Little v. Carter County Board of Education

146 S.W.2d 144, 24 Tenn. App. 465, 1940 Tenn. App. LEXIS 53
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedAugust 10, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 146 S.W.2d 144 (Little v. Carter County Board of Education) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Little v. Carter County Board of Education, 146 S.W.2d 144, 24 Tenn. App. 465, 1940 Tenn. App. LEXIS 53 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

PORTRUM, J.

The plaintiff, Mary Nan Little, was elected by the School Board of Carter County as a teacher in the primary department for the term of 1938-39; she entered upon her duties at the beginning of the term and taught for a period of five weeks, when she was summarily dismissed upon the assigned reason that the Board *467 bad employed too many teachers and her services were not necessary, and that the salary carried under her contract when added to all other expenditures "incurred as salary for primary teachers, exceeded the limit fixed by the budget for this purpose, which rendered her contract void. She surrendered her last class roll, school supplies, etc., and gracefully withdrew. It is admitted by counsel representing the Board that there was no objection to her other than that above assigned. From this record there could not be, except, perhaps, the superintendent and secretary of the Board admits telling her, when talking to her when requested the reason for her discharge, that he said, quoting her, “as far as he knew there wasn’t a teacher in the Hampton school that voted for him, and for that matter he didn’t know that I voted for him. ’ ’

As a result of this dismissal, Miss Little instituted suit before a Justice of the Peace for a breach of contract, and the case was carried to the Circuit Court where it was tried anew by the Circuit Judge without the intervention of a jury.

The Board of Education submitted its annual budget to the quarterly County Court at its April term, as it is required to do by statute, which budget was approved and adopted by the court. This budget carried an estimated grand total of income in the sum of $169,000 and is composed of items 1 and 2, the first being total income from the State, $107,000, made up of per capita appropriation $58,000, equalization fund allotment $45,000, transportation grant $3,000, library and forest reserve income $1,000. And item 2 is a total of estimated county income of $62,000, made up of the anticipated tax levy for the school term of 1938-39.

The proposed expenditure of this fund is set out in numerous items of school expense, as estimated and determined upon by the Board. The items that we are concerned with comes under the head of “Instructions: Salaries of teachers, $109,000.” The law requires that the teachers be elected before May 1 of each year. One hundred and seventy-seven teachers were elected on April 30, 1938, the minutes showing:

“Carter County, Tennessee. Harry B. Leonard, Chairman, Board of Education, teacher elected April 30, 1938.

“The salaries as set by the State scale at the time of the election and as written into the contract dated as July 1, 1938. . . . (Then follows a list of the teachers elected, with salaries opposite their names designated per salary state scale, and the salary carried by the contract designated salaries subsequently written into the contract.)”

The large number of these teachers were employed at a higher salary than that fixed by the state scale. This is permissible for the state scale is a minimum salary required before the county can participate in certain state funds. This list contains the name of the plaintiff, *468 Mary Nan Little, whose state scale salary was the sum of $520, as fixed therein, and her contract salary the sum of $600, as fixed therein, and her contract dated July 3, 1938, fixes her salary at $75 per month without any designation of the length of the term. These pui’ported minutes appear as exhibit 2 to the -testimony of Harry Leonard and the date of their adoption is not shown. The minutes of the meeting of April 30, without the state rate or the fixed salaries, appears in Exhibit 1 to the testimony of C. M. Morgan, the caption reading' as follows: “The Carter County Board of Education met at 9 a. m. April 30, 1938, with all members present and teachers for the year 1938-39 were elected as follows: (Followed by the list of teachers elected, which list includes the name of the plaintiff.) ” Then following the list is the following, “All teachers elected subject to proper certification,” and the adjourning’ order of the Board, signed by the chairman and secretary.

The law requires that the list of teachers be submitted to the Commissioner of Education at Nashville prior to July 1, in order that he might determine their qualifications, and fix the state scale applicable to each of them, which is based upon their educational qualifications plus increment, which means that the rate increases with efficient service. Chapter 127, section 3, Public Acts of 1937. The Commissioner performed this duty on a form known as chapter D-881, which bears date of July 21, 1938, and is Exhibit No. 6 to the testimony of C. M. Morgan. The purpose of this is to acquaint the Board of Education with the minimum salary required for each teacher elected, in order that the Board can fix the salaries of the elected teachers. And upon this information the Board fixed the salaries as shown by the quotation from the first exhibit above referred to. The date does not appear from the minutes when this formal action was had. The total of the minimum salaries of these teachers as fixed by the state is the sum of $103,066, and the total of the salaries as contracted which is the maximum salaries here, is the sum of $117,000 as testified to by an auditor.

The auditor’s conclusion is that since the salaries as contracted at $117,000 and that the item as fixed in the budget for salaries is $109,000, therefore the budget is overdrawn, for expenditures incurred in excess of the budget which, at the conclusion of the Board, rendered all of the contracts Amid. If the premise is correct, then the conclusion is perhaps correct, and this is a question for the court to determine. But Ave will deal with it after the conclusion of the statement of the case.

The Board again met in August and employed fourteen additional teachers, with a state rating of $6,420, and salaries fixed in the contract of $7,064. This Avas taken from a memorandum filed in evidence, and there is no showing that this list of teachers Avas in fact submitted to the State Commissioner of Education, or that the *469 whole list appears upon the minutes of the Board. It appears from the testimony that the Board executed contracts in August to teachers without the formality of the election of.the teachers, or in a minute entry showing their election. By adding the $7,000 to the $117,000 the total sum of teachers’ salaries is increased to the sum of $124,000.

After the August election of 1938, a new County Superintendent and members of the School Board were elected, displacing the.old, and they qualified on the following September 5. The schools were opened in August and 177 teachers were assigned their schools and began teaching. There were more teachers than this number elected since the fourteen were given contracts in August, and about this number received no schools. It is not known from this record who they were that received no schools.

The new School Board, with the new Superintendent, met some time after his qualification and assumption of office, (Copies of the minutes of the meeting are filed in the record, but they have been

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Bluebook (online)
146 S.W.2d 144, 24 Tenn. App. 465, 1940 Tenn. App. LEXIS 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/little-v-carter-county-board-of-education-tennctapp-1940.