Lewis v. Board of Education

157 Misc. 520, 285 N.Y.S. 164, 1935 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1698
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 30, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 157 Misc. 520 (Lewis v. Board of Education) 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
Lewis v. Board of Education, 157 Misc. 520, 285 N.Y.S. 164, 1935 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1698 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1935).

Opinion

Collins, J.

This motion by the plaintiff challenges the legal sufficiency of the separate defenses.

The plaintiff, as a taxpayer, seeks to forbid the defendant, The Board of Education, from permitting school buildings to be used as assembly places for racial and religious groups,/and to restrain reading from the Bible in public schools. The law which authorizes such readings is attacked as unconstitutional.);

The amended complaint projects three causes of action. The first asserts that the board of education is illegally allowing the use of school buildings “to a large number of distinctively sectarian religious denominations, societies and groups,” among them many Roman Catholic Newman Clubs, Protestant Young Men’s and Young Women’s Christian Associations and Hi-Y Clubs, and Hebrew Menorah and Junior Hadassah Clubs.” Other Protestant, Jewish and Catholic organizations are enumerated as utilizing the schoolhouses in disregard of law. (Complaint, IV.)

(íhe second cause attacks, as violative of the Federal and State Constitutions, the use of the Holy Scriptures in the public schools.

The third cause assails as unconstitutional that portion of section 1151 of the Greater New York Charter which prohibits the board of education from excluding “ the Holy Scriptures, without note or [522]*522comment, or any selections therefrom, from any of the schools provided for by this chapter; but it shall not be competent for the said board of education to decide what version, if any, of the Holy Scriptures, without note or comment, shall be used in any of the schools; provided that nothing herein contained shall be so construed as to violate the rights of conscience, as secured by the constitution of this State and of the United States.”^) (Complaint, XXIV.)

Paragraph X of the answer alleges, as a defense to the first cause of action, that <( the so-called sectarian religious denominations, societies, and groups, mentioned and described in * * * the amended complaint * * * are not permitted by the defendant, Board of Education of the City of New York, to hold any religious denominational services in any of the public schools under the jurisdiction and control of the defendant and that the aforesaid denominations, societies and groups are only and solely permitted to have meetings in the aforesaid public schools for the purpose of conducting ethical, educational and cultural discourses and lectures for the moral uplift of the pupils in the public schools connected with the said so-called denominations, societies and groups; and the defendant alleges that at no time and for no purpose does it permit any pupil of the aforesaid public schools or the societies and groups to which they belong to use or occupy any public school in the City and City School District of New York for the inculcation of any of the tenets of any religious denomination or for any meeting or purpose, directly or indirectly, in which any denominational tenet or doctrine is taught,”

Paragraph XI of the answer, as a defense to the second and third causes of action, alleges that the board of education is a State agency, “ charged by the State with the administration of its educational system in the City and City School District of New York, and it stood during all of said times, and it still stands, as a substitute for the City of New York as a corporate agency of the State for the purpose of administering educational matters in the said City; that all funds, raised by taxation by the State of New York for the support of the common schools or by The City of New York, pass to the credit of the Board of Education and they are disbursed upon the audit of the defendant, and the only relation that The City of New York has to the subject of public education is as the custodian and depositary of school funds and the only duty of the said City of New York with respect to the said funds is to keep them safely and disburse the same according to the instructions of the Board of Education; that The City of New York, as trustee, has title to the money, but it is under the care, control and administration of the defendant, Board of Education, and the powers [523]*523conferred upon the Board of Education, and the powers conferred upon the said Board of Education to administer the public educational system within the confines of The City of New York are exclusive and the grant of the same to the Board of Education negatives the authority in the Municipality to exercise like powers; that a taxpayer’s action brought under the provisions of Section 51 of the General Municipal Law, which authorizes such actions against only municipal corporations and their officers, will not lie and cannot be maintained against the defendant, a branch of the State Government, and the corporate agency of the State established for the purpose of administering educational matters of the State in The City of New York, and the defendant alleges that this action will not he and cannot be maintained against it to obtain the relief prayed for in the amended complaint.”

Paragraph XII of the answer asserts a second defense to the second and third causes by averring'f' that the practice of singing hymns in the pubhc school assembhes has never been universal and is declining rapidly, and that the reading of portions of the Bible or Bibles, mentioned in the amended complaint, without note or comment, at the opening exercises in the pubhc schools of The City of New York is regular and lawful and not in violation of any provision of the Constitution of the State of New York or the Constitution of the United States or of any statute, but is duly permitted by and in accordance with the provisions of the said Constitutions and statute.’^} i

It is the validity of these defenses that this motion poses.

No merit attaches to the board’s prehminary objection that the motion is tardy/

Section 279 of the Civil Practice Act provides that “ an objection * * * that a defense is insufficient in law upon the face thereof,” is “ not waived by failure to raise the same before trial.” -

(Let it be emphasized that the concern here is with power, not policy. Within the boundaries of law what shall and shall not be done in the pubhc schools is an educational function to be determined by those intrusted with the conduct and administration of the pubhc schools. (Lewis v. Board of Education of City of New York, 258 N. Y. 117.) The question here is not whether the Bible shall or shall not be read in the pubhc schools; it is not whether permission to utihze the school buildings should be given or withheld from those of racial or religious affiliations. The board has resolved these questions of policy. The query here is whether the board, in causing excerpts from the Bible to be read, and in allowing school buildings to be employed in the assailed fashion, is transgressing a constitutional guaranty, or is violating any other pro- / vision or concept of law, )

[524]*524Undisguised, the plaintiff’s attack is on a belief and trust in God and in any system or policy or teaching which enhances or fosters or countenances or even recognizes that belief and trust. Such belief and trust, however, regardless of one’s own belief, has received recognition in State and judicial documents from the earliest days of our Republic.

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Bluebook (online)
157 Misc. 520, 285 N.Y.S. 164, 1935 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1698, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewis-v-board-of-education-nysupct-1935.