Hancock v. Board of Education

74 P. 44, 140 Cal. 554, 1903 Cal. LEXIS 636
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 9, 1903
DocketL.A. No. 1167.
StatusPublished
Cited by56 cases

This text of 74 P. 44 (Hancock v. Board of Education) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hancock v. Board of Education, 74 P. 44, 140 Cal. 554, 1903 Cal. LEXIS 636 (Cal. 1903).

Opinion

SHAW, J.

This is an appeal by the defendant from a judgment in favor of the plaintiff. The appeal was taken within sixty days after the rendition of judgment, and the evidence is brought up by a bill of exceptions.

The action is upon a contract alleged to have been executed by the high-school board of the Santa Barbara High-School District, in August, 1899. The theory of the plaintiff is, that the school trustees, constituting the board of education of the city of Santa Barbara, upon their coming into office under the charter of that city, adopted in 1899, succeeded to all the rights and obligations previously existing of the high-school district, and were obliged to carry out the contract which the plaintiff had made with that district. The principal theory of the defendant is, that the so-called high-school district, which, by its board, is alleged to have made the contract, had no existence either in law or in fact sufficient to enable it to make the contract, and that, therefore, it cannot be said that there was any contract or obligation which the defendant could have assumed, and hence there can be no recovery.

Previous to 1891, the Santa Barbara "School District had been organized, and included the territory within the city of Santa Barbara and certain outlying territory duly annexed thereto. The act of March 20,1891, (Stats. 1891, p. 182,) purported to authorize a city of more than fifteen hundred inhabitants to maintain a high school. Soon after that act was passed an election was called in the Santa Barbara School District to determine whether or not a high school should be established in the district under that law. It resulted favorably, and thereupon proceedings were taken to establish a high school. From that time continuously up to the first Monday of January, 1900, the trustees of the Santa Barbara School District maintained a high school therein in which the branches prescribed under the law as high-school studies were taught, and from year to year during that period a tax was levied annually in said district for the support of said high school, and the moneys obtained thereby were expended by *558 the trustees of the district in the maintenance of the school. In 1893 (Stats. 1893, p. 236) the law of 1891 authorizing the establishment of high schools by cities was repealed, and a law was passed adding section 1670 to the Political Code, authorizing any city or school district having a population of a thousand inhabitants or more to organize and establish a high school, and providing that the board of education of the city, or board of school trustees of the district, should constitute the high-school board, and should have the management and control of the high school. Section 1670 was amended in 1897 (Stats. 1897, p. 79), but not so as to affect the question in this case. The schools of the Santa Barbara School District, which included the city, had been during this period managed and governed by the trustees of the Santa Barbara School District, and, in addition to their functions as trustees of said district, they also claimed that there was a legal high-school district of the same name, and assumed to act as a high-school board for such Santa Barbara High-School District. In August, 1899, the trustees of the Santa Barbara School District, assuming also to act as the high-school board for the so-called Santa Barbara High-School District, made a contract with the plaintiff in this action, whereby the high-school board, as such, employed the plaintiff as principal of the Santa Barbara High School for the term of one school year, from September 4, 1899, to consist of ten school months, at the salary of one thousand dollars for the school year. By the same contract the same trustees, assuming to act as the board of trustees of the Santa Barbara School District, employed' the plaintiff as teacher of the ninth grade for one school year, consisting of ten school months, at the salary of one hundred dollars a month. The contract was in writing, and is set forth in the complaint. The plaintiff proceeded under this contract to perform the duties of principal of the high school and teacher of the ninth grade for the months of September, October, November, and December of 1899, and was paid therefor monthly at the contract rate. A new charter for the city of Santa Barbara was approved by the legislature of 1899. (Stats. 1899, p. 448.) By section 172 thereof it was provided that it should go into effect on the first Monday in January, 1900, (Stats. *559 of 1899, p. 486.) By article XII of the charter the school department of the city was put under the government of a board of education, to consist of five members, to be called school trustees. Section 128 authorizes the board to establish and maintain high schools. Section 145 provides that “the board of education succeeds to all the property rights and obligations of the school trustees of the Santa Barbara School District heretofore existing.” On the first Monday of January, 1900, there was in the high-school fund, under the control of the school district, more than seven thousand dollars in money. The ordinary primary and grammar schools were being carried on in the city, as was also the so-called high school, the plaintiff acting as principal, and also as teacher of the ninth grade. On that day the previously existing board of school trustees ceased to exercise any of the functions of their office, and turned over to the board of education all the property together with the management of the district school and the high school aforesaid. The defendant board of education received the money of the school district, including the high-school fund, and proceeded with the maintenance and management of the district school and the high school as before, using the money in the high-school fund for the support of the high school. But instead' of continuing the employment of the plaintiff under the contract, it required him to continue as teacher of the ninth grade, and refused to allow him to perform the duties of principal of the high school. During the remaining six months of the school year the plaintiff continued to perform the duties of teacher of the ninth grade, and held himself at all times ready and willing to perform all the duties of principal of the high school as required by the contract during said months, but the defendant refused to allow him to do so. This suit is for the purpose of recovering the remainder of the salary, as principal, which would have accrued during the six months which he was thus prevented from serving.

The defendant claims that the act of 1891 is unconstitutional by reason of the fact that the section thereof purporting to give the power to raise taxes for the support of the schools was decided to be unconstitutional in McCabe v. Carpenter, 102 Cal. 469, and that this provision is so important to the ob *560 ject of the act that the entire act must be declared- invalid..

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Bluebook (online)
74 P. 44, 140 Cal. 554, 1903 Cal. LEXIS 636, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hancock-v-board-of-education-cal-1903.