Hughes v. Grant Parish School Board

145 So. 794
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 6, 1933
DocketNo. 4420.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 145 So. 794 (Hughes v. Grant Parish School Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hughes v. Grant Parish School Board, 145 So. 794 (La. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

MILLS, J.

Petitioner alleges that on the 14th day of September, 1929, she entered into a contract with the Grant parish school board to teach and act as principal at the Eureka School for a term of nine months at a salary of $60 per month. While it is alleged that the contract is attached to the petition, an examination shows that it is not.

She alleges that she performed her duties for three months and was paid for that period ; that during this time the schoolhouse was destroyed by fire, the pupils transferred to Montgomery, and, without fault on her part, her services were discontinued, she receiving no further salary, though ready and willing to perform her part of the contract.

She alleges that the school board is indebted to her in the sum of $360, being six months’ salary, with legal interest from January 14, 1930. The prayer of the petition, however, asks for interest only from January 14, 19;32.

Defendant filed and abandoned an exception to the citation, then interposed an exception of no cause or right of action, which, over defendant’s objection, was referred to the merits.

On the day of trial, defendant pleaded the prescriptioii of one and two years.

Answer was filed, and the case tried June 21, 1932.

The answer, first reserving all rights under the exception of no cause or right of action, admits most of the allegations contained in the petition. It sets up and attaches the written contract which reads;

“Parish of Grant
“Department of Education
“Colfax, Louisiana
“State of Louisiana:
“Parish of Grant:
“This agreement, made and entered into on this 14 day of September 1929 between Imo-jean Hughes, a public school teacher, holding a certificate of qualification from the State of Louisiana, on the one part, and the said Grant Parish School Board, through said officers, on the other part;
“Witnesseth, That the said Imojean Hughes agrees to teach principal ⅛ the Eureka School, commencing on the 16 day of September 1929, for a term of eight months, unless sooner discharged, at $60.00 per month of actual employment payable monthly; that for said services properly rendered, and in harmony with all laws and regulations governing public schools in the State of Louisiana, the said President and Secretary of the Grant Parish School Board will draw warrants in favor of said teacher.
“And it is understood and agreed, by the Grant Parish School Board and said teacher, that said teacher shall be governed and discharge duties required by the school laws of the State and such rules and regulations as may be determined by the Grant Parish School Board.
“And it is understood and agreed, by the *796 said Grant Parish School Board and said Teacher that the payment of the salary herein specified shall be contingent upon the presence in the Treasurer’s hands of sufficient funds to the credit of the proper account to meet same, and that in no case shall the teacher’s claim for compensation in any one year exceed the school revenues for that year, properly appropriated by the Parish School Board to the account of White Teacher’s Salaries.
“Signed:
“Imojean Hughes, Teacher.
“S. C. Shaw,
“iSecretary Parish School Board.
“President, Parish School Board.”

An examination of the contract discloses that it is for eight months instead of nine; that it contains the provision “unless sooner discharged”; that the salary is for “actual employment” for “services properly rendered” in harmony with the school laws. The term is “to begin” September 16th instead of the' 14th.

The answer alleges that the discharge of the plaintiff was caused by the burning of the school, and the transfer' of the pupils was due to the fact that no suitable and available building could be obtained wherein the remainder of the session of the Eureka School could be held; the school board being without funds to erect a new one. It alleges that the destruction of the school by fire was a fortuitous event for which defendant was in no way responsible, that the contract was so drawn that payment for actual services rendered was contemplated, and that its continuance was at the will of defendant, because of the proviso “unless sooner discharged.”

There was very little testimony taken. It shows that there was a church building near the site of the burned school which had formerly been used as a school; that its use was mentioned, but some of the congregation objected to its being partitioned into the two rooms required for the school; that the school board had no funds and made no efforts to procure any to put up a new building; ■that, after the fire and before the discharge of the teachers, a meeting of the citizens was held at which it was decided “it would be undesirable” to try to run the school at Eureka; that it was best to transfer thevpupils to Montgomery.

In the lower court, plaintiff obtained judgment for $300, with legal interest from judicial demand. The exception of no cause or right of action and the plea of prescription were overruled.

Both parties appealed to this court, plaintiff from- that part of the judgment only which allowed her interest from judicial demand instead of from maturity.

Opinion.

Defendant, having objected to the reference to the merits of its exception of no cause or right of action, was entitled to have it passed upon before further proceedings were had. From defendant’s brief we learn that the exception is based upon the terms of the written contract not set out in the petition. Though alleged to be, the written contract is not attached to the petition. As the exception, at the time it was filed, was triable on the face of the petition alone, it was correctly overruled.

Plea of Prescription.

Plaintiff was paid up to and discharged December 16, 1929. Her discharge matured any unpaid salary due her. Suit was filed April 12, 1932. The prescription pleaded is one and two years. We can find, and have been referred tó, no two years’ prescription which is in any way applicable to salaries of school teachers.

Article 3534 of the Civil Code provides: “The following actions are prescribed by one year: * * * That of masters and instructors in the arts and sciences, for lessons which they give by the month.”

Article 3538 of the Civil Code provides: “The following actions are prescribed by three years: * * * That for the salaries of overseers, clerks, secretaries, and of teachers . of the sciences, who give lessons by the year or quarter.”

The fact that the employment in the present case was for a term of eight months and not by the month makes the one-year prescription inapplicable, and relieves us of the unpleasant necessity of deciding whether or not a grade school teacher is a master and instructor in the arts and sciences.

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Bluebook (online)
145 So. 794, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hughes-v-grant-parish-school-board-lactapp-1933.