Pape v. McKinney

368 A.2d 28, 170 Conn. 588, 1976 Conn. LEXIS 1052
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedApril 13, 1976
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 368 A.2d 28 (Pape v. McKinney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pape v. McKinney, 368 A.2d 28, 170 Conn. 588, 1976 Conn. LEXIS 1052 (Colo. 1976).

Opinions

House, C. J.

This appeal is from a judgment of the Superior Court for the judicial district of Waterbury. The named plaintiff is the publisher of three newspapers and the coplaintiff is the corporation which publishes, prints and circulates them. The defendants are the members of the board of education of the city of Waterbury and the clerk of that board. The gravamen of the complaint, filed August 13, 1973, is that the defendants violated the provisions of § 1-21 of the General Statutes as it then read with respect to giving notices of two of their meetings and to keeping records of minutes of those meetings and the votes of individual members on each issue voted on at the meetings. By way of relief, the plaintiffs claimed “[a] Writ of Mandamus ordering the defendants, and each of them, to supply the plaintiffs with copies of the minutes of the meeting of June 11, 1973, together with a statement setting forth the vote of each of the defendant members in relation to such issues, and that the plaintiffs be supplied by the defendants with the record of the votes of each member of said Board of Education upon each of the issues before it at the meeting of June 28, 1973.” In answer to the complaint, the defendants denied the material allegations of the complaint insofar as they alleged a violation of the provisions of § 1-21. Thereafter, the plaintiffs moved for a summary judgment, claiming that there existed no genuine issue as to any material fact, supporting their motion by an appropriate affidavit of the named plaintiff. The [591]*591defendants filed counter affidavits and an objection to the motion for summary judgment asserting that there did exist a genuine issue as to the material facts alleged in the complaint. The judgment as rendered, after reciting the foregoing pleadings, states simply that the action then continued “thence to the present time when the parties appeared and were at issue to the Court, as on file. The court, having heard the parties on said Motion for Summary Judgment, finds the issues for the defendant. Whereupon It Is Adjudged that the defendants recover of the plaintiffs their costs taxed at $ .” We find the judgment more than a little confusing in that it literally appears to have been rendered only on the contested motion for summary judgment, finding the issues for the defendant on that motion, and makes no reference to the basic issue raised by the pleadings—whether the plaintiffs were entitled to the writ of mandamus which they sought. It clearly does not conform to a proper form of judgment to be entered in a mandamus action. See State ex rel. Chernesky v. Civil Service Commission, 141 Conn. 465, 468 n.1, 106 A.2d 713. Since, however, the judgment does appear to have been intended as a final one on the merits of the action, in view of the adjudication that the defendants should recover their costs and the court did file a finding of facts which is unattacked, we will treat the judgment, as have the parties on the appeal, as a final one on the merits adjudging that the plaintiffs’ request for an order in the nature of a mandamus was denied.

Although the issues are relatively simple, it is necessary to recite the facts found by the court in some detail in order to place them in understandable context. The amount and extent of the circu[592]*592lation of the plaintiffs’ newspapers depends partly upon obtaining and disseminating news of public events occurring within the city of Waterbury. Under the provisions of § 1-21 of the General Statutes which govern both the giving of notice and the recording of the doings of meetings of government agencies, it is the duty of the defendant McKinney, clerk of the board of education, to keep a record of the doings of that board and record and make available for inspection and copying the motions and minutes of the board. It is also the duty of the board and its members to hold and conduct meetings, to give notice of such meetings, to record the doings of such meetings in conformity with § 1-21 and to supervise the clerk of the board so that there is compliance with the requirements of the statute. On June 11, 1973, six of the ten members of the board met with the superintendent of schools, the deputy superintendent, and the director of elementary education at a “work session” where there was a discussion of a memorandum prepared by the director of elementary education relating to the class size problems which were expected to arise when schools reopened in September. The defendant McKinney, clerk of the board, did notify each member of the board of this meeting but no public notice was given and she did not attend it. No minutes or other record of what transpired at the meeting were kept except that the director made a notation on his copy of the memorandum referring to the “6/11/73 Bd. of Ed. caucus,” and listing the names of the six members who attended and of the other two school officials followed by “O.K.” This document was, thereafter, taken surreptitiously from the director’s files and delivered into the possession of the executive editor of the plaintiff news[593]*593papers. The unattacked finding of the court is that “ [n] o decisions were made at the meeting of June 11, 1973 and no votes were taken at such meeting.” The court further found that it was not a regularly scheduled meeting of the board of education and that no public notice of the meeting was given as required by § 1 -21 for a special meeting nor was there compliance with the requirements for holding an executive session. It also found that during the course of the litigation the plaintiffs had already acquired whatever information was available concerning the meeting.

As to the second meeting in question, held June 28,1973, the court found that at the regular meeting of the board held on June 18, at which a reporter from the plaintiff newspapers was present, it was voted to hold a meeting on June 28 in substitution for the meeting previously scheduled for July 2 since several members would be away on July 2. The clerk of the board gave notice to the city clerk of the changed date by letter dated June 21, 1973, and sent postcard notices to the members of the board, the mayor, the superintendent of school?, the school building inspector, the newspapers operated by the plaintiffs, and the liaison member of the board of aldermen, as is her regular practice.

On August 3, 1973, the named plaintiff made a request of the board of education for the minutes of meetings of the board held on June 11 and June 28. No minutes of the meeting held on June 11 were sent to him, no such minutes having been recorded. Minutes of the meeting held on June 28 were sent to him. In all minutes of the board meetings kept up until and including the minutes of the June 28 meeting, the clerk recorded the votes of [594]*594the members as follows: (1) a vote upon a motion with nothing further indicates a unanimous vote of the board; (2) the names of members voting affirmatively were not recorded individually in the minutes; (3) the names of members voting negatively or abstaining were individually recorded in the minutes. The court found that “[t]he names of members who voted in favor of any motion could be readily ascertained by comparing the names of the members in attendance with the names of those whose names were recorded as voting negatively or as abstaining upon a particular motion.” This finding was not attacked.

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Pape v. McKinney
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Bluebook (online)
368 A.2d 28, 170 Conn. 588, 1976 Conn. LEXIS 1052, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pape-v-mckinney-conn-1976.