Park v. Independent School Dist. No. 1

21 N.W. 567, 65 Iowa 209
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 4, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 21 N.W. 567 (Park v. Independent School Dist. No. 1) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Park v. Independent School Dist. No. 1, 21 N.W. 567, 65 Iowa 209 (iowa 1884).

Opinion

Reed, J.

The evidence given on the trial shows that, on the morning of the eighteenth of September, the members of defendant’s board of directors appeared at the school house, and informed plaintiff of certain rumors affecting his character and conduct as a teacher, which were current in the district. No formal action was taken at that time, but in the afternoon of the same day the members of the board came together again at the school house, and in plaintiff’s presence examined some of the pupils of the school touching the sub[211]*211jeet of said rumors. The result of this meeting was that plaintiff ceased to teach the school, and the chief question of controversy between the parties is as to what action was taken at that time.

Plaintiff’s claim is that the board of directors then assumed to discharge him, while defendant’s claim is that he tendered his resignation, and that the only action of the board of directors was to accept the sarnie. Within the time provided by section 1829 of the Code for taking appeals from decisions or orders of the board, plaintiff filed bis affidavit with the county superintendent, setting forth the fact of his employment to teach said school, and alleging that he had been discharged from said employment by the board of directors without any just reason, and without a full, fair, and impartial investigation of the ease, and without being permitted to make any defense. The county superintendent gave notice of the appeal to the secretary of the board of directors, as required by section 1832 of the Code, and fixed a time for the hearing thereof. The secretary filed with the superintendent what purported to be a transcript of the record of the meeting of the board on the eighteenth of September. This paper recited that plaintiff on that day tendered his resignation as teacher of said school, and that the same was accepted by the board, but it did not have attached to it the certificate of the secretary that it was a correct transcript of the record, or that it correctly stated the aetion of the board on the occasion in question. On the hearing of the case, the superintendent rejected this paper as evidence of what had been done, on the ground that it was not properly authenticated, and permitted the parties to introduce parol evidence on the question; and on the evidence before him he found that the board had discharged plaintiff, and that its action in doing so was irregular, in that he had not been accorded a legal hearing; and he made an order reversing its action.

[212]*212schools: discharge of teacher: appeal to state^uperintfóiftordamaIfcatef evi-u' [211]*211I. On the trial in the district court, plaintiff was permitted, against defendant’s objection, to introduce in evidence the [212]*212record of tlie order made by, the county superin - tendent on the hearing of the appeal. Defendant ■ ° k \ offered in evidence the record of the meeting of ° hoard of directors on the eighteenth of September. It also offered parol evidence tending to prove that plaintiff was not discharged from said school, but that he resigned, and his resignation was accepted by the board of directors; but, on plaintiff’s objection, all this evidence was excluded, and the court instructed the jury “that the record of the proceedings before the county superintendent was conclusive upon defendant, and that it determines that plaintiff’s discharge was wrongful and illegal.” These several rulings constitute the ground of the first assignment of error argued by counsel. The position urged by counsel is that the board of directors, in investigating a charge or complaint against a teacher, and in discharging him from his employment thereon, and the county superintendent, in reviewing their action on appeal, act in a ministerial capacity, and hence their action is not conclusive of the rights of the parties when they become the subjects of inquiry in the ordinary tribunals, but the courts may go behind their orders and decisions, and determine them according to their merits. But, in our opinion, this position cannot be maintained.

It is provided in section 1734 of the Code that, “ in case a teacher employed in any of the schools of the district is found to be incompetent, or is guilty of partiality or dereliction in the discharge of his duties, or for any other sufficient cause shown, the board of directors may, after a full and fair investigation of the facts of the case, at a meeting convened for the purpose, at which the teacher shall be permitted to be present and make his defense, discharge him.” It is also provided by section 1829-that “any person aggrieved by any decision or order of the district board of directors, in matter of law or of fact, may appeal therefrom to the county superintendent.” Section 1834 provides that upon the hearing of such appeal [213]*213the superintendent “ shall make such decision as may be just and equitable, which shall be final, unless appealed from.” And section 1835 provides for an appeal from the decision of the county superintendent to the superintendent of public instruction, whose decision, when made, shall be final. We think it manifest that the intention of the legislature in enacting these sections was to provide a speedy and inexpensive mode for the determination of such questions as might arise in cases wherein it is sought to discharge teachers in the pub-. lie schools from their employment. And we think it equally clear that it was the intention, also, that the parties should be concluded, as to the questions involved in the controversy, by the decision which should be finally made in the proceeding. This conclusion results, necessarily, we think, from the language of the section quoted above, and is consistent with the holding of this court in the cases of Smith v. District Twp. of Knox, 42 Iowa, 522, and Kirkpatrick v. Ind. Dist. of Liberty, 53 Id., 585, in each of which it is held that the power and duty imposed on the board of directors by section 1734 partakes of a judicial character, and that the teacher who has been discharged by the board has no remedy in the courts, until it has been determined, on an appeal from the order of the board, that such discharge was wrongful or unlawful. As the county superintendent had no competent record evidence before him of the action of the board of directors, it was competent for him to hear the parol evidence offered by the parties, and determine from it what action had in fact been taken. And the holding of the district court, that his decision of the questions presented by the appeal was conclusive of the rights of the parties as to those questions, and that the parol and documentary evidence offered by the defendant on the trial to impeach the decision was incompetent, was clearly right.

[214]*214'wrongful discharge of measure of damages. [213]*213II. Defendant asked the court to instruct the jury that, upon the decision of the appeal by the county superintendent, [214]*214plaintiff liad the right at once to take charge of the school, and proceed to perform the unexpired ’ x x x portion of his contract, and that the appeal to the superintendent of public instruction did not supersede or suspend the decision of the county superintendent; and that, if the plaintiff failed to return and take charge of the school when the decision of the county superintendent was made, or did not offer to do so, he could not recover anything on the contract after that date.

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Bluebook (online)
21 N.W. 567, 65 Iowa 209, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/park-v-independent-school-dist-no-1-iowa-1884.