Jokinen v. Allen

15 Misc. 2d 124, 182 N.Y.S.2d 166, 1958 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2088
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 23, 1958
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 15 Misc. 2d 124 (Jokinen v. Allen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jokinen v. Allen, 15 Misc. 2d 124, 182 N.Y.S.2d 166, 1958 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2088 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1958).

Opinion

Howard T. Hogan, J.

Each of the four plaintiffs operates a nursery school and kindergarten. They bring this action for a judgment declaring unconstitutional, null and void section 195 of the ‘ ‘ Regulations of the Commissioner ’ ’, adopted by the Board of Regents of the State of New York on March 1, 1957, and the “ G-eneral Regulations ” of the Commissioner of Education, adopted by him on March 1, 1957, to implement the said section 195, and they now move for summary judgment. Defendants cross-move for summary judgment dismissing the complaint. No material issues of facts are raised by the pleadings.

The aforesaid section 195 provides that a nonpublic nursery school and/or kindergarten may be registered by the New York State Education Department if it shall present evidence of compliance with the following conditions: Satisfactory buildings, rooms, facilities and equipment, teachers whose training is substantially equivalent to that of public school teachers, an adequate curriculum and teacher-pupil ratio, provisions for parent co-operation, minimum age of pupils of three years, an entrance age for both nursery school and kindergarten which is within one month of that required by the local public schools, and a yearly term substantially equivalent in length to that required of public schools. It further provides for annual reports from each registered school, continuing review of its advertising and conduct, and revocation of registration for failure to comply with said conditions. Such registration is purely voluntary.

The Regulations of the Commissioner, who is the executive officer of the Board of Regents, set up the mechanism of registration, supplement the Regulations of the Board of Regents and provide that when a school has been registered it shall receive from the Education Department a “ Certificate of Approval ’ ’ which may be displayed on its premises as long as it is valid.

The gravamen of the complaint is found at paragraphs “20” through “25” thereof which may be summarized as follows:

1. The registration program was designed and adopted to influence the public not to deal with unregistered schools.

2. The regulations governing entrance to first grade discriminate against children from unregistered kindergartens.

3. The regulations are unconstitutional in that they deny plaintiffs the equal protection of the laws of New York State, they are discriminatory, they are unlawful delegation of legislative power, and they violate the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution.

[127]*1274. The regulations injure the reputation and standing of unregistered schools.

Plaintiffs further allege that a list of “registered” schools has been distributed to local public school administrators and that the registration program is designed and was adopted for the purpose of influencing the general public not to deal with unregistered nursery schools and kindergartens, and of coercing such schools to become registered and thus to meet the conditions set up by the commissioner.

Although the defendants deny these allegations, including the charge that the commissioner discriminates in favor of children from registered nonpublic kindergartens in the matter of admission to the first grade, they have offered to the court as an exhibit a bulletin dated August, 1958, in which it is stated:

“ The Division of Elementary Education recommends that any child under 5 years 9 months of age on September 1 (but older than 4 years 9 months on September 1) shall be enrolled in the kindergarten unless that child has attended and satisfactorily completed a full year’s work in a kindergarten which provides equivalent instruction to that of the local school. [Italics supplied.]

4? ^

“ Within certain legal limitations the age of entrance and the grade placement of the children are matters for the local education authorities to decide. The local board of education: * * * “3. May require any child entering school under the age of 6 to attend kindergarten and complete a year of the same provided that the child has not completed a year in a kindergarten substantially equivalent to that of the local public school. [Italics supplied.]

* * *

1 The Commissioner of Education has ruled that chronological age cannot be the sole determiner of promotion from the kindergarten to first grade. Chronological age may be the sole criterion for entrance to kindergarten (within the limits heretofore mentioned). The Commissioner has also ruled that any child who has attended and satisfactorily completed a year’s work in a kindergarten which provides equivalent instruction to that of the local school must be enrolled in grade 1.” [Italics supplied.]

“ C. Implications for Entrance of Children to First Grade

“ The program of any nonpublic kindergarten registered by the State Education Department is considered equivalent [128]*128to that of the local public school. If any child has attended and satisfactorily completed a full year’s work at a registered nonpublie kindergarten, the local public school must admit the child to the first grade. [Italics supplied.] * * * “ A list of registered nonpublie kindergartens is now available to superintendents of schools. A revised list will be issued in May 1959.

# # #

D. Unregistered Nonpublie Kindergartens

When a child has completed a full year’s work in an unregistered nonpublic kindergarten and his parents seek his admission to first grade in the public school, the local school authorities shall determine whether or not the kindergarten attended provides substantially equivalent instruction. If the program is not judged by the local school authorities to be substantially equivalent to that of the local school, the child may be placed in the public school kindergarten. If the unregistered nonpublie kindergarten which a child has attended for a full year provides equivalent instruction, the child should be placed in the first grade. If after a reasonable length of time the child has not made satisfactory progress in the first grade, the school may consider the advisability of placing the child in the kindergarten. [Italics supplied.] ”

The court interprets these directives as follows:

Local public school authorities must admit to the first grade any child who has attended and satisfactorily completed a full year’s work at a registered nonpublic kindergarten, if it be 5 years, 8 months or more on September 1, upon entering the first grade (since both the rules of the Board of Regents [§ 195, subd. 1, par. h] and of the Commissioner [General Regulations of the Commissioner of Education, § 195, subd. 1, par. h] provide that the age at entrance to a registered nonpublic kindergarten shall be within one month of that required by the local school system [See “ Entrance to First Grade ” in the above-quoted bulletin of August, 1958.]).

They may not admit a child of the same age to first grade upon completion of a full year at an unregistered nonpublic kindergarten unless and until they have determined if such unregistered kindergarten provides instruction substantially equivalent to that of the local public school. If it does, 1 ‘ the child should be placed in the first grade.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
15 Misc. 2d 124, 182 N.Y.S.2d 166, 1958 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2088, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jokinen-v-allen-nysupct-1958.