Polzin v. Rand, McNally & Co.

95 N.E. 623, 250 Ill. 561
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 20, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 95 N.E. 623 (Polzin v. Rand, McNally & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Polzin v. Rand, McNally & Co., 95 N.E. 623, 250 Ill. 561 (Ill. 1911).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Farmer

delivered the opinion of the court:

The bill in this case was filed by appellant, Paul E. Polzin, as a tax-payer in the city of Chicago, against the board of education of said city and Rand, McNally & Co., also of the-city of Chicago, and other defendants not necessary to be named. The bill alleges that in September, 1909, the board of education adopted for use in the public schools of the city of Chicago, Dodge’s Advanced Geography and Dodge’s Elementary Geography, published by Rand, Mc-Nally & Co., and entered into a contract with said Rand, McNally & Co. whereby said publisher agreed to furnish said school text books to said board of education and to the pupils of said schools at maximum prices in said contract specified.- The bill further alleges that said text book has never been licensed as required by an act of the legislature of 1909, entitled “An act in relation to the adoption, use and price of public school text books in the free public schools of this State.” The Governor refused to approve the act but failed to return it to the General Assembly during its session with his veto, and failed to file the bill, with his objections thereto, in the office of the Secretary of State within ten days after the adjournment of the General Assembly. The bill therefore became a law without the Governor’s signature and went into effect'July 1, 1909. The contract between the board of education and Rand, McNally & Co. was for furnishing by the latter Dodge’s Advanced Geography to the board of education, or to persons designated by it, at the price of seventy-two cents or to pupils at the price of ninety cents, and Dodge’s Elementary Geography to the board of education, or to persons designated by it, at the price of thirty-five cents and to pupils at the price of forty-five cents. The bill alleges that under said act of 1909 the said contract between the board of education and Rand, McNally & Co. is unlawful, and prays an injunction against both parties restraining them from carrying out and performing it.

The answer of the board of education admits failure to comply with the provisions of the act of 1909, and alleges that since the enactment of said law no publisher of any text book has complied with its provisions by licensing any geography or other school text book, except an arithmetic; that said law is operative only when the publishers voluntarily place themselves under its provisions, and by the failure of publishers to do this the law became and is inoperative, and said board of education was confronted with the alternative of obeying the strict letter of the law by buying no text books, thereby closing the public schools, in violation of its duty under the constitution to maintain said schools, or arranging for such temporary use of such text books as in the judgment of said board was deemed best, so as to perform its duty, under the constitution, to maintain an efficient public school system within its jurisdiction; that at its meeting September 7, 1909, the board of education adopted resolutions setting out this condition; that among other things the resolution recited “that during the emergency created by the conditions hereinbefore set forth, this board temporarily use such text books- as in its opinion are necessary and best for the operation of the schools, and purchase the same in such quantities as they are needed, at the lowest obtainable prices.” The answer of Rand, Mc-Nally & Co. relies as a defense upon the unconstitutionality of the act of 1909.

The cause was heard in open court upon bill, answers and replications, oral testimony and a stipulation of facts. The chancellor found and decreed that said act is unconstitutional and dismissed the bill at complainant’s costs, and complainant has brought the case to this court by appeal.

Section 1 of the act of 1909 requires the publisher of any text book desiring to offer the same for sale for use in the public schools of this State to file two sample copies of such book in the office of the Superintendent of Public Instruction, together with the list price and the wholesale and retail prices at which said text book is to be offered for sale. The publisher is also required to file with the Superintendent of Public Instruction a written agreement to furnish said text book at the wholesale price so filed, to the directors of any public school district or any board of education or to any merchant or dealer, and at the retail price so filed, to any patron of the public schools. The agreement is required to guarantee that all books offered for sale and sold in this State shall correspond with and be equal in quality with the copies deposited with the Superintendent of Public Instruction. With such text book so deposited the publisher is required to pay into the State treasury $10, to constitute a fund to be used by the Superintendent of Public Instruction to pay expenses of printing and distributing lists of accredited text books to county superintendents of schools, school directors and boards of education, as required by section 5 of the act. Section 1 forbids the Superintendent of Public Instruction from licensing any publisher,'and school directors and boards of education from contracting with any publisher, to furnish any public school text book which shall be sold at retail prices to patrons at a price or prices in excess of the prices fixed for text books enumerated in said section. Then follows a list of maximum prices for text books upon the subjects enumerated. The price of “complete geography” is fixed at seventy-five cents and “elementary geography” at thirty-five cents.

Section 3 requires the publisher depositing with the Superintendent of Public Instruction any text book, to file with said superintendent a bond in the sum of $5000 conditioned for compliance with the agreement filed with said text book, and the Superintendent of Public Instruction shall thereupon enter said text book upon the list of public school text books permitted to be used in the public schools of this State and shall issue a license to the publisher to sell said text book for use in said public schools. For a violation of the agreement the publisher is liable to a penalty in the sum of $2000, to be recovered in an action on the bond in the name of the State.

Section 5 requires the Superintendent of Public Instruction, in February of each year, to furnish county superintendents, boards of school directors and boards of education a list of publishers who have conformed to the requirements of the act, a list and description of accredited school text books and the list prices and wholesale and retail prices of said books. Said section 5 also requires the publisher, before entering into any contract with any board of education or board of directors, to furnish the county superintendent of schools and the secretary of the board of education or board of directors a duplicate printed list of school text books filed by him with the Superintendent of Public Instruction, together with the lowest wholesale and retail prices, and also with samples of the school text books in said list referred to, which lists and samples are required to be preserved as a part of the records of the board of education or board of directors for inspection and examination by school officers, teachers and patrons.

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Bluebook (online)
95 N.E. 623, 250 Ill. 561, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/polzin-v-rand-mcnally-co-ill-1911.