Consolidated School District No. 1 v. Wright

1927 OK 474, 261 P. 953, 128 Okla. 193, 56 A.L.R. 152, 1927 Okla. LEXIS 419
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 13, 1927
Docket18379
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 1927 OK 474 (Consolidated School District No. 1 v. Wright) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Consolidated School District No. 1 v. Wright, 1927 OK 474, 261 P. 953, 128 Okla. 193, 56 A.L.R. 152, 1927 Okla. LEXIS 419 (Okla. 1927).

Opinion

BENNETT, C.

On November 4, 1925, Rilda Alright, plaintiff, aged 14, a resident of and a pupil in consolidated school district No. 1, in Tulsa county, Okla., was permanently and seriously injured in an accident to a school bus. The bus was being driven by one H. L. Mayfield, the regular driver, who was also a teacher in the school. Panties will be referred to as they were designated in the trial court.

The school was in the village of Turley. As the bus, loaded with school children, was being driven about 8 o’clock in the morning toward the village, the two right wheels went off the pavement, which was wet from mist and rain. This was at a point near a culvert and the road was slightly down grade. The driver succeeded in getting the front wheel back on the pavement, but when the rear wheel came back on the pavement the bus, on account of the heavy load, the grade, and wet pavement, skidded *194 around, and the rear end struck the abutment of the culvert and overturned, and plaintiff was injured.

Brady Taylor, L. J. Garnett, and William Robinson comprised the board of said school district. Mayfield was not made a party. The negligence alleged is that Mayfield was an inexperienced and incompetent driver; that the defendants, the school district and the individual members thereof, were negligent in that they knew or should have known that the said driver was incompetent and inexperienced, and that he had had a number of accidents, and that lie was an unsuitable and improper person to have charge of the transportation of said pupils, by reason whereof the plaintiff was injured.

There was a general demurrer filed by each and all of the defendants, and later motions to direct verdict, and the same were overruled with exceptions. There was a verdict of a jury and a judgment thereon, for $50,000 against all the defendants, and for review thereof this appeal is lodged here. There are eleven assignments of error, but in the argument three questions are presented :

(1) Are school districts in Oklahoma liable in tort?

(2) Are the members of the school board liable in tort as individuals for an act done by them as a board?

(3) Erroneous instructions.

This case has been skillfully tried, and there are exceptional briefs filed on the part of each party. The clear-cut and candid announcement of law applicable to this case in the respective briefs is of the greatest aid to the court in determining the law questions involved. Eor example, with respect to a proper answer to questions Nos. 1 and 2 (which points we now hold to be finally determinative of this case), the plaintiff, on page 11 of the brief, uses the following language:

“In the first place we believe that the rule is this: If a municipal corporation is in the exercise of a purely governmental function, that then neither the corporation nor its governing officers are liable in tort for injury resulting from the exercise of such strict and purely governmental function. On the other hand, it is equally true that if the tort is committed in the exercise of a corporate or proprietary function, as distinguished from a purely governmental function, then such municipal corporation is liable in tort for such injury.”

Further:

“Our next proposition is that where the power exercised is intended for the private advantage and benefit of the corporation, or its inhabitants, or for the benefit of a limited number of its inhabitants, then such municipal corporation is subject to the same liability as an individual would be exercising the same powers for purposes essentially private. In the instant case the power exercised was the furnishing of motor transportation, which was not mandatory on the defendants, to a limited number of the inhabitants of the defendant district for the private advantage of certain localities in the district, the inhabitants thereof, and for the private advantage of the district itself. Consequently, the defendant district was in the exercise not of a purely governmental function necessary to the administration of the laws of the state, but, on the other hand, was in the exercise of a corporate or proprietary function, and therefore liable for this injury.”

Accepting at full face, therefore, this statement of the plaintiff, if the furnishing to the plaintiff of transportation to the common free school by the school board was an exercise of a purely governmental function, then the answer to these two pivotal questions must be in the negative. On the other hand, if the same was in the exercise of a corporate or proprietary function, or if the same was exercised and intended for private advantage, and for the benefit of the corporation, or its inhabitants, or for a limited number of such inhabitants, then such exercise would not be a governmental function, but would be essentially private, and liability would follow.

1. Is the furnishing of free transportation by the school boards of the state to those pupils within their several consolidated- school districts, who reside two or more miles from school, an exercise of governmental function?

The Constitution of Oklahoma, article I, see. 5, provides:

“Provisions shall be made for the establishment and maintenance of a system of public schools, which shall be open to all the children of the state and free from sectarian control. * *

Article 13, sec. 1, provides:

“The Legislature .shall establish and maintain a system of free public schools wherein all the children of the state may be educated.”

Article 11, sec. 2, provides, among other things:

“All proceeds of the sale of public lands that have heretofore been, or may be hereafter, given by the United States for the use and benefit of the common schools of *195 this state, all such- per centum as may be granted by the United States on the sales of public lands, the sum of five million dollars appropriated to the state for the use and 'benefit of the common schools in lieu of sections 16 and 36, and other lands of the Indian Territory, the proceeds of all property that shall fall to the state by es-cheat, the proceeds of all gifts or donations to the state, * * * shall constitute the permanent. school fund, the income from which shall be used for the maintenance of the common schools in the state. The principal shall be deemed a trust fund held by the state, and shall forever remain inviolate. It may be increased, but shall never be diminished. The state shall reimburse said permanent school fund for all losses thereof which may in any manner occur, and no portion of said fund shall be diverted for any other use or purpose.”

Section 3 of said article provides:

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Bluebook (online)
1927 OK 474, 261 P. 953, 128 Okla. 193, 56 A.L.R. 152, 1927 Okla. LEXIS 419, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/consolidated-school-district-no-1-v-wright-okla-1927.