Lenhart v. Board of Education

5 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 129, 18 Ohio Dec. 825, 1907 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 104
CourtMuskingum County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedMay 3, 1907
StatusPublished

This text of 5 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 129 (Lenhart v. Board of Education) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Muskingum County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lenhart v. Board of Education, 5 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 129, 18 Ohio Dec. 825, 1907 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 104 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1907).

Opinion

McGinnis, J.

The case of Lenhart v. The Board of Education of Newton Township et al is an action to enjoin the board and its co-defendant, Ginn & Co., from placing in use in the schools of Newton township certain books of Ginn & Co., instead of certain books claimed to have been adopted, that were published by the American Book Company.

In the petition, the plaintiff alleges that he is a tax-payer and a citizen of Newton township, and that, on May 7, 1906, the books of the American Book Company were legally adopted and contracted for; that on September 3, 1906, said board by its action, which the plaintiff claims to have been irregular, adopted some books of the defendant, Ginn & Co., instead of some of the boobs theretofore alleged to have been adopted of the American Book Company. The petition also alleges that this latter adoption, i. e., the adoption of the books of Ginn & Co., was illegal [130]*130and void; that the attempted change of books would cause expense to the patrons of the schools and a wrongful expenditure of public money; that it would cause irreparable injury, for which there is no adequate remedy at law; and prays for an injunction against the defendants to prevent the board and the said Ginn & Co. from making this exchange of books.

The board of education does not file any answer, but the defendant, Ginn & Co., denies that the books of the American Book Company were legally adopted, and denies that the books of Ginn & Cq. were illegally adopted, and it alleges that the books adopted in May, 1906, if legally adopted at all, were simply adopted as a substitute for books theretofore adopted by the board in 1901, and that the other books were adopted September 3, 1906, within two weeks after the third Monday of August, by a majority vote of the board. As a second defense, Ginn & Go. say that on August 6, 1906, said books were adopted at a regular meeting of said board, by a three-fourths majority of said board.

Plaintiff replies to the second defense and denies that said meeting of August 6, 1906, was a regular meeting, alleging that it was a special meeting.

The issues made by these pleadings have been submitted on the evidence and the arguments of counsel.

The record of the board shows that at a meeting of the board held July 22, 1905, the schools were ordered to begin on the second Monday of September, where the buildings were completed, and nothing is said about when they were to begin where the buildings were not completed. The evidence outside of the record evidence shows that, the terms were eight months for each school, and that each and all of these terms expired on the twenty-seventh day of April, except one; and that one expired May 16, 1906, I believe was the testimony of the witness.

At a meeting on the 6th of January, 1906, the board fixed the time for its regular meetings, as it is required to do by law, and these meetings were to be on the first Monday in each month while the schools were in session, and after the schools were closed, then each alternate month. All of the school terms but one expired in April, and that one expired the sixteenth of [131]*131May — -twenty-seventh of April and the sixteenth of May. Between those two dates, on the seventh day of May, the first Monday, the board of education held a meeting; and the first question presenting itself in the case, probably is, was that a regular meeting of the board?

Just how broad we may consider the language of the board’s resolution as to when its regular meetings should be held, “the first Monday in each month while the schools were in session,” is a question. It is true that on the seventh day of May, 1906, all of the schools were not in session. Is there anything in that resolution that would warrant us in saying that the resolution did not apply and was not in force, so long as any school of the township was in session?

When we come to look at the minutes of the meetings of May 7, 1906, they say, “The board of education in Newton township met in regular meeting in election house in White cottage.” If the record is'to be taken as showing what they themselves thought about it, they called it a regular meeting; and if the schools were in session, or any of them, within the meaning of their resolution, it should be called a regular meeting.

I find then that that meeting of May 7, 1906, was a regular meeting. I find that as one of the facts in the case.

Before any other regular meeting was had, the last school term expired, and the question that next presents itself is, what would be the next regular meeting? They were to be alternate months. The resolution of the board does not say whether the succeeding month after the expiration of the school terms should be the one for the first regular meeting or whether that month should be missed and the next month be the one for. such regular meeting. But if we take it in its ordinary sense, and call the meeting of May 7 a regular meeting, the next regular meeting would be the first Monday in July. It seems from the record, however, that no meeting was held on the first Monday in July. The first meeting held in July was on the ninth day of the month, and that could not very well have been the first Monday. Then, missing the month of August, the next regular meeting would come the first Monday in September, which, I take it, was the third day of September. Ac[132]*132cording to this plan of calculation, starting as a basis with the seventh of May as a regular meeting, the meeting of September 3 would be a regular meeting.

At that meeting, it is alleged that the books of Ginn & Co. were adopted, but the record shows that they were not adopted by a vote of three-fourths of the board. While the meeting was regular, the vote was not such as is required by law, only three out of the five voting for the adoption of those books, which could not have been legally adopted at that meeting according to the showing of this record.

The record shows (if we are permitted to go into it outside of certain specified items) that on June 11 the board held a called meeting and adjourned to July 9, and then adjourned to August 6. At that last meeting, it is alleged in the second defense of Ginn & Co., three-fourths of the board voted to adopt the -books of Ginn & Co., i. e., the books that are named in the petition as belonging to that company. But while the vote at that meeting was three-fourths, as required by law, that meeting was not and could not have been a regular meeting, because it was a second adjourned meeting from a called meeting. We could not, I think, with any propriety call the meeting of August 6 a regular meeting.

■ I think that the evidence shows that the books of Ginn & Co. were not adopted according to law, and that any attempt to place them in the schools of Newton township would be unlawful, under the authority of either of those meetings of August 6 or September 3.

I think the evidence shows that the books of the American Book Company were adopted at a regular meeting by a legal vote and that they were not adopted, as has been claimed in argument, as substitutes for books adopted in 1901, but for the full period of five years.

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Bluebook (online)
5 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 129, 18 Ohio Dec. 825, 1907 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lenhart-v-board-of-education-ohctcomplmuskin-1907.