Conrad v. . Board of Education

130 S.E. 53, 190 N.C. 389, 1925 N.C. LEXIS 87
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedNovember 4, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 130 S.E. 53 (Conrad v. . Board of Education) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Conrad v. . Board of Education, 130 S.E. 53, 190 N.C. 389, 1925 N.C. LEXIS 87 (N.C. 1925).

Opinion

CoNNOR, J.

This action, pending in the Superior Court of Granville County, was heard, upon demurrer, by the judge of the Superior Court holding the courts of the Tenth Judicial District, which includes Gran-ville County. It is in this Court upon appeal from the judgment overruling said demurrer. C. S., vol 3, secs. 513, 514. Justice Walker in Wood v. Kincaid, 144 N. C., 393, says: “A demurrer is an objection that the pleading against which it is directed is insufficient in law to support the action or defense, and that the demurrant should not, therefore, be required to plead further. It is not its .office to set forth facts, but it must stand or fall by the facts as alleged in the opposing pleading and it can raise only questions of law as to their sufficiency.” A demurrer is the formal mode of disputing the sufficiency in law of the pleading to which it pertains. Manning v. R. R., 188 N. C., 648. In the construction of a pleading for the purpose of determining its effect, its allegations should be liberally construed with a view to substantial justice between the parties. C. S., 535. A complaint will be sustained as against a demurrer if any part presents facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, or if facts sufficient for that purpose can be gathered from it under a liberal construction of its terms. Pridgen v. Pridgen, ante, 102; Foy v. Foy, 188 N. C., 519; Sexton v. Farrington, 185 N. C., 339; Hartsfield v. Bryan, 177 N. C., 168.

The complaint in this action states facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, in favor of plaintiff and against defendant, unless, upon the facts stated therein, it appears affirmatively that defendant was without authority to enter into the contract alleged or that defendant is not liable to plaintiff upon said contract.

Defendant, by its demurrer, in writing, contends that it was without such authority (1) because of the terms and provisions of the contract as alleged in the complaint and (2) because it is not alleged therein that defendant had complied with certain statutes applicable to it as the Board of Education of Granville County, before entering into such *394 contract. Defendant by its demurrer ore terms, contends, further, that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action for that (1) it is nowhere stated therein that the alleged contract was in writing; (2) that even if it is liable on the contract alleged, plaintiff cannot maintain this action because he is not a party thereto but is only the assignee and transferee of N. J. Boddie, with whom the contract was made.

1. The proposal dated 8 August, 1924, signed by N. J. Boddie and accepted by defendant, as appears on the minutes of its meeting on said day, constitutes the contract upon which plaintiff seeks to recover in this action. By this contract N. J. Boddie agreed to erect a transmission line from Creedmoor connecting the plant of G. H. Dove with the Wilton High School building; defendant agreed to pay to N. J. Boddie for the erection of this transmission line the sum of $3,250. The words appearing in said minutes and alleged to be appended to the proposal of N. J. Boddie, purporting to be a proposal by G. H. Dove to furnish power over this line and to maintain it upon the terms stated therein, do not constitute any part of the contract between N. J. Boddie and defendant. It does not appear from the complaint that G. H. Dove signed the purported proposal or that defendant accepted it. No contract is alleged to have been made between defendant and G. II. Dove. Whether or not, if the purported proposal of G. H. Dove had constituted a part of the contract between N. J. Boddie and defendant, the contract would have been in effect an agreement by the board of education to lend the sum of $3,250 to N. J. Boddie for the benefit of G. H. Dove, for an indefinite period of time, without any assurance that same would ever be repaid, and that, therefore the contract would have been beyond the powers conferred upon the defendant as the Board of Education of Granville County, is not presented for consideration. The contract as alleged in the complaint does not, involve the loan of money by defendant; nor does defendant thereby obligate itself to sell the transmission line when same had been constructed. There is nothing inherent in the contract as alleged in the complaint that renders it void or unenforceable and we must therefore overrule the demurrer upon the first ground relied upon by defendant.

2. Defendant further demurs to the complaint for that it is not alleged therein and it does not appear therefrom (a) that the plans for said transmission line had been submitted to and approved by the State Architect or (b) that deeds had been procured, delivered and registered conveying to defendant the right of way over which said transmission line had been constructed.

(a) There is no statute in this State requiring that plans for new sehoolhouses or for repairs to or equipment for old schoolhouses shall *395 be submitted, to or approved by tbe State Architect. C. S., 7492, when in force, applied only to buildings to be erected or which bad been erected at State institutions; it did not apply to school buildings over which the county board of education had jurisdiction. This statute however, has been repealed. Public Laws 1921, chap. 213.

0. S., vol. Ill, sec. 5468 provides that the county board of education shall not be authorized to invest any money in any schoolhouse that is not built in accordance with plans approved by the State Superintendent of Public Instruction. The contract set out in the complaint herein is not for the building of a new schoolhouse. It is a contract made in August, 1924, to provide for the lighting of a schoolhouse erected during that year. It was the duty of the defendant to provide for the proper lighting of said schoolhouse; it had authority commensurate with the performance of this duty. The lighting of this schoolhouse was one of the needs of the public- schools of Granville County for which the board of commissioners of said county had provided funds upon its approval of the budget of May, 1924. 0. S., vol. Ill, sec. 5601. The statute does not require the approval by the State Superintendent of Public Instruction of a contract made by the county board of education providing for the lighting of a public school building.

(b) C. S., vol. Ill, see. 5472 is as follows: “The county board of education shall make no contract for the erection or repair of any school building unless the site on which it is located is owned by the county board of education and the deed for the same is properly registered and deposited with the clerk of the court.” This statute, the wisdom of which is manifest, cannot be construed as applying to the erection of electric light wires, erected by the board' of education to provide for the lighting of a schoolhouse nor to the right of way required for said wires. It applies only to sites for school buildings; it does not extend to or include right of ways.

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Related

Wilson v. Chastain
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Bluebook (online)
130 S.E. 53, 190 N.C. 389, 1925 N.C. LEXIS 87, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/conrad-v-board-of-education-nc-1925.