McIntyre v. State Board of Higher Education

3 N.W.2d 463, 71 N.D. 630, 1942 N.D. LEXIS 96
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedApril 13, 1942
DocketFile 6795
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 3 N.W.2d 463 (McIntyre v. State Board of Higher Education) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McIntyre v. State Board of Higher Education, 3 N.W.2d 463, 71 N.D. 630, 1942 N.D. LEXIS 96 (N.D. 1942).

Opinions

*632 Burke, J.

The plaintiffs in this case, Owen McIntyre, Margaret McIntyre, Mary Alice McIntyre and Eose McIntyre, are father, mother, and daughters respectively. In September, 1939, the two daughters, Mary Alice and Eose, registered as students at the Valley City State Teachers’ College. At the time they registered they were *633 presented with a bill for matriculation and other incidental fees for the first quarter of the school year. This bill was paid without protest. At the time of her registration, Eose was enrolled with the National Youth Administration and was receiving from this source the sum of $10 per month to help defray the cost of her education. In December, 1939, a bill for matriculation and incidental fees for the winter quarter of the school year was presented to plaintiff's. This bill, they refused to pay. About the same time, the enrolment of Eose with the National Youth Administration was canceled. Mary Alice and Eose, however, continued in school. Plaintiffs later attempted to make payment of the fees for the winter quarter with a check upon which the words “for tuition” were inscribed. This check the school authorities refused to accept upon the ground that the inscription incorrectly stated the nature of the charges. Mary Alice and Eose nevertheless continued in school until the end of the summer term of 1940, when they voluntarily left.

Plaintiffs brought this action in December, 1939, seeking injunctive relief against the State Board of Higher Education and the President of the State Teachers’ College at Valley City. Specifically, they demanded (1) that the rules and regulations of the State Board of Higher Education which required the payment of matriculation and other incidental fees, be adjudged null and void; (2) that the defendants be enjoined from collecting from the plaintiffs the matriculation and other incidental fees for the quarter commencing in December, 1939; and, (3) that the order of the defendant canceling the enrolment of Eose in the National Youth Administration be vacated and that the court order her immediate reinstatement therein.

As a basis for the invocation of injunctive relief, the plaintiffs alleged (1) that the rules and regulations of the State Board of Higher Education pertaining to matriculation and other incidental fees are violative of the provisions of § 148, Constitution of North Dakota; (2) that if such fees were not paid by the plaintiffs they would be expelled from said Teachers’ College, and deprived of the benefits of a free education; and, (3) that the defendant President of the State Teachers’ College wrongfully, unlawfully, and arbitrarily procured the cancelation of the assistance which the National Youth Administration had been furnishing to Eose solely because she refused to obey said defend *634 ants’ unlawful orders that she move into one of the college dormitories in which the rent was beyond her ability to pay. The judgment of the trial court ruled that the regulations of the State Board of Higher Education which established matriculation and other incidental fees did not violate the Constitution, and dismissed the action. Plaintiffs appealed from the judgment and the case is here for a trial anew. Wo must therefore reinvestigate the law and the facts and “apply what we deem to be the law to the facts as disclosed'by the record.” Buckingham v. Flummerfelt, 15 ND 112, 115, 106 NW 403; Englert v. Dale, 25 ND 587, 142 NW 169.

At the trial of the case in district court in September, 1940, plaintiffs attempted to establish facts sufficient to justify the relief demanded. At that time, however, it appeared not only that Mary Alice and Bose had not been denied the privilege of attending the Teachers’ College by reason of nonpayment of fees for the school quarter commencing in December, 1939, but that they had also been permitted to attend during the spring and summer quarters of 1940, at the end of which time they voluntarily left the school. None of the plaintiffs testified. The sole testimony upon this question is that of the defendant President Cox whose examination is in part as follows:

“Q. Now ordinarily if students don’t pay their fees you remove them from school, don’t you ?
“A. That very rarely happens. Indeed, I can’t recall a single instance of that kind since’I have been at Valley City.
“Q. Well, because they paid, isn’t that the reason?
“A. Well, many have not paid.
“Q. But anyhow, it is the object of your school to collect these fees from students ?
“A. Yes, sir.
“Q. Now you still hold these charges against these two girls ?
“A. Yes, sir.
“Q. And if they lose out in this lawsuit it is your expectation to collect for them.
“A. We shall attempt to collect them; yes, sir.”

It is clear that at the time of the trial the plaintiffs had enjoyed in full all of the privileges which they had alleged would be denied them upon nonpayment of fees — and that the sole controversy remaining be *635 tween the parties with respect thereto was whether or not the plaintiffs were indebted to the school.

In so far as plaintiffs’ allegations relating to the reasons and motives for the discontinuance of National Youth Administration aid to Rose McIntyre are concerned, we think it sufficient to say that the record affirmatively and without dispute shows that these allegations are wholly unfounded.

Plaintiffs therefore failed to establish the alleged factual premises of irreparable injury upon which they relied to justify injunction. At the close of the testimony, all that remained in the lawsuit was a collateral issue of debt and an otherwise academic quandary as to whether certain rules and regulations of the State Board of Higher Education violated the Constitution.

Both at the trial of this action and upon this appeal, counsel for all parties were concerned principally with the issue of whether or not the rules and regulations of the State Board of Higher Education imposing incidental fees were invalid and unconstitutional or otherwise. Doubtless all parties would like to have this court decide that question. Mere anxiety of parties and their consent are not sufficient to vest this court with jurisdiction to decide a constitutional question. The function of this court is to determine actual controversies between litigants. State ex rel. Olsness v. McCarthy, 53 ND 609, 207 NW 436. As was said by Judge Christianson in Langer v. State, 69 ND 129, 142, 284 NW 245: ... it goes without saying, litigants cannot by consent, either passive or express, dispense with -necessary parties; or confer upon a person, who does not have a sufficient interest in a controversy to entitle him to bring suit, the right to sue, or transform a controversy that is not justiciable into one that is.” See also State ex rel. Amerland v. Hagan, 44 ND 306, 175 NW 372, with regard to the “friendly test case” and 3 Dakota L. Rev. 273.

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Bluebook (online)
3 N.W.2d 463, 71 N.D. 630, 1942 N.D. LEXIS 96, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcintyre-v-state-board-of-higher-education-nd-1942.