Gilliam v. Adams

171 S.W.2d 813, 180 Tenn. 74, 16 Beeler 74, 1943 Tenn. LEXIS 47
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedMay 8, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 171 S.W.2d 813 (Gilliam v. Adams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gilliam v. Adams, 171 S.W.2d 813, 180 Tenn. 74, 16 Beeler 74, 1943 Tenn. LEXIS 47 (Tenn. 1943).

Opinion

Me.. Justice Peewitt

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The chancellor sustained a demurrer to complainant’s bill and dismissed his suit on the ground that Chapter 451 of the Private Acts of 1939, applying to Henderson County, was unconstitutional and void. Complainant sued for $447 claimed to be due him as salary as a schoolteacher of the county.

The bill sets out and charges in substance as follows:

1. That complainant held a permanent, professional certificate as an elementary teacher in Tennessee; that in the school year of 1938-1939 he was an elemfintary schoolteacher in Henderson County, and has been such teacher in said county for more than ten years consecutively prior to the school year 1938-1939 ; that in so far as he ever knew his services as a public schoolteacher in said county were satisfactory; and that there was never preferred against him at any time as such teacher any formal charge of any kind or character requiring his answer thereto.

2. The bill further charges that by Chapter 451 of the Private Acts of 1939 the General Assembly of Tennessee enacted a law regulating the employment of teachers in the public schools of the counties of Tennessee having a population of not less than 17,650, nor more than 17,700', by the 1930 Federal census or any subsequent Federal census, which law provides: ’

*76 (a) That teachers in comities within the population classification shall he employed on continuing.contracts.

(b) That “teacher** is defined in said Act to include teachers of all public schools in the county school systems.

(e) That a beginning teacher shall serve a probationary period of three years on annual contract, and on said teacher being re-employed for the fourth year and the holder of a permanent certificate for the grade or subject taught, the teacher shall be on indefinite tenure and shall not bé demoted or dismissed except for incompetency, immorality, or willful and persistent refusal to obey any reasonable rules or regulations of the Board of Education and superintendent.

(d) That teachers who have been employed for three or more years in their present school systems not necessarily continuously and who are otherwise qualified by law shall be deemed to be on indefinite tenure, and that those teachers employed at the time of the passage of the Act who have not served three or more years but are otherwise qualified by law shall be deemed to be on indefinite tenure on reemployment for the fourth year.

(e) That a teacher might be dismissed without cause if the position which the teacher holds is eliminated and there is uo vacancy for which the teacher is qualified; that in the event of the elimination of a position, the teacher of shortest length of service in that position shall be dismissed first, but such teacher so eliminated shall have first claim to any vacancy for which he is qualified.

(f) That a teacher charged with incompetency shall before being dismissed be warned with .a specific statement in writing of the defects complained of, and then if the teacher fails to make satisfactory improvement in the specified matters, the superintendent may give the *77 teacher' a thirty days ’ dismissal notice, which notice shall contain the specific grounds of dismissal; that a teacher is likewise required to give thirty days’ notice of his intention to relinquish his position or suffer the penalty prescribed by statute.

(g-) That the superintendent may suspend a teacher pending the hearing of charges of immorality.

(h) That a teacher upon written request prior to the fifteenth day of the thirty-day period following notice of dismissal shall be giyen a hearing by the Board of Education, or other employing- agency, at which hearing the teacher is entitle to be represented by counsel.

(i) That any dismissed teacher shall have the right to have his dismissal reviewed under Code, Section 9008 et seq.

(j) That if on final disposition of any case the teacher is not dismissed, he shall receive any back pay for any period of suspension.

3. The original bill further charges that after the completion of the school year 1938-1939' complainant sought to teach again in the public elementary schools of Henderson County, but the County Board of Education refused to permit complainant to teach. Complainant charges that he was a “teacher” within the meaning* of Chapter 451 of the Private Acts of the General Assembly of Tennessee for the year 1939, and that he was entitled to teach in the public elementary schools of Henderson County for the school year 1939-1940 and also for the school year 1940-1941, but the Board of Education refused to permit him to teach and thereby complainant sustained a’definite monetary loss.

4. Complainant further charges in his bill that when the Board of Education refused to permit him to -teach *78 as be was entitled.to, be set about to obtain other employment and did obtain other employment, but at less salary than he would have received as a teacher in the public school system of Henderson County; that as a teacher he would have received approximately $83 per month, and that it was not until October, 1940, that complainant began to make a salary equivalent to or greater than he would have made as such teacher.; that by reason of the action of the Board of Education in refusing to permit him to teach as it should have done under said law (Chapter 451, Private Acts 19.39’) and as he wanted to do, which action of the Board of Education was purely arbitrary, the complainant sustained a monetary loss of $447.

To the bill the defendants, members of the County Board of Education of Henderson County, interposed a demurrer charging that Chapter 451 of the Private Acts of 1939 was unconstitutional on several grounds, among which was that it violated Article 11, Section 8, of the Constitution of Tennessee in that said Act suspends the general law for. the benefit or protection of particular individuals, grants to individuals benefits inconsistent with the general law of the State, grants to certain individuals rights, privileges, immunities, or exemptions not granted to others in the community, and grants to individuals of one county privileges and benefits not granted and enjoyed by individuals of other counties and communities of the State.

The chancellor sustained the defendants’ demurrer, holding that said Chapter 451 of the Private Acts of the G-eneral Assembly of Tennessee for the year 1939 was violative of Article 11, Section-8, of the Constitution of Tennessee, and dismissed the bill at the cost of complainant.

*79 The complainant insists in support of the Act that under its provisions the county is acting in its governmental capacity, and such being the nature of the Act, it is valid, although special.

There can be no doubt that education is a governmental function. Quinn v. Hester, 135 Tenn., 373, 186 S. W., 459. In exercising this function the county acts in a governmental capacity.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
171 S.W.2d 813, 180 Tenn. 74, 16 Beeler 74, 1943 Tenn. LEXIS 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gilliam-v-adams-tenn-1943.