Lindquist v. Abbett

265 N.W. 54, 196 Minn. 233, 1936 Minn. LEXIS 943
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJanuary 24, 1936
DocketNos. 30,479, 30,483.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 265 N.W. 54 (Lindquist v. Abbett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lindquist v. Abbett, 265 N.W. 54, 196 Minn. 233, 1936 Minn. LEXIS 943 (Mich. 1936).

Opinion

Stone, Justice. .

Defendants appeal from orders denying their several motions for amended findings or a new trial.

This is a taxpayer’s action. Defendants Abbett, Andresen, Coole, Knight, Haney, and Wakeman are six of the nine members of the board of education of the city of Duluth. Defendant Hartford Accident & Indemnity Company is surety for defendant Coole as treasurer of the school district. Defendant Spear is a member of the Duluth bar. The purpose of the action is to compel restitution to the school treasury of a substantial sum which plaintiff alleges was wrongfully paid therefrom to defendant Spear for professional services. Two smaller items are also involved, which will be treated separately.

By Sp. L. 1891, c. 312, “the board of education of the city of Duluth” was incorporated as an independent school district, its territory the same as that of the city. Section 13 subjects the school district to the general school laws of the state (as far as they are not inconsistent), particularly those concerning independent school districts. The district owns and maintains something like 40 school plants, including a junior college. Its property is said to be worth around $9,000,000. The 1930 tax levy was $2,829,384. There are about 1,000 employes, including 700 teachers. The students number upwards of 22,000. The magnitude of the administrative organization is indicated by these facts. The clerk has six assistants, inclusive of two stenographers. In the “administration offices” are 19 or 20 clerks and some 15 or 16 additional in the schools.

*235 Mr. Spear did all legal work for the district from sometime before 1923 until the commencement of this action. In August, 1923, a resolution was adopted by the board under which “all matters of a legal nature” were thereafter to be referred to him as attorney. The practice was to pay him at the rate of $350 monthly or $4,200 yearly. He submitted no bills but drew his compensation monthly. There was nothing contractual to prevent the termination of Mr. Spear’s services at any time upon proper notice. His employment, as far as it rested in contract, was one from month to month rather than from year to year.

Decision below went against the individual defendants. The findings segregate Mr. Spear’s legal from his nonlegal services and allow him compensation (quantum meruit) for the former. The result was an order for judgment against defendants, other than the board itself, for $2,937.72, in which sum the board was held entitled to restitution.

In 1910 the attorney general’s office ruled that it was “not competent” for a school district “to hire an attorney by the year.” The opinion recognizes, however, that one may be retained “for the performance of any particular service which is necessary, and such hiring can properly be made by the adoption of a resolution to that effect.” That ruling, we are advised, has been followed ever since.

In that connection, 1 Mason Minn. St. 1927, § 2848, is cited for plaintiff. It reads thus:

“If any difference of opinion arises between school officers, or any doubt as to the proper construction of any part of this chapter, or as to their powers or duties, the state superintendent, at the request of any such officer, shall submit such question to the attorney general, who shall give his written opinion thereon to such superintendent, and such opinion shall be binding until annulled or overruled by a court.”

It would probably be enough, in answer to the argument for plaintiff based upon that statute and the rulings of the attorney general, to observe that the latter’s opinions were not addressed to the state *236 superintendent of education. ■ But it should be noted that, while opinions of the attorney general have great weight, not only because of their origin, but also because of their effect as a practical construction where a statute is involved (County of Hennepin v. Ryberg, 168 Minn. 385, 210 N. W. 105), it was certainly not the intention of the legislature to confer upon the attorney general, an executive officer, the legislative duty of making law or the judicial function of interpreting it. Hence, aside from whatever effect an opinion of the attorney general, procured pursuant to § 2848, may have as protection for officers operating under it, it can never have the effect of foreclosing, as against judicial action, a question of statutory construction.

The trial judge rightly rejected the argument that “the board of education is but a department of the city of Duluth” — so much so that the city attorney is ex officio attorney for the board, which, in consequence, has no authority “to employ an outside attorney.” That view is based upon mistaken appraisal of the decision in State v. West Duluth Land Co. 75 Minn. 456, 469, 78 N. W. 115, 118. The special law, which is the charter of the district, was there challenged as a violation of the then constitutional provision prohibiting “special or private laws for granting corporate powers or privileges except to cities.” The prohibition did not apply, it was held, because “this entire act could have properly been made a part of the city charter, for under it the schools of the city are nothing but one of its executive departments. * * " the powers and privileges therein granted and conferred were to a city and for city purposes, and therefore * * there was no infringement upon the constitution.” For long before that decision and the special act itself, the Duluth school district had been an entity distinct from the city. The decision in the West Duluth Land Co. case is criticized but followed in State ex rel. Pine v. Board of Education, 158 Minn. 459, 463, 197 N. W. 964, 966. The point of the criticism is that there was in the earlier case no real obstacle to a holding that “the school district remained an entity distinct from the city.” Notwithstanding, the view was reaffirmed that “the board of education is a department or component part of the city *237 government.” But, as Mr. Justice Dibell went on to say [158 Minn. 463]: “the board is a corporation, a school district, having distinct powers of its own.”

The fact of its own independent corporate existence cannot be denied. By statute, 1 Mason Minn. St. 1927, § 2742, every school district in the state is declared “a public corporation.” That the powers granted the board are to be exercised by it, to the exclusion of all city officials, is equally plain. As a matter of corporate status and its incidents, the school district in law and fact exists and functions separately from the city. The school district might well have been amalgamated with the city in corporate organization but was not. The result is two corporations where there might have been one.

In the special law which is the charter of the school district, there is nothing to indicate that the members of the board of education or any other officers of the district were to look to the legal department of the city for such counsel and other legal aid as surely would be needed from time to time.

Not conclusive but relevant is the absence from the city charters (during the period since the special law was enacted the city has had two) of any indication that it would be part of the city attorney’s duty to serve the school district.

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Bluebook (online)
265 N.W. 54, 196 Minn. 233, 1936 Minn. LEXIS 943, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lindquist-v-abbett-minn-1936.