Miller v. Dailey

68 P. 1029, 136 Cal. 212, 1902 Cal. LEXIS 688
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 4, 1902
DocketS.F. No. 2799.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 68 P. 1029 (Miller v. Dailey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller v. Dailey, 68 P. 1029, 136 Cal. 212, 1902 Cal. LEXIS 688 (Cal. 1902).

Opinion

CHIPMAN, C.

A writ of mandate was asked by plaintiff to compel defendants to admit him to the state normal school at San José, and to permit him to enjoy the privileges thereof as a student. The writ was granted and defendants appeal from the judgment. The action is brought against defendant Dailey, as president, and all the teachers constituting, the faculty of said normal school. Among other defenses, defendants set forth in their answer, as authority for their action, a resolution passed on September 21, 1899, by the local board of trustees of said school, which is as follows: “Resolved, that the faculty of this state normal school is hereby directed to drop any student who, by reason of poor scholarship, bad character, or evident unfitness for teaching, is disqualified to become a teacher.”

The court found that plaintiff entered the school in 1895, and was duly readmitted February 25, 1899, as alleged, with all the rights and privileges common to students therein; that he conformed to all the rules and regulations adopted for the government of the school, and continued to be such student until September 4,1900, “when the said president and faculty of said state normal school refused to permit the said Henry E. Miller to further continue in said school as a pupil.” The court found that the resolution set forth in the answer was duly adopted by the local.board of trustees; that while plaintiff was being instructed in the several branches taught in said school, the defendants “did on the fourth day of September, 1900, strike from the rolls of said state normal school the name of said Miller and then and there dismissed and expelled said Miller from the state normal school; and then anQ there refused, and still refuse, to instruct, teach, or in any manner recognize the said Miller as a pupil therein”; that plaintiff made the demand for admission alleged in the petition; that *215 he made the declaration alleged as to his purpose in entering the school, and that there was and is room therein for him as n pupil; that it is not true that he voluntarily severed his connection with the school, or that he made three several or any failures in the subject of practice teaching, or that he will never attain such degree of proficiency in said subject as will warrant the faculty in recommending him for a diploma, as averred in the answer; that plaintiff was not permitted to complete the course of practice teaching as prescribed by the rules of the school; that said board of trustees had no authority to pass the resolution set forth in the answer, and “the said resolution is unreasonable, oppressive, and deprives the said Miller of his legal rights to attend said school, in an arbitrary manner.”

1. It is contended that the court was without jurisdiction because, as is claimed, the authority to hear and determine such matters as are in controversy is devolved by statute on the joint board of normal school trustees, by section 1492 of the Political Code, which reads: “It shall be the duty of the joint board. ... 4. To sit as a board of arbitration in matters concerning the management of each state normal school that may need adjustment.” Just what “matters concerning the management” of these schools “that may need adjustment” are subjects of arbitration by the joint board may not be easy to define. This much, however, we think may be safely said; that the legislature did not intend to give to the joint board jurisdiction to arbitrate the question of an individual student’s right to be admitted to the school. This joint board meets but once a year, except “any urgent business affecting the welfare of any or all of the normal schools” will authorize the governor to call a special meeting. If it was intended that this board should supervise every matter affecting individual students, it would have to be in session most of term time in order to adjust matters arising in the several schools (now five) in the state, and this certainly was not contemplated in our normal-school management. Section 1489 seems to leave the control and government of each school with its local board, and it is only such matters of general concern needing adjustment which it was intended the joint board might arbitrate. But whatever may be the meaning of this provision, the jurisdiction of the court is not taken away or affected by it. *216 Whether petitioner exhausted the remedies afforded him by the statute is another question, it will be noticed at this point, as the claim is, that plaintiff under the above provision of the statute should have shown that he appealed to the joint board, and not having done so he cannot have the remedy of mandamus. We do not think the statute gives to the joint board an appellate jurisdiction to hear and determine such a grievance of a, student as is set forth in the complaint. Plaintiff was not called upon to appeal to the joint board from the action of the teachers and president before he could resort to the courts.

2. It is urged that the action was commenced against the wrong parties; that the action should have been against the local board of trustees of the school. There was no question raised to the proceedings, by demurrer or otherwise, for misjoinder or non-joinder of parties. Defendants answered the petition and the parties went to trial; plaintiff put in his evidence and rested his ease without objection being made by defendants that they were not proper parties to the action. Besides, defendants claimed and exercised the power to admit plaintiff to the school, and also to drop or to expel him. It would seem, therefore, that they are properly made defendants to the action. (See Tape v. Hurley, 66 Cal. 473; Wysinger v. Crookshank, 82 Cal. 588.)

3. It is contended that the petition does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action against defendants.

The complaint shows that plaintiff possessed all the requisite qualifications for admission prescribed by the Political Code (secs. 1494, 1503), and that he was duly and regularly admitted as a student September 2, 1895, and readmitted February 25, 1899, with all the rights and privileges common to students of the school; that he pursued the studies prescribed and conformed to all the rules and regulations of the school, and so continued until September 4, 1900, when the president and faculty refused to permit him to further attend the school, and while he was thus pursuing his studies they unlawfully and without cause struck him from the roll of students, expelled him, and refused to recognize him as a student or to further instruct him. When plaintiff showed that he possessed all legal qualifications to enter the school, that he was admitted, and that he conformed to all the regulations of the school, and was engaged in pursuing the prescribed studies, he showed *217 a violation of duty on defendants’ part in expelling him without cause. If the local or joint board, or both boards, had made any regulations governing the school,plaintiff has alleged full compliance with them. He was not called upon to set forth these regulations in his petition, and it cannot be held insufficient on an assumption that these boards, or either of them, made some regulation as to time of graduation and on the further presumption that petitioner was permitted to attend the allotted time and could thereupon be expelled.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
68 P. 1029, 136 Cal. 212, 1902 Cal. LEXIS 688, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-dailey-cal-1902.