Hagler v. Larner

120 N.E. 575, 284 Ill. 547
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 21, 1918
DocketNo. 12167
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 120 N.E. 575 (Hagler v. Larner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hagler v. Larner, 120 N.E. 575, 284 Ill. 547 (Ill. 1918).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Duncan

delivered the opinion of the court:

Appellants, Clifton Hagler and twelve other infant complainants, by William Hagler, their next friend, filed a bill in the city court of Granite City, to the March term, 1918, against appellees, R. H. Larner and others, as members of the board of education, principals of schools and of the local board of health of the city of Granite City. The relief sought by the bill was the enjoining of appellees from preventing appellants from attending the public schools unless they were first vaccinated, áccording to a resolution adopted by the local board of health. The cause was heard on the bill and stipulations, the hearing being in the nature of an oral demurrer to the bill. The court dismissed the bill for want of equity, and appellants have appealed to this court, contending that their constitutional rights are involved.

From the bill and the stipulations it appears that appellants are actual residents of Granite City, between the ages of six and twenty-one years, and are pupils of the Granite City public schools; that the board of health on March 4, 1918, passed a resolution that all children be excluded from the public schools for a period of two weeks unless recently vaccinated, or unless they produced a certificate that they had been successfully vaccinated within the past five years or had had small-pox; that appellees are endeavoring to enforce said resolution; that appellants have refused to submit to vaccination; that they are normally healthy and have not been exposed to small-pox, so far as known; that there is no ordinance of the city requiring vaccination as a prerequisite to attending the public schools of Granite City; that the disease of small-pox is prevalent and epidemic in said city, there being about forty cases in the city, which has a population of approximately 12,000, and that the resolution of the board of health was for the purpose of preventing the spread of the disease of small-pox and of preserving the health of the citizens of the city. It also appears from the stipulations that section 183 of chapter 9 of the revised ordinances of the city contains, among other things, the following provisions as to the duties of the local board of health: “The board of health, or a majority of said board, shall have power, upon the appearance in epidemic form of small-pox, etc., and other contagious and infectious disease within the city limits, for the purpose of preventing the spread of said disease, to make such rules and regulations and such sanitary investigation as they may from time to time deem necessary for the preserving and improvement of the public health, to provide for gratuitous vaccination and disinfection, and to do all acts, make all regulations which may be necessary or expedient for the promotion of health or the suppression of disease.”

Appellants contend that the local board of health had no legal authority to pass the aforesaid resolution, that it is void, and that the injunction should have been granted restraining the. board and the school officers from enforcing the same. It is also insisted that the resolution and the enforcement of the same violate section i of article 8 of the constitution of 1870, which provides: “The General Assembly shall provide a thorough and efficient system of free schools, whereby all children of this State may receive a good common school education.”

The question of the right to require school children to be vaccinated as a prerequisite to their admission to the public schools has met with frequent discussion in the various jurisdictions in this country. There is a manifest lack of uniformity in the decisions of the courts. In this State the rule is firmly established that school directors and boards of education have no authority to exclude children from the public schools on the ground, simply, that they refuse to be vaccinated, unless in cases of emergency, in the exercise of the police power, it is necessary or reasonably appears to be necessary to prevent the contagion of small-pox. (Potts v. Breen, 167 Ill. 67; Lawbaugh v. Board of Education, 177 id. 572; People v. Board of Education, 234 id. 422.) In all of the foregoing cases it appears that there was no epidemic or prevalence of small-pox and that the pupils were in a healthy condition and had not been exposed to small-pox, and this court held it to be unreasonable to require vaccination as a prerequisite to admission to the pub-lie schools in such cases and that there was no law of this State authorizing such action. In the instant case it appears from the stipulations that small-pox was epidemic and prevalent in Granite City and that there actually existed a large number of cases of small-pox when the resolution was passed and enforced, and that the board of health, acting under the authority conferred by the ordinance above set out, passed the resolution for the purpose of preventing the spread of the disease and of preserving the health of the citizens.

The exact question here raised seems never to have been passed on directly by this court, but it is not a new one in other jurisdictions having similar health laws. The courts are practically a unit in holding that in the event of a present or threatened epidemic such rules and regulations as are now under consideration are reasonable and should be upheld,—and such has been the rule in States where there has been no express authority requiring vaccination. Where small-pox is epidemic it is not a necessary prerequisite to require vaccination that pupils have been personally exposed. (State v. Cole, 220 Mo. 697; Blue v. Beach, 155 Ind. 121.) It has been held in some jurisdictions that even without specific authority from the legislature or city council, local boards having control of schools or of the general care of the public health are justified by the existence of the emergency in making vaccination a condition for admission to the public schools. (Hill v. Bickers, 171 Ky. 703; State v. Zimmerman, 86 Minn. 353; State v. Board of Education, 21 Utah, 401.) This court, in Potts v. Breen, supra, while making no direct decision upon the point, recognizes the rule that in cases of emergency, when necessary or apparently necessary to prevent the spread of small-pox and preserve the public health, pupils may be temporarily excluded from the public schools unless they are properly vaccinated or have had small-pox. It was said in that case: “Undoubtedly, also, children infected with or exposed to small-pox may be temporarily excluded or the school temporarily suspended, but, like the exercise of similar power in other cases, such power is justified by the emergency, and, like the necessity which gives rise to it, ceases when the necessity ceases.”

The resolution of the board of health was reasonable in view of the fact that small-pox was epidemic and the disease likely to spread from the many cases then existing in the city. It is not disputed that the purpose of the board of health in passing the resolution was the prevention of the spread of the disease and preserving the health of the citizens, and there is no argument offered by appellants that that would not be its tendency or that the actual, express purpose of the board would not be accomplished by the enforcement of the board’s rules. The requirement of the resolution was that such exclusion of the pupils should be temporary, or for two weeks, and then only in case they refused to-be vaccinated, etc.

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Bluebook (online)
120 N.E. 575, 284 Ill. 547, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hagler-v-larner-ill-1918.