Crowson v. Crawford

63 So. 2d 231, 216 Miss. 770, 23 Adv. S. 5, 1953 Miss. LEXIS 693
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 9, 1953
DocketNo. 38705
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 63 So. 2d 231 (Crowson v. Crawford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crowson v. Crawford, 63 So. 2d 231, 216 Miss. 770, 23 Adv. S. 5, 1953 Miss. LEXIS 693 (Mich. 1953).

Opinion

McGehee, C. J.

On June 30, 1952, the appellant, Q. T. Crowson, filed a petition for a writ of mandamus to compel the defendant, Charles Crawford as County Superintendent of Education of Yalobusha County, to issue to him pay certificates for each of the months of July and August, 1951, for services alleged to have been rendered as Superintendent of the Coffeeville Special Consolidated School District, in order that the clerk of the board of supervisors could issue unto the petitioner the warrants' for his salary at the sum of $291.67 per month for each of the two months in question.

In the alternative the petitioner asked that in the event the Court should hold that a contract of employment duly signed by the county superintendent of education was an essential prerequisite to the issuance of the pay certificates prayed for, then that the defendant county superintendent of education be required by a writ of mandamus to enter into such contract with the petitioner covering the two months period in question.

There was exhibited to the petition a written agreement which bears the caption “Coffeeville School Board Meeting January 15, 1951” and which agreement was duly signed by the petitioner and the five members of the board of trustees of the Coffeeville Special Consolidated School District, and which reads as follows:

“On the 15th day of January 1951, the School Board of Coffeeville Consolidated School met at the school building with all members present to consider the matter of electing Q. T. Crowson superintendent for another year with permission to make the race for county superintendent of - education.
“The said Board had tentatively agreed to elect Q. T. Crowson in a meeting held at the Gym on Jan. 11 and [773]*773give Mm permission to make said race for county superintendent of education. All members of the Board were present except J. H. Burney. After talking the matter over with others, the Board stated there was some dissatisfaction regarding the above arrangement. With this in mind the Board agrees to continue Q. T. Crow-son ’s contract as Superintendent of the school until Sept. 1, 1951. Q. T. Crowson asked that his resignation be effective Sept. 1, or before, 1951.”

A demurrer of the defendant to the petition was sustained by the trial court and the petition was dismissed. The order sustaining the demurrer and dismissing the suit does not recite that the petitioner declined to plead further. But he has prosecuted this appeal from the action of the trial court in sustaining the demurrer and dismissing the suit.

The petitioner alleges that for a number of years prior to January 1951 the board of trustees of the Coffeeville Special Consolidated School District had duly elected him as superintendent of the schools thereof and that during all of said years he was a duly and legally licensed teacher, and had fully discharged, the duties of his employment; that the said board of trustees had verbally contracted with him to serve as superintendent of the schools for the scholastic year of 1950-1951, and that he served during said period and received the salary agreed upon in the sum of $3,500 for said year, payable in twelve equal amounts monthly beginning July 1, 1950, and ending June 30, 1951; and that on January 15, 1951, he entered into the contract with said board of trustees to serve as such superintendent for the months of July and August 1951 as hereinbefore set forth. The petitioner then alleges that he performed his duties under such employment until September 1, 1951, and was entitled to be paid by the proper authorities of the county the sum of $291.67 per month, beginning July 1,1951, and ending September 1, 1951.

[774]*774It is to be noted that the written agreement of January-15, 1951, hereinbefore quoted in full, does not specify the amount of salary that was to have been paid to the petitioner during the two months period mentioned therein, unless it may be implied that the provision to the effect that “The board agrees to continue Q. T. Crow-son’s contract as superintendent of the school until September 1, 1951” means that he was to receive the same salary per month that he had been receiving during the scholastic term of 1950-1951 which ended on June 30,1951.

One of the grounds of demurrer is that the written agreement was an attempt to extend the void verbal contract of employment under which the petitioner had served during the scholastic year 1950-1951, but it would seem that this particular point is not well taken for the reason that the proceeding herein does not involve an attempt to enforce the verbal contract for that scholastic year, which had been fully executed both as to services rendered and the payment therefor, but rather seeks to enforce the written agreement as to employment for a portion of the following scholastic year of 1951-1952.

Another ground of the demurrer is that the facts alleged in the petition failed to show that a lawful meeting of the board of trustees was held for the employment of the petitioner for the two months for which he sues to compel compensation, and that the petition fails to show that there were any minutes of the board of trustees to disclose that he was legally elected as superintendent. However, if the petitioner had been duly elected superintendent according to law by the trustees, he would have been entitled to compel the board to make the proper entry on its minutes in that behalf, McG-aha v. Curlee, et al., 176 Miss. 671, 169 So. 694; and would have been entitled to require the county superintendent of education to contract with him as superintendent of the schools of the said district by the filing of a petition for mandamus prior to the end of the school term.

[775]*775Although the petition alleges that the petitioner was elected at a meeting of the hoard duly and legally held, such allegation is a mere conclusion since it is elsewhere alleged in the same paragraph of the petition that the meeting at which he was elected was held on January 15, 1951, whereas, Section 6302, Code of 1942, declares that “any election of teachers by trustees for the ensuing school term, before the annual election of trustees, shall be illegal. . . .”

Section 6422, Code 1942, provides for the election of trustees of separate school districts on the first Saturday of March, except municipal trustees whose terms shall date from January 1st.

Section 6397, Code 1942, provides that “a special consolidated school district shall have five trustees, at least three of whom shall be patrons of the school. They shall he elected in the same way as trustees of rural separate school districts. . . .”

Section 6401, Code 1942, provides that the trustees of a special consolidated school district shall be elected on the first Friday of April of the year in which the term of the trustee in that district shall expire.

Section 6302, supra, which declares that “any election of teachers by trustees for the ensuing school term, before the annual election of trustees, shall he illegal”, also provides that the trustees shall meet annually, on or before the 15th day of June to select a teacher or teachers for their school, and they shall at once notify the county superintendent of their selection.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
63 So. 2d 231, 216 Miss. 770, 23 Adv. S. 5, 1953 Miss. LEXIS 693, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crowson-v-crawford-miss-1953.