Cudney v. Spaulding

191 Misc. 979, 78 N.Y.S.2d 473, 1948 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2268
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedApril 27, 1948
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 191 Misc. 979 (Cudney v. Spaulding) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cudney v. Spaulding, 191 Misc. 979, 78 N.Y.S.2d 473, 1948 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2268 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1948).

Opinion

Bookstein, J.

Plaintiff, a taxpayer of the town of Mamakating, Sullivan County, New York, brings this action for a declaratory judgment, as follows:

(1) Against defendant, Commissioner of Education of the State of New York, declaring illegal ab initia (a) the enumeration of the population of Fallsburg Central School District No. 1; (b) the creation by the Fallsburg Central School District No. 1 of a school superintendency; (c) the appropriation of $48,000 per year State aid to defendant, Fallsburg Central School District No. 1.

(2) Against defendant, Board of Education of Fallsburg Central School District No. 1, declaring illegal and void ab initia (a) the request for the aforesaid enumeration, and (b) the appointment of Leon J. Weiss as superintendent of said district.

Additional relief demanded is a permanent injunction restraining the defendant, Commissioner of Education, from granting or allowing to defendant, Fallsburg Central School District No. 1 the sum of $48,000, or any sum, per year in State aid; pérmanently enjoining the defendant, board of education, from submitting or causing to be submitted payrolls for moneys to be paid to defendant, Leon J. Weiss, as superintendent of schools of said district; permanently enjoining and restraining defendant Leon J. Weiss from performing the duties of superintendent of schools of Fallsburg Central School District No. 1; and adjudging that all moneys heretofore paid to Leon J. Weiss as superintendent of schools of said district were illegal and void, [982]*982.and directing defendant, Leon J. Weiss, to refund all said moneys.

All of the defendants join in a motion to dismiss the complaint, on the ground that it fails to state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action and on the ground that the court has no jurisdiction over the subject matter of the action.

The basic and fundamental question involved is whether or not a central school district has the right to appoint a superintendent of a central district school; if it has, then (with the possible exception of one claim made in the complaint, which mil be treated separately), plaintiff is entitled to none of the relief which he seeks and, if that situation is disclosed on the face of the complaint, there exists no justiciable controversy warranting the plaintiff in invoking the jurisdiction of this court to grant a declaratory judgment and defendants are entitled to the relief sought.

In determinihg the question presented it must be borne in mind that, for the purposes of this motion, all of the factual allegations of the complaint are deemed to be admitted and true.

The complaint does not allege any facts showing that the defendant, Fallsburg Central School District No. 1 was not duly organized under the provisions of law governing the organization thereof. Plaintiff’s quarrel seems to be with the proposition that a central school district when duly organized does not have the power to create the position of a superintendent and to fill it.

The central school district in question was organized in 1946.

Section 183 of the Education Law, which since has been renumbered without change and now is section 1804, and which was in effect when the defendant, Fallsburg Central School District No. 1, was organized, by subdivision 1 thereof, provided as follows: Each such central school district shall be managed by a board of education consisting of five,- seven or nine members, which board shall have the same powers and-duties as boards of education in union free school districts as prescribed by this chapter. Except as provided in this article, all the provisions of this chapter or of any other general law. relating to or affecting union free school districts shall apply to central districts organized as herein provided. ’ ’

Section 312 of the Education Law (now § 1711), so far as applicable at the time when the enumeration was requested, provided as follows:

1. In any union free school district having a population of four thousand five hundred or more, which fact shall be [983]*983determined by the commissioner of education, as herein provided, the board of education may appoint a superintendent of schools.”

U 2 # * * 99

3. The board of education of any union free school district may by resolution duly adopted and entered upon its minutes request that an enumeration of the inhabitants of such district be made. The commissioner of education may thereupon cause an enumeration of the inhabitants to be made, the expense of such enumeration as certified by him to be paid by the district in whose interest it is made. The population shown by the last state or federal census or village enumeration for city, village or town may be accepted by said commissioner whenever such city, village or town shall be wholly within or coincide with the boundaries of the school district.”

The only difference between the foregoing provisions and the provisions as they existed at the time when the enumeration complained of was ’requested is in the second sentence of subdivision 3 in which the fifth word of the sentence was changed from shall ” to may ”.

Pursuant to the foregoing provisions of law, the defendant, Board of Education of Fallsburg Central School District No. 1, on or about April 10, 1946, requested an enumeration of the inhabitants of the district for the purposes of determining whether the district contained 4,500 or more persons and the defendant, Commissioner of Education caused that enumeration to be made and as a result found the population of said Falls-burg Central School District No. 1 to be in excess of 4,500. Thereupon, the Board of Education of said Fallsburg Central School District No. 1 appointed the defendant, Leon J. Weiss, superintendent of said district school.

Under subdivision 1 of section 183 of the Education Law, now section 1804 thereof, and section 312, now section 1711 thereof, it is crystal clear that the Legislature intended, except as provided in present article 37 of the Education Law, that all of the provisions of the Education Law “ or of any other general law relating to or affecting union free school districts ” should “ apply to central districts organized as ” provided in said article 37 of the Education Law. It necessarily follows that a central school district has the same right to appoint a superintendent of schools as has a union free school district, if such central school district has a population of 4,500 or more and such fact is determined by the Commissioner of Education after a resolution duly adopted and entered upon the minutes of the [984]*984board of education requesting the Commissioner of Education to make an enumeration of the inhabitants of such district.

The complaint alleges the organization of the central school district; the resolution of the board of education for an enumeration; the making of the enumeration and its result; and the appointment of the superintendent and alleges that the acts were purported to be done pursuant to the aforesaid section 312, now 1711, of the Education Law and then alleges that the defendant, Commissioner of Education, or someone in his behalf, illegally authorized and empowered the defendant Board ol: Education of Fallsburg Central School District No. 1 to elect its own superintendent of schools.

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Related

Finley v. Spaulding
192 Misc. 860 (New York Supreme Court, 1948)

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Bluebook (online)
191 Misc. 979, 78 N.Y.S.2d 473, 1948 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2268, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cudney-v-spaulding-nysupct-1948.