Herold v. Parish Board of School Directors

68 So. 116, 136 La. 1034, 1915 La. LEXIS 1942
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 22, 1915
DocketNo. 20908
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 68 So. 116 (Herold v. Parish Board of School Directors) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Herold v. Parish Board of School Directors, 68 So. 116, 136 La. 1034, 1915 La. LEXIS 1942 (La. 1915).

Opinion

SOMMERVILLE, X

The judges of the Court of Appeal, Second Circuit, certify certain questions to the court in this case, ■with a request for instructions. The entire record was ordered up for consideration by the court; and the case will now be disposed of.

The three plaintiffs are resident taxpayers of Caddo parish. Two of them are parents of children who are in attendance at the public schools of that parish; and the third is the parent of children whom he expects and intends to send to said schools for their education.

Sidney L. Herold and Henry Heilperin, two of the plaintiffs, are Jews; and the third plaintiff, James B. Marston, is a Catholic. They complain of the action of the parish board of school directors in adopting the following resolution:

“Whereas, it is a fact well established among us that the children in our public schools are at the most impressionable age for receiving and retaining good or evil; and
“Whereas, the lessons and truths contained within the Holy Bible are acknowledged by right-thinking people as being of paramount value in creating and maintaining a better moral atmosphere in every community, and also in the individual life: Therefore, be it
“Resolved that the principals and teachers be .requested to open daily sessions of the public schools of Caddo parish with readings from the Bible, without note or comment, and, when the leader, is willing to do so, the Lord’s Prayer shall be offered.”

[1, 2] They allege that the Bible referred to in the foregoing resolution is the King James version, including the New, as well as the Old, Testament; that the reading of the Bible and the offering of the Lord’s Prayer are exercises which are prohibited by the Constitution of the state, in articles 4 and 53, which provide that:

“Every person has the natural right to worship God, -according to the dictates of his conscience, and no law shall be passed respecting an establishment of religion.”

And that:

« * * * No preference shall ever be given to, nor any discrimination made against, any church, sect or creed of religion, or any form of religious faith or worship. * * * ”

They further allege that the resolution of the board “compels the children of your petitioners Marston and Heilperin to join in forms of worship which are contrary to the dictates of their own consciences, and that it interferes with their natural right to worship God according to their own religious conviction”; “that such services constitute a sectarian form of worship, namely, the form of worship adhered to by the Protestant sects of the Christian religion; and such action constitutes a preference in its favor, and a discrimination against the Catholic and Jewish forms of worship;” and that it is an establishment of religion; that petitioners disbelieve, upon religious conviction, in such services; further, that such action is prohibited by Statute No. 214 of 1912, p. 464, for the reason that there is vested in the state board of education alone power or authority to make rules, by-laws, and regulations for the government of the public schools of the state, and to give directions as to the branches of study which shall be taught. And they pray that an injunction issue to prevent defendants from enforcing and carrying into effect the resolution referred to; and they further ask that the defendants be enjoined “from having religious exercises of any character whatsoever in said schools.”

The prayer of the petition, and the preliminary injunction issued in accordance there[1037]*1037with, are too broad in their terms. The schoolhouses of the parish belong to the people of that parish, and they are under the control of the school authorities of the parish. If, at the time when the schoolhouses are not being occupied or used for school purposes, the school board were to permit the schoolhouses to be used for religious or other purposes, the rights of plaintiffs would not be infringed in any way, and they might not be heard to complain of such action by the school authorities.

In an amended petition plaintiffs allege that the word ‘'Bible,” in said resolution, refers to a Protestant version thereof, including the Old and New Testament, and that the reading thereof will be the actual practice under said resolution.

The parish school board and the parish superintendent answered, admitted the passage of the resolution referred to, and alleged that it was their intention to put the same into effect; but they denied:

“That the effect of said resolution will be to force conducting religion daily in the public schools, or that it will result, or was intended to result, in reading solely from the Protestant Bible; on the contrary, they aver that it was not intended as a religious worship, nor did they intend thereby to force or require any one to read any Bible or to conduct any form of religious worship.”

And they further aver:

“That any Bible, Catholic or Protestant, Jewish or otherwise, may have been read by the teachers under said resolution.”

They deny that the Bible is a sectarian book, and they allege:

“That they had no intention of permitting any teacher to resort to any sectarian practice in said schools; and, were one to do so, or attempt to do so, under the guise of said resolution, that they would immediately order the same discontinued.”

There was judgment setting aside the preliminary injunction, and plaintiffs appealed to the Court of Appeal, from which court the case has been ordered up to this court.

“Courts take judicial notice of the contents of the Bible, of the numerous sects into which the religious world is divided, and also of the general doctrines maintained by each sect.” Jones on Evidence, vol. 1, § 131, p. 274; Abbott, Proof on Eacts, p. 634; State v. Board, 76 Wis. 177, 44 N. W. 967, 7 L. R. A. 830, 20 Am. St. Rep. 41; Smith v. Pedigo, 145 Ind. 361, 33 N. E. 777, 44 N. E. 363, 19 L. R. A. 433, 32 L. R. A. 838; Hilton v. Roylance, 25 Utah, 129, 69 Pac. 660, 58 L. R. A. 723, 95 Am. St. Rep. 821.

It is generally accepted that the Old Testament was originally written in Hebrew, and that the New Testament was originally written in Greek. The first complete English translation is said to have appeared about the year 1383. The Geneva Bible, embracing the New and Old Testaments, was translated into English at Geneva in 1560, and in London in 1576; it was the first to omit the Apocrypha. There is the King James version, or translation, of the year 1604; the Douay version or translation of the New Testament at Rheims in 1582; and the Old Testament at Douai in 1609. There is Luther’s Bible, 1521; and then there is the Rabbinical Bible. There is also the Koran, often called the Mohammedan Bible.

There'are doubtless differences in the several translations of the Bible just referred to. But it is not within the province of the court in this case to point out these differences, or to give them consideration. The court recognizes the difference between the Rabbinical Bible and the Christian Bible, in that the latter adds to the former the New Testament Scriptures, which are the bases of the Christian.religion. There may be other differences, such as the inclusion in the one, and the exclusion from the other, of the Apocrypha.

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Bluebook (online)
68 So. 116, 136 La. 1034, 1915 La. LEXIS 1942, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/herold-v-parish-board-of-school-directors-la-1915.