Feasel v. Board of Education

24 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 329, 1922 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 282
CourtSeneca County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedNovember 29, 1922
StatusPublished

This text of 24 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 329 (Feasel v. Board of Education) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Seneca County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Feasel v. Board of Education, 24 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 329, 1922 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 282 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1922).

Opinion

Platt, J. '

Jackson township, Seneca county, Ohio, school district, by a vote of the people had in due form, adopted centralization of its schools on the 19th day of February, 1920, and the board of education proceeded thereafter to centralize the district schools.

None of the schools of the district in operation before centralization have been suspended by force of any action taken under the provisions of Section 7730, General Code, or abandoned temporarily or otherwise,. unless centralization ex propria vigore worked such suspension or abandonment. That board of education is now threatening to sell all of the school properties in the district, except that in which the centralized schools of the district are conducted, before the period of four years after such centralization, and the plaintiff, setting up in his petition the appropriate averments therefor, seeks to enjoin such sale. The petition is demurred to on the ground that the averments made in the petition do not constitute a cause of action against the defendant in favor of the plaintiff.

The plaintiff claims that he is entitled to an injunction on the ground that the proposed sale is prohibited by Section 7730-1 [330]*330of the General Code, while the defendant contends that the latter section does not apply to a case in which the schools of a school district are in temporary disuse because of centralization. In other words, the plaintiff contends that inasmuch as the general scope and purpose of Section 7730-1 of the General Code are to prevent a sale of school buildings and grounds prematurely, before it becomes reasonably certain that they will be no longer needed in the plan of education of such district, the provisions of Section 7730-1 shall be enlarged by construction so as to prevent school property from being sold until four years after centralization.

The doctrine of judicial construction of statutes is involved and is of the very essence of the ease.

The ease can not be correctly studied without reference to Section 4756, General Code, under which plenary power is conferred on boards of education of rural school districts to sell school property, real or personal, ’subject only to the terms of that act as to the method to be pursued. There ,*s no question raised in the petition as to the procedure of the Jackson township board of education. The attack of the plaintiff is upon the power of the board to sell under any circumstances until four years have elapsed since centralization.

Section 7730-1, General Code, is the only statute that exists in Ohio that attempts to restrict the power conferred on boards of education in Section 4756, General Code. The problem to be solved is this: Shall Section 7730j-l, General Code, be so construed as to limit the restriction upon the power of the board of education to cases in which schools have been suspended by the direct action of the board of education, clothed in the form of a resolution providing for such suspension, or shall Section 7730-1 be enlarged by construction so that its legal interpretation shall be as though it reads as follows :

‘‘In order to protect the rights of the petitioners mentioned in Section 7730, .where a school has been suspended though either or any of the processes mentioned in such section, and in order to protect the rights of those who may petition for the decentralization of the schools of a (district in which the schools have [331]*331been centralized, the school buildings and real estate located in the territory of such suspended school and in which the board of education has legal title, and the school buildings and real estate • n the territory of a centralized school district and in which the board of education has legal title shall not be sold by the board of education of the district until after four years from such date of suspension in case of a suspended school, and shall not be sold' until after four years from the date of the vote upon centralization in case the schools of the district have been centralized, unless the school building has been condemned for school use bv the chief deputy of the division of work-shops, factories and public buildings.” The interpolated words are italicized.

Can construction properly go so far?

We are urged to do so on the plausible ground that it is just as necessary for a board of education to be prevented from selling the school property located in a centralized district within four years from the vote on centralization, as it is that it should be preventéd from selling the school property located within a suspended district for four years from the date of the suspension.

That it is just as nese'ssary in the one case as in the other is quite plain. When we consider that, under the limitations of Section 4727 of the General Code, a vote on decentralization may be had in the school district within three years from the date of the vote on centralization and that, should decentralization carry, the schoolhouses in which the children of the district attended school before centralization ought to be in existence and in the control of the board, so as to enable the schools to be conducted as they were conducted in the status existing before centralization, the argument gathers additional force.

The board of education should not be permitted to sell the school property and use as an argument against decentralization the fact that there are no school buildings in the district, except that or those provided after centralization, to receive the school children. That argument is more of the nature of a club than an appeal to reason.

Notwithstanding the winning power of the argument, the supreme duty of a court in construing a statute is to ascertain, declare.and give force to the legislative intent. In doing so, [332]*332the terms o£ the statute itself are of paramount importance. Lewis’ Sutherland on Statutory Construction, second edition, Section 348, says:

* * * “The statute itself furnishes the best means of its own exposition, and if the intent of the act can be clearly ascertained from a reading of its provisions, and all its parts may be brought into harmony therewith, that intent will prevail without resorting to other aids for construction.” * * *

In harmony with this doctrine is the case reported in the 66th O. S., page 621, Slinghuff et al v. Weaver et al. In the second syllabus the Supreme Court says:

“But the intent of the lawmakers is to be sought first of all in the language employed, and, if the words be free from ambiguity, and doubt and express plainly, clearly and distinctly the sense of the law-making body, there is no occasion to resort to other means of interpretation. The question is not what did the General Assembly intend to enact, but what is the meaning of that which it did enact. That body should be held to have meant what it has plainly expressed and hence no room is left for construction.

That case is followed in 82 O. S., 376, the State v. Roney; in 83 O. S., 146, Scheu v. State of Ohio; 86 O. S., 80, Sipe, Auditor, v. State ex rel; 88 O. S. 71, State ex rel City of Toledo, v. Lynch, Auditor; 91 O. S., 354, Village of Elmwood Place v. Schanzle, a taxpayer; 92 O. S., 434, State ex rel Munding, Adm. v. Industrial Commission of Ohio; 96 O. S., 27,

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24 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 329, 1922 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 282, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/feasel-v-board-of-education-ohctcomplseneca-1922.