Loewy v. Board of Education

59 Misc. 70, 112 N.Y.S. 4
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 59 Misc. 70 (Loewy 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
Loewy v. Board of Education, 59 Misc. 70, 112 N.Y.S. 4 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1908).

Opinion

Goff, J.

At the commencement of the school year, on the 1st of October, 1899, plaintiff was appointed teacher of shop work in the public schools at an annual salary of $960. On the 3d of May, 1900, there went into effect an amendment to the Greater Hew York charter (Laws of 1900, chap. 751, charter § 1091) which, among other things, provided that “ The board of education shall have power to adopt by-laws fixing the salaries of * * * all members of the supervising and teaching staff * * * . Such by-laws shall establish a uniform schedule of salaries for the supervising and teaching staff throughout all boroughs, which schedule ¡alt all provide for an equal annual increment of salary of such [71]*71an amount, that * * * no male teacher in said elementary schools shall receive less than nine hundred dollars per annum nor shall the annual increment for any male teacher therein be less than one hundred and five dollars. * * * Ho salary now paid to any member of the supervising and the teaching staff of any of the public schools in the city of Hew York shall be reduced by the operation of this section, and the aforesaid, equal annual increment for each class or grade of the supervising and the teaching staff of said public schools shall be uniform throughout each class or grade, and each of said persons shall at once receive all the emoluments in accordance with the above schedule of minimum salaries to which said person is entitled by reason of merit, of experience and of the grade of class taught.” On the same day, and in pursuance of the act, the board of education adopted a schedule known as schedule VI, by which a minimum salary of $900 for the first year was fixed as the salary of teachers of plaintiff’s grade, with an annual increase of $105 for a period of twelve years, when a maximum fixed by law would be reached. At the time this schedule went into effect, plaintiff was, under his original appointment, receiving $960 per year, and he continued to receive that sum, in monthly payments, for the balance of the school year, until the 1st of October, 1900, when under the schedule he received salary at the rate of $1,005 per year, and for each subsequent year received the prescribed increase of $105. Ho question is raised as to the efficiency of the plaintiff as a teacher, nor as to his having been appropriately graded or classified, nor as to the propriety or validity of the schedule. The only question to be determined is what salary was plaintiff entitled to receive, under the schedule, when it went into effect on the 3d of May, 1900 ? He contends that from that date he was entitled to receive a minimum salary, at the rate of $1,005 per year, until the first of October next ensuing when, at the commencement of the new school year, he became entitled to receive the annual increase of $105 for each recurring ■ year. The defendant contends that he was only entitled to receive for the first year the minimum rate of $900 and, thereafter, the annual increase of [72]*72$10-5; and the fact that he actually received $960 for the first year was because he had been employed at that figure, and the act prohibited any reduction. While the act cited is very prolific in language, yet in vain may it be searched for any express terms or provisions which are applicable to or control the precise question involved. Eecourse must be had, therefore, to the act which was amended, to the object and purpose of the amendment, and to the reason of the thing, in order that the true intent and meaning of the statute may be ascertained. When the different boroughs which now constitute the city of Eew York were consolidated into one municipality, a scheme of government for the department of public education was devised. Such a scheme was rendered difficult of accomplishment, because of the different systems existing in the various municipalities and school districts within the territorial limits of the new city. It is not necessary to refer to the statutes or by-laws then in existence beyond the mere statement that, out of the confusion, there was sought to be shaped something like order, and how far this was successful may be measured from the provisions which empowered the different school boards to fix the salaries of the teaching staff, although “ said salaries need not be uniform throughout all the several boroughs nor in any two of them nor throughout any one borough.” -Charter, § 1091. Thus large power was given to the individual school boards to adopt such salaries as they deemed proper, provided only that such salaries shall be regulated by merit, by the grade of class taught, by the length of service, or by the experience in teaching of the incumbent in charge, or by such a combination of these considerations as the school board may deem proper.” § 1091. It was to be expected that, with such power in the hands of the different boards, different standards of compensation should be adopted; thus giving rise to much dissatisfaction among the teachers, not only on account of the unfairness, but also on account of the insufficiency. This defect was in part remedied, in 1899, by an act (Laws -of 1899, chap. 417), which amended -section 10.91 of the charter by adding to it certain restrictions as to the minimum salaries which might [73]*73be paid to teachers and principals. By this amendment, no regular teacher could be paid less than $600 per annum. Although some relief was given by this act, it was but slight; and the continued dissatisfaction with existing conditions was expressed in the enactment of chapter 751 of the Laws of 1900, under which the present action has been brought. It is entitled' “An act to amend chapter 378 of the Laws of 1897 * * * relative to the department of education, for the purpose of establishing a uniform salary schedule and providing funds therefor.” The fourth section is an amendment of section 1091 of the Greater Hew York charter. That section gives to the central board of education, instead of to the individual school boards, the power to fix salaries, bpt greatly limits that authority by providing for a uniform schedule of salaries; and it further directs, with much minuteness-, what shall be the minimum salaries and increments for the various grades of the teaching and supervising staff. The purpose of this act was to vest the power of fixing salaries within clearly defined limits, according to a uniform schedule, in the central or governing board; and the reason of it was, not only to pay a just and uniform compensation to the teachers, but to remove the inequalities, the incongruities and the capriciousness of the old system. In construing the act, the reasons for its creation must be borne in mind; but such reasons may not be allowed to limit the discretion formerly given to the boards, except in so far as the act specifically states. If, as in the present case, an amendment is lacking in some particular or is capable of more than one construction, it is permitted to look, not only to the provisions of the original act, but the court may avail itself of any legitimate aids for the purpose of ascertaining its true meaning, 2 Lewis’ Suth. Stat. Oonstr. (2d ed.), §§ 450, 456. When the outlying districts were annexed to the city of Hew York by the Greater Hew York charter, § 1086, entitled “ Continuation of Yearly Contracts with Teachers in Territory Consolidated,” directed that “All yearly school contracts by and between the local school authorities of any school district whose territory is so annexed and consolidated by this act and the teachers in [74]

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Related

Moses v. Board of Education
127 Misc. 477 (New York Supreme Court, 1926)
Rockwell v. Board of Education
125 Misc. 136 (New York Supreme Court, 1925)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
59 Misc. 70, 112 N.Y.S. 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/loewy-v-board-of-education-nysupct-1908.