Cross v. Trustee Walton Graded School

110 S.W. 346, 129 Ky. 35, 1908 Ky. LEXIS 135
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 13, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 110 S.W. 346 (Cross v. Trustee Walton Graded School) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cross v. Trustee Walton Graded School, 110 S.W. 346, 129 Ky. 35, 1908 Ky. LEXIS 135 (Ky. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Settle —

Affirming.

This is the second appeal prosecuted by appellants iu this case. Ou the first appeal (see Cross, by, etc., v. Bd. of Trustees Walton Graded Com. School, 121 Ky. 469, 89 S. W. 506, 28 Ky. Law Rep. 440) the judgment of the circuit court was reversed because of error committed by that court in sustaining a general demurrer to the petition; it being the opinion of this court that the facts alleged in the petition stated a good cause of action. ■ The present appeal is from the judgment rendered by the circuit court ou a trial of the case upon the merits, which dismissed the action at appellants’ cost. Briefly stated, the cause of action alleged is that appellant Waite Cross, who was a student of the Walton graded common school, was by the act of W. P. [39]*39Dickey, principal of file school, and with the approval of appellees, the trustees, maliciously, arbitrarily, and without cause expelled from the school, “without condition or limitation,” and that the latter have refused to permit him to re-enter the school, threaten to persist in such refusal, and will continue to exclude him therefrom, unless compelled by judgment and process of the court to permit his return. The petition closed with a prayer, for a mandatory injunction requiring the trustees to allow the appellant Waite Cross to re-enter the school and resume his studies therein. The action was instituted against the trustees alone; the board being composed of the appellees A. N. Jones, T. F. Courley, G. B. Powers, A. M. Rouse, Richard Jones and William Ransler. The answer of the trustees denied that the appellant Waite Cross was maliciously, arbitrarily, or without cause expelled by the principal, or that such alleged expulsion was without condition or limitation or approved by the board of trustees, or that he was expelled at all. It, however, contained the admission that appellant was, on April 4, 1904, suspended from further attendance at school during the remainder of the term, which closed April 29, 1904, for disobedience of an order of the principal, the rules and regulations of the school, and for insubordination as a student; that the suspension was ordered by the principal, and later approved by the board of trustees after numerous meetings attended by Waite Cross, a full hearing of the charge, and sufficient proof of his guilt thereof; and that the suspension was necessary for his good and the discipline of tlje school.

The action of the board of trustees with respect to the suspension of the appellant Waite Cross is shown by the following resolution or order entered upon the [40]*40record book kept by the board at the time of its adoption: “The principaPs report suspending Waite Cross, a pupil in junior grade, for disobedience, was read, and the board having previously heard the statement of the principal and also that of the student, Waite Cross, and the board being duly advised in the matter, it is moved and unanimously carried that the action of the principal be sustained, and that the pupil, Waite Cross, be and he is hereby suspended fro# further attendance at school during the remainder of the present term, for disobedience and insubordination.” Section 4473, Ky. Stats., 1903, provides that such action as was taken by the trustees in this instance shall be entered in the journal kept by them, which shall be open at all times to the inspection of any citizen of the graded common school district in which he or she may reside.” The language of the foregoing resolution plainly shows that the student, Waite Cross, was not expelled from the Walton graded school as alleged, but was merely suspended from attendance thereat during the remainder of the term, viz., from April 4 to April 29, 1904, a period of only 25 days. It appears from the record that the decision of the trustees approving his suspension by the principal of the school was announced to Waite Cross and his father when made, April 4th; and whether then made or not they could have ascertained, at any time, by an inspection of the trustees’ journal, that suspension, and not expulsion, was the penalty for his offense, yet notwithstanding such knowledge on their part, or means of information at hand, they delayed bringing this action until July 28, 1904, nearly three months after the period of Waite Cross ’ suspension had expired, and when there was no obstacle in the way of his attending the school at the [41]*41next or succeeding session, which, had not then commenced. In other words, when the action was instituted, there was no necessity for appellant’s applying .to the court for such relief as thereby sought; for the way of appellant "Waite Cross’ return to the school was open and unobstructed, because the term of his suspension had previously expired. It would do appellants no injustice if we should hold that the affirmance of the judgment appealed from might be rested on this ground alone. In making this suggestion we do not - overlook appellants’ claim that the trustees’ journal has, in some mysterious way, been changed since their decision was rendered to make it appear that Waite Cross was suspended, instead of expelled, from the school; but there is no testimony save that of appellants, father and son, to support this claim, and theirs amounts to only an inference arising from what they contend was declared by the trustees to be their decision at the meeting of April 4, 1904. On the other hand, the testimony introduced by appellees is of such convincing weight and character as to leave no doubt that the only penalty imposed by the principal and approved or announced by the trustees of the Walton graded common school for the breach of discipline charged against the appellant Waite Cross was that of suspension during the remainder of the school term then nearing an end. The same testimony is equally convincing of the further fact that the decision as thus made by the principal and trustees was immediately entered upon the journal of the board of trustees in the precise form in which it now appears. All of appellants’ testimony introduced for the purpose of showing that the resolution in question does not truthfully express the decision of the trustees, or their approval of the act of the principal of [42]*42the school with respect to the suspension of the appellant Waite Cross, or that it was not entered in the trustees’ journal as adopted, was and is incompetent, as neither the petition nor reply attacks it upon any of these grounds or alleged fraud or mistake in its form ■or language. However, as none of this incompetent evidence was excepted to by appellees, we do not hold that the court should have excluded it.

An important question presented by the record for our consideration is: Was the refusal of the appellant Waite Cross to accept and prepare for the part in the approaching commencement exercises of the school assigned him by the principal such an act of disobedience as amounted to a violation of a reasonable rule or regulation, adopted by the board of trustees, for the proper discipline of the school? The Walton school is a graded school, maintained, like all other common schools of the State, by taxation. Therefore all white youths or children residing in the Walton graded common school district, who are within the school age, may attend the school in question upon such conditions as the statute with respect to common schools may prescribe. Section 4367, Ky. Stats., 1903, provides: “All pupils who may be admitted to common schools shall comply with the regulations established in pursuance of law for the government of such schools.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
110 S.W. 346, 129 Ky. 35, 1908 Ky. LEXIS 135, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cross-v-trustee-walton-graded-school-kyctapp-1908.