of the public school system, and is conducted by defendants with a view to finishing the education of high school graduates, and graduates cf other institutions, so that they may enter on the work of teaching with some special knowledge cf the art, and to this end the school officers exercise the discretion cf removing or excluding from the school as fast as they discover the want of those qualities in the pupil, natural or acquired, which indicate a want of adaptation tc becoming successful teachers. She says, that some thirty ycung women were excluded from the schools with plaintiff, and for like reason.

She alleges further that favoritism and desire to keep down the competition for p'aces in the schools are the real motives masked behind this test of inadaptability. She alleges that her deportment and recitations were good, but that she was excluded from the school by the arbitrary action cf the defendants, based on frivolous and unreasonable grounds.

She asks the court to re-instate her in the school to which she was admitted at- the beginning cf the school year and from which she was excluded on February last; or, in other [412]*412words, dhe asks that the defendants be restrained from interfering with her free exercise and enjoyment of her right to attend sohool.

She says, that she is a resident of the city of Cleveland, and has been such from her birth; that she was graduated from the West High School of the oity of Cleveland, in the year 1897, and that her average of scholarship for the four years was about 60 per oent.; that she held and still holds a valid certificate granted by the city Board of Examiners, and held the same at the commencement of the normal sohool cf said city at the beginning of the currant year, at which time she offered herself as a pupil in said sohool, was examined by the legal authority, and was accepted into said school as a pupil therein. That she is the daughter of a resident and a tax payer of said city. That she has spent years in pursuing the course of instruction in the publio schools of the city of Cleveland at great expense, witn the object and purpose of becoming a teacher in the common sohools cf the city or state, and that she is greatly injured by the arbitrary acts of said defendants in excluding her from the normal school, and asks that the defendants be restrained and enjoined from excluding her from the use, benefits and instruction of said sohool, and from interfering with her in her free enjoyment of such rights while complying with the reasonable rules and regulations of said school.

No answer has been filed by the defendants herein, but upon the hearing of application for temporary injunction affidavits were filed by the defendants, and the Director of Law of the city of Cleveland, who is counsel for the Board of Education, and the sohool authorities, appeared in opposition to granting a temporary injunction herein.

It was olaimed upon that hearing in behalf of the defendants that while plaintiff had complied with all the regulations and requirements necessary to entering the normal school at the beginning cf the school year; that up to the time of her dismissal from said school, or tüe time she was requested to withdraw from said sohool by the Superintendent of Instruction on February last, she had pursued certain branohes of instruction so poorly and unsatisfactorily as not to give promise of graduation so as to fit her for teaching, and that as soon as the defendants became satisfied of that fact they had .the power and the right to exclude her from the normal school if they deemed it best for the pupils remaining and the educational interests in their charge.

They say again that the plaintiff is now past twenty-one years of age, and although under age at the ’beginning of the sohool year, is now beyond sohool age and is barred by the law from the public schools. They say that they exercised their discretion in good faith in excluding plaintiff and others from the school, and that the courts ought not to and cannot interfere with matters committed by law to their discretion. They also say that while they excluded her from the normal school, they did not exclude her from the publio sohools generally. And that she should have understood that her place was to go back to the high school from which they had graduated her notwithstanding they gave her no such instruction, but simply notified her by letter from the superintendent that she was expected to withdraw from the school at the end of the current week.

The material facts are notin serious dispute.

The board cf education cf the city of Cleveland is maintaining the normal school for the purpose of fitting pupils of that school for teachers and thereby raising the standard of the teaching force of the public schools of the city. To do this, they have adapted oertain rules for the selection of persons as pupils in the normal sohools. None but graduates of the high schools whose standing equals 80 per cent, or graduates of other academic institutions of equally or higher grade can apply to this board for admission, and these must pass the board of examiners before they can be [413]*413admitted to receive instruction in the normal school.

From the testimony in this case it appears that the application for admission to the normal school and the number of persons which have been received,- have been- beycnd the resources at .the command of the defendants. In other words, the school authorities have not had sufficient means to grade and accommodate all who had desired instruction in the normal scnool. That up to this time they have had but one grade and in case any number of the pupils lacked proficiency and failed to keep up with the brighter pupils of the class, there has been no way up to this time of disposing of them except by letting them remain to the detriment of the class or by requesting them to withdraw from the normal school. So that Heretofore, when the school has been sc full as to indicate a surplus of teachers and certain pupils have retarded the advancement of the brighter ones, the board has deemed it advisable to cut out and exclude the inferior pupils. This plaintiff was excluded from the school as one of the inferior pupils, falling behind in certain lines of study, and for no other reason.'

The court is informed that the sohool authorities are now seeking to and will provide against this seeming necessity by the establishment of an additional grade in the normal school to which the pupils who for any reason seem slower than the rest, may be sent, and thus avoid the necessity of having them withdraw frum the school.

This case suggests several legal questions:

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Bluebook (online)
6 Ohio N.P. 411, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-board-of-education-ohctcomplcuyaho-1899.