Meade County Board of Education v. Powell

71 S.W.2d 638, 254 Ky. 352, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 76
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMay 4, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 71 S.W.2d 638 (Meade County Board of Education v. Powell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Meade County Board of Education v. Powell, 71 S.W.2d 638, 254 Ky. 352, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 76 (Ky. 1934).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Drury, Commissioner

Reversing.

*353 . The Meade County Board of Education removed L. H. Powell, superintendent of schools, and thereupon Powell sued the board in equity in the Meade circuit court, alleging that the board in removing him had acted arbitrarily and capriciously, had abused its discretion, and removed him for insufficient cause; the circuit court found his petition meritorious and entered a judgment restraining the board from removing him, and it has appealed.

This is a case similar to that of Howard v. Bell County Board of Education, 247 Ky. 586, 57 S. W. (2d) 466. There is no need that we should review all of the charges made against Powell by the board, or even that we should state or review the evidence as to all of. those upon which he was found guilty. If there was evidence in regard to any one of them sufficient to show the board did not abuse its discretion in doing what it did, then the board’s action must stand.

Failure to Visit the Schools.

By section 4404a, Ky. Stats., it was the duty of Mr. Powell as county superintendent of schools to visit each subdistrict school of his county. That does not mean visit the schoolhouses when there is no one there; it means visit the schools while in session, for how else can he learn anything of the efficiency of the teacher, the method of instruction, the conduct of the pupils, the discipline, the government of the school, and other things which he is required by section 4404a, Ky. Stats., to learn and to note in a book he must keep for that purpose. Neither does it mean this visit can be perfunctorily made, at any time. It means a visit made in good faith, and it should not be postponed until the schools are about to close, but it should be a timely visit, so that youthful teachers may by the superintendent be aided and advised in the conduct of their schools, and that erroneous methods may be' supplanted by proper ones, and the schools be thereby made more efficient.

Powell’s position as to this; charge as finally developed by pleading and proof is largely that of confession and avoidance.

School Year 1930-31.

His visit to the school at Oak Grove was made, so the teacher testifies, while the school was in recess, he *354 brought with him a Mr. Sporing, and they were soliciting subscriptions to the “College Graduates Foundation,” and that as soon as they had obtained his agreement to contribute $25 thereto, they left. Powell admitted all this, but says he remained until recess was over and the school was called to order, that he made a talk to the pupils, distributed some pictures of Lincoln, and that he saw the school in operation.

School Year 1931-32.

The teacher of the school at Black Jack testified Powell did not visit this school, but Powell says he did visit it in December, 1931, and read from the record he is required to make the information he is required to obtain on such a visit; but in view of the fact that he could easily have made that up from records in his office, but little weight can be given to such a self-serving-declaration.

The teacher of the Hall School testified Powell did not visit that school, and Powell for excuse says this school was closed when he got there. The fact that this school was closed and Mr. Powell did not visit it did not keep the -notation in his book from being full and complete, which shows how little weight should be given to such book entries. Powell testifies he got to this school before 3 p. m. and found it closed, and that he never went back because from exhaustion of money this school closed two weeks sooner than he anticipated.

Both of the teehers of the Hynes School testified Powell failed to visit that school. Powell testified he visited this school, that he got there between 2:45 and 3 p. m., and the school had adjourned for the day. The teachers when recalled said they never dismissed school before 3:30 p. m.; that after that they swept out the-building and attended to other matters that required them to stay about 40 or more minutes longer.

The teacher of the Big Spring School testified Powell failed to visit it. Powell testified he did and again read his record of his visit.

School Year 1932-33.

The teacher of the school at Cedar Flat testified Powell failed to visit that school. This is another school Powell claims to have visited after school had been closed for the day, but when his book was examined it *355 showed his visit to this school was made in the forenoon. When confronted with that, Powell said this visit was made with Dr. Blair, in the summer vacation, before the school opened, and was made at a time when the children had been specially called in for some sort of medical examination and serum treatment. His final position is that he did not visit this school while it was in session, because due to financial shortage the school closed two weeks sooner than anticipated.

The teacher of the Buck Grove School testified Powell failed to visit it, and a sister of this teacher says Powell told her the reason he did not visit her brother’s school was because it was raining when he was in that neighborhood. Powell denies saying that to her. Powell had not been charged in pleading with failure to visit this school, but after Powell had testified he visited every school in the county except the one at Cedar Flat, the evidence of his failure to visit this Buck Grove School was admissible to contradict him. The same is perhaps true of the school at Big Spring.

Thus we have a number of contradictions in the evidence about the visitation of schools by Mr. Powell. This is not a case of Mr. Powell being contradicted a half dozen times by the same witness, but of his being contradicted by half a dozen different witnesses, about a half dozen different matters.

There is some evidence of bias on the part of some of these teachers, but that is matched by the evident interest of Mr. Powell. This evidence was before the board; it saw, as well as heard, all these witnesses.

The Question Before the Board.

It was for the board to weigh and consider this evidence, to determine its competency, its relevancy, its probative effect, and its sufficiency, and from such finding to take such official action as it was by section 4399a-7, Ky. Stats., authorized to take in its discretion. It chose to remove Mr. Powell. That is one of the powers conferred on the board by the statute just quoted. There is no provision made for an appeal from such action of the board, and this action as begun in the Meade circuit court, and as it stands in this court, is in no sense an appeal from the action of the board. There is no provision in the law for the courts to undo what the board has done, so the question becomes this:

*356 What Power Have the Courts in the Matter?

The power and duty of the courts is thus stated in 32 C. J. p. 242, sec. 384:

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Bluebook (online)
71 S.W.2d 638, 254 Ky. 352, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meade-county-board-of-education-v-powell-kyctapphigh-1934.