Oneida High School v. Scott County Board of Education

145 Tenn. 306
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1921
StatusPublished

This text of 145 Tenn. 306 (Oneida High School v. Scott County Board of Education) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Oneida High School v. Scott County Board of Education, 145 Tenn. 306 (Tenn. 1921).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Hall

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is a contest between complainants and defendants as to who is entitled to control the school property and school of a special school district in Scott county known as the Oneida High School of Scott county.

The original bill was filed on August 27, 1921, by the Oneida High School of Scott county, as a domestic corporation duly chartered- by chapter 371 of the Private Acts of 1915, and having its situs in Scott county; and A. C. Terry, C. B. Hail, J. B. Carson, George H. Jackson, and M. E. Thomas, trustees of said school, and all citizens and residents of said school district and county, against defendants, as the county board of education for Scott county, alleging, among other things, that complainant, Oneida High School of Scott county, was incorporated and created a body politic by chapter 371 of the Private Acts of 1915, and alleging that the other complainants were the legally elected and duly qualified trustees of said school, and that it was the duty of said trustees, and they were vested with power to do so under and by the provisions of said act which gave them the control and management of said school and its property, to employ all necessary teachers for said school, fix their salaries, and to make all necessary rules and regulations for the government of said school; in other words, said act made them the custodian of the school property situated within the special school [308]*308district created by said act, including the high school building at Oneida; that at the July session, 1921, of the county court of Scott county said court' elected defendants as a county board of education for ^aid county under the provisions of chapter 120 of the Public Acts of 1921, after which defendants organized as a county board of education for said county and entered upon the discharge of their duties as such under said act; that they had, in their official capacity, unlawfully assumed control and had taken possession of the Oneida High School building, which was the only school building owned by the special school district created by chapter 371 of the Acts of 1915, and of which complainants were given control by the provisions of said act, and were employing teachers for and assuming the management and control of said school, notwithstanding the fact that complainants had previous thereto entered into contracts with other teachers than those employed by defendants to teach said school; that defendants were threatening to appropriate the public school fund belonging to said school district to the payment of salaries of teachers and other expenses incident to conducting said school, and all without authority to do so under the law.

The bill prayed for a mandatory injunction requiring defendants to vacate the high school building of said district and restore posesssion thereof to complainants, who were rightfully entitled thereto; that a decree be l'endered establishing and fixing the rights of complainants, as trustees of said school, and that it be decreed that appellants, in their official capacity as a county board of education for Scott county, are without right or authority to control or manage said school, and that they be held [309]*309personally liable for any damage which they may have done to said school property while in the wrongful possession of same; and that they also be perpetually enjoined from interfering with complainants in the management and control of said school property.

It appears that the complainant, J. B. Carson, appeared before the court, and in writing denied that he had authorized the use of his name as a complainant to the bill, and asked that his name be stricken from the bill as a complainant. Whereupon this was ordered done by the court.

Thereafter complainants were permitted to amend their bill so as to allege that chapter 120 of the Public Acts of 1921 is. unconstitutional and void, because it violates section 8 of article 11 and section 8 of article 1 of the Constitution, in that it deprives complainants of a property right which is vested in them by chapter 371 of the Private Acts of 1915, without due process of law.

Defendants answered the bill, admitting that, as the .county board of education for Scott county which board was authorized and created by chapter 120 of the Acts of 1921, and duly elected by the county court of said county at its July term, 1921, they had taken possession of said school building, and had assumed the management and control of same by virtue of the authority and power vested in them by said act, and had employed teachers to teach said high school for the ensuing year, as alleged in complainants’ bill. They denied, however, that the taking of possession by them of said school building was unlawful, or that their management and control of said building and the employment of teachers to teach said school was unlawful, but [310]*310was in accord with the authority and power vested in them by chapter 120 of the Public Acts of 1921.

Defendants further denied that said act was unconstitutional and void for the reasons stated in the amendment to complainants’ bill.

Upon the hearing the chancellor sustained complainants’ bill, holding that complainants were entitled to the possession, management, and control of the property of said special school district under and by virtue of the provisions of chapter 871 of the Private Acts of 1915, free from any interference on the part of defendants. The mandatory injunction, which had theretofore been issued and served on defendants in accordance with the prayer of the bill, was made perpetual, and defendants were taxed with the costs of the cause. From this decree they have appealed to this court, and have assigned the action of the chancellor for error.

In the court below the cause was heard upon the bill and answer and the stipulation of counsel. In the stipulation of counsel it was agreed that complainants constituted the trustees of the Oneida High School of Scott County under and by virtue of chapter 871 of the Private Acts of 1915, and were in possession and control of the school property of said district at the time of the election of the defendants as the county board of education for said county, and at the. time defendants took possession of said school property, claiming the right to possession and the right to manage and control said school property under the provisions of said act of 1915; that defendants claimed the right to take possession of the property of said district and manage and control the same under and by virtue of chapter 120 of the Public Acts of 1921; that [311]*311after demanding of complainants the possession of said property, and its possession being refused, defendants took possession of said property, not forcibly, bnt with the assistance and permission of the complainant, J. B. Carson, whom it is stipulated was not officially representing the trustees of said school district at the time, but assisted them in taking possession of said property.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
145 Tenn. 306, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oneida-high-school-v-scott-county-board-of-education-tenn-1921.