Chatham v. Davis

183 Ill. App. 506, 1913 Ill. App. LEXIS 1617
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 9, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 183 Ill. App. 506 (Chatham v. Davis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chatham v. Davis, 183 Ill. App. 506, 1913 Ill. App. LEXIS 1617 (Ill. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice McBride

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from the decree of the Circuit Court of Effingham county, enjoining the County Superintendent of Schools from revoking a teacher’s certificate.

It appears from the record in this case that appellee was a school teacher and had been engaged in the teaching of schools in Effingham from September 1, 1910, to June 1, 1912, and that on April 27, 1912, he had been re-employed by the Board of Education of School District No. 22 in said county for another year, beginning July 1, 1912, and ending July 1, 1913, but it is provided in said agreement that if appellee’s- certificate should be revoked that the contract should terminate. It further appears that prior to the city election in 1911 a difficulty arose between appellee and E. L. Damron, then mayor of Effingham, about some supposed reports that had come to the ears of Damron about what appellee had said with reference to him. That on Sunday night before the city election in 1911 appellee and Damron were engaged in a street quarrel and threatened fight near a place where,, religious services were being conducted and that the meeting was disturbed by the noise, vulgar and profane language used at this time. That on about May 11, 1912, at the hour of eleven o’clock at night, the appellee and said Damron were engaged in a fight on or near to one of the public streets in said city, in which fight the appellee took out his pocket knife and cut Damron in several places about the face and body. The fight caused considerable commotion and disturbance in the neighborhood. It is claimed by Damron and his friends that in the first quarrel that Damron undertook to talk to appellee privately but that appellee flew mad, threw off his coat and began to curse and abuse Damron. This is denied by appellee who says that Damron and two of his companions were attempting to surround him for the purpose, as he thought, of doing him bodily injury and that he simply stepped out in the middle of the street and told them to come out there if they wanted to talk with him. In the fight that occurred on May 12, 1912, Damron and his friends claim that appellee without any provocation whatever assaulted Damron and cut him with a knife and that Damron to protect himself knocked appellee down and undertook to take the knife away from him. It is claimed by appellee and his friends that immediately after he had passed Damron upon the street that Damron called to him and when he stopped Damron came up and knocked him down and was on him beating and choking him and that appellee took out Ms penknife and cut at Damron for the purpose of making him release his grasp upon his throat, and that all he did was in self-defense. After this latter fight the friends of Damron, and some of the members of the board of education that had voted to retain appellee as teacher for another year, came to appellant Davis, then County Superintendent of Schools of Effingham county, and requested him to revoke appellee’s teacher’s certificate. Many of the friends of appellee requested appellant not to revoke the certificate and claimed that appellee was not to blame for the trouble that they had.

Appellee was arrested on account of this latter fight on a charge of assault to murder. Appellee and one of his solicitors, Judge Wright, in the meantime called upon appellant to ascertain from Mm what he was going to do about the revocation of the certificate. Appellant then told them that he would not do anything about it until after the preliminary trial of appellee which he would listen to, and later on told them that he would not take any steps in the matter until after the close of appellee’s school, which would be about June 1st. After the close of school appellant consulted with the State Superintendent of Schools and his attorney as to what he should do with tMs matter, who advised him to give appellee notice and a hearing upon the charges. Thereafter and on June 25, 1912, appellant caused to be delivered to appellee the following communication:

Effingham, Ill., June 25, 1912.
Supt. L. W. Chatham,
Effingham, Ill.
In compliance with the request of you and Judge W. B. Wright, made two weeks prior to the closing of the Effingham schools, and that your contract expires the last of this month (June), I now notify you in regard to my decision. Looking at it for the good of the schools that your actions have been such that you have lost your usefulness in the Effingham schools, and that you are therefore given twenty days to surrender your certificate or appear before me and prove why such action should not be committed.
J. W. Davis, Supt.”

A few days after receiving this notice appellee and his solicitor called upon appellant and asked appellant to make his charges specific and give him a copy of them, and appellant promised that he would do so and would prepare them on July 5, 1912. The specifications were prepared un July 5th, but appellee did not call for them and on the morning of July 6th appellant placed these charges in envelopes, addressed them to appellee and one to his solicitor and had them upon the desk ready for mailing at which time this writ of injunction was served upon appellant restraining him from revoking appellee’s certificate, whereupon appellant abandoned any further efforts in this direction.

The bill filed by appellee in this cause alleges the difficulties that existed between him and Damron, the street quarrel and the street fight, the notice sent by appellant to appellee on June 25, 1912, and denies that appellee was in any manner to blame for the quarrel of 1911 or the fight of 1912 or that he used profane and vulgar language on either of those occasions; alleges that no cause exists for the revocation of his certificate; that he had successfully taught and improved the schools at Effingham; that he is a teacher by profession and if his certificate is revoked it will leave him without employment and will work irreparable injury to Ms reputation as a teacher and render it 'more difficult to secure employment elsewhere. Then charges on information and belief “That said Davis (appellant) intends to revoke his certificate, being inspired to do so by Damron and friends who have insisted without cause appellee has lost his usefulness in the Effingham schools;” and concludes with the prayer for an injunction restraining the appellant from revoking such certificate, and for general relief.

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Related

Eveland v. Board of Education of Paris Union School District
92 N.E.2d 182 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1950)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
183 Ill. App. 506, 1913 Ill. App. LEXIS 1617, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chatham-v-davis-illappct-1913.