Brumfield v. Board of Education

6 S.E.2d 238, 121 W. Va. 725, 1939 W. Va. LEXIS 121
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 12, 1939
Docket8974
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 6 S.E.2d 238 (Brumfield v. Board of Education) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brumfield v. Board of Education, 6 S.E.2d 238, 121 W. Va. 725, 1939 W. Va. LEXIS 121 (W. Va. 1939).

Opinion

*726 Riley, Judge:

In this original proceeding in mandamus against The Board of Education of Logan County and Paul Winters, its secretary, the relators, Cecil Brumfield and Roy Chambers, a citizen and taxpayer, seek a peremptory writ to declare vacant the office of George Vincen as a member of the board, and to reinstate Brumfield (at times hereinafter referred to as relator) as a member in his stead.

The petition proceeds upon two theories: (1) the meeting at which relator’s resignation was tendered and accepted was invalid as having been irregularly convened; and (2) the resignation was induced by intimidation and other specific invalidating circumstances. The petition alleges that Brumfield qualified as a board member on July 6, 1937, and served until January 3, 1939; that Vin-cen’s claimed appointment in lieu of Brumfield was voidable, if not void; that at a regular meeting of the board, Shelton and Louden H. White, assumed their seats under a new term of office at which relator attempted to repudiate his resignation, but was rejected.

A demurrer to the petition was overruled by this Court on August 5, 1939. The respondents answered denying the material allegations of the petition, to which relators replied generally, thus putting in issue two main questions of fact: (1) Was the meeting of January 3, 1939, at which relator tendered his resignation, valid? and (2) if so, did relator tender his resignation because of threats, intimidation or fear of prosecution? Of course, if the first question is answered in the negative, the second question does not properly arise, but if the meeting was valid, it becomes necessary for us to consider the circumstances which led up to the tender of the resignations.

Before discussing the evidence bearing upon the validity of the meeting and the legality of the resignation claimed to have been made by relator, it is well to refer briefly to the circumstances under which the claimed meeting was supposed to be had and the resignations tendered. At the September, 1938 term of the circuit *727 court, the grand jury returned certain felony and misdemeanor indictments against relator, Shelton and White. Relator and White were indicted for bribery, Shelton for malfeasance in office and all three for the illegal purchase of gasoline from the board. The grand jury, after returning these indictments, recommended that impeachment proceedings be instituted against the three board members under attack. The prosecuting attorney, Claude A. Joyce, testified that, after the return of the indictments, a number of citizens and taxpayers urged him to institute impeachment proceedings in his official capacity; that he at first declined; that after efforts were made to retain an attorney in Logan and Charleston, witness and his law partner, Judge Robert Bland of Logan, were retained and the witness, with the aid of his law partner, prepared a petition for impeachment, which he finally decided to file on January 3rd. The cases arising upon the indictments were set for trial on October 11th and 17, 1938, but were continued by agreement between counsel until the January, 1939 term, at a date after the time contemplated for the filing of the impeachment proceedings.

Pleas in abatement were filed to the various indictments and after the claimed meeting held on January 3, 1939, the issues raised by these pleas in abatement were tried before Judge Charles L. Estep as special Judge, and the indictments quashed on the ground that there was irregularity in the selection of the persons from whose names the jury commissioners selected the grand jury which returned the indictments.

Shortly thereafter, a special grand jury returned similar felony indictments, but the indictments relating to the sale of gasoline were dismissed. The felony case against White was tried at the May, 1939 term and resulted in a verdict of not guilty, and the other case against him was nollied; Brumfield’s case, at his request, was continued until the September, 1939 term, and then nollied, and the case against Shelton was nollied at the January term after he had tendered his resignation. *728 While the second indictment was pending, the relator, at two board meetings held June 28, 1939, and July 3, 1939, attempted to repudiate his resignation, but was refused reinstatement.

In attempting to appraise the evidence bearing upon the two issues before us, we have in mind the oft-repeated rule that essential to the awarding of a writ of mandamus, the one seeking relief must have a clear legal right to the remedy, and there must be a corresponding duty upon the respondent. Koebert v. City of Clarksburg, 114 W. Va. 406, 171 S. E. 892; Morton, Sheriff, v. Sims, Auditor, 114 W. Va. 434, 172 S. E. 531; Wells v. State Road Commissioner, 114 W. Va. 709, 173 S. E. 576; Master v. Morrison, Receiver, 117 W. Va. 33, 183 S. E. 691.

At the time the resignations were tendered, besides the resignors, the board consisted of J. C. Avis and P. C. Dingess. On the evening of January 2, 1939, the evidence preponderates that all the members, except Shelton, the board president, were present in the room where the board usually met, evidently for the purpose of discussing the matter of the contemplated resignations. Upon the advice of the prosecuting attorney, who was called into the room, to the effect that in the absence of an agreement or formal call, a meeting could not be held in Shelton’s absence, the four members then dispersed, with the understanding, according to some witnesses, except the relator, that the members would reconvene on the following evening. About the time of the dispersal, Shelton, who was in Huntington at the time, was called by telephone, at the instance of the superintendent of schools, and urged to return to Logan. As a result of this conversation, and at Shelton’s request, he was driven back to Logan. Brumfield testified that on the following evening, January 3, 1939, he, Louden White, Avis and Dingess were present in the board room, together with other persons. Though there is some evidence to the effect that Avis’ presence was not noticed, the evidence clearly preponderates to corroborate Brumfield’s statement. Even if it did not, a party litigant, though not bound by his own *729 witness, is bound by his own testimony. Within a short time after these four members had assembled, variously estimated at about twenty or thirty minutes, Shelton came into the room and tendered his resignation. The evidence conflicts as to whether he called the meeting to order and likewise it conflicts as to whether he assumed his usual place in the president’s chair at the time the tender was made. Brumfield testified to the effect that Shelton entered from an adjoining room with his coat on his arm, threw his resignation down on the desk and said, “There is my resignation and I hope you fellows are satisfied”, and then walked out of the room. The county superintendent, Parsons, evidently was not in the board room when Shelton tendered his resignation. It seems clear, however, from the evidence that prior to the tender, the superintendent had written the resignation which Shelton signed in the adjoining room just immediately before he entered into the board room.

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Bluebook (online)
6 S.E.2d 238, 121 W. Va. 725, 1939 W. Va. LEXIS 121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brumfield-v-board-of-education-wva-1939.