Richards v. Board of Education

1 Ct. Cl. 142
CourtWest Virginia Court of Claims
DecidedApril 21, 1942
DocketNo. 48
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Ct. Cl. 142 (Richards v. Board of Education) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Richards v. Board of Education, 1 Ct. Cl. 142 (W. Va. Super. Ct. 1942).

Opinions

WALTER M. ELSWICK,. Judge.

On the second day of October 1940, while attending, as a pupil, a one-room public school known as the Klipstine school near Big Springs, in Calhoun county, West Virginia, Ernestine Richards, a child then eight years of age, was seriously burned when her clothing caught on fire from an exposed open-blaze gas stove. The stove used was not equipped with any brick, gratings, screens or other protection from the open flame, it appearing from the evidence that the brick or grating had been broken and removed. The defective condition of the stove had [143]*143been reported by the teacher in charge to both a repairman employed by the board of education of Calhoun county and to the assistant county superintendent of said county some several weeks prior to the time said child was burned, with request that the stove either be repaired or replaced with a new one. (Record pp. 44 and 45). It had not been repaired on the day toe child was burned. There was no supervision of the schoolroom at the time the child was burned, though the injury occurred during school hours.

Ernestine Richards, prior to receiving the burns was a normal child in general good health. (Record pp. 20 and 68). The burns extended from a point midway on her thighs covering the back of her body up to her shoulders and over parts of her arms and legs with an extended strip on the front of her body up to her breast, those from the point midway on her thighs to her shoulders consisting of second and third degree burns. (Record pp. 21 and 36). The burned portions of her back were exhibited to the court. She was treated for burns at St. Joseph’s hospital at Parkersburg, West Virginia, for three months during which time three nurses were required each day to nurse and care for her by succeeding shifts. Later she was removed to a private apartment rented by her father and nursed by two aunts and her mother daily for ten weeks while still receiving treatment for burns by physicians of said St. Joseph’s hospital. She is still required to wear a cotton padding over her burns to which applications of oil are made daily to prevent cracking and crusting. She sustained bums over the kidneys and is now suffering from an abscessed kidney. Her temperature rises abnormally and she is affected by excessive urination and becomes delirious at times. She complains of pains in her side and head and is affected mentally. The burns are of a permanent nature, of which she will not by all probability recover.

J. C. Richards, the father of Ernestine Richards, filed a claim for compensation for the injuries with the court of claims on October 6, 1941, and notice was mailed by the clerk of the court to the state board of education that such claim had been [144]*144filed; a copy of such notice was mailed to the board of education of Calhoun county, and a copy mailed to the attorney general of the state-of West Virginia. The case was docketed for hearing on January 21, 1942, and evidence adduced by the claimant and state on said date.

The claimant, by counsel, filed a statement or bill of particulars of the claim for hospital bills, medical attention, nursing, compensation for injuries, etc., showing the nature of the claim, which is in the sum of $5000.00. Prom the evidence it appeared that the father had incurred indebtedness for more than $1002.00, exclusive of doctor and hospital bills, and of special care and attention required .by the father and mother and their family. It also appears that the hospital bill amounted to $284.00 and that a bill for her treatment by Dr. Harris amounts to $150.00. The father is an oil and gas worker of modest financial circumstances and has exhausted all of his funds and credit in the care and treatment of said child since said injury.

The attorney general, on behalf of the state, moved to dismiss the claim pn the ground that the state court of claims was without jurisdiction to hear evidence and make recommendations as to the merits of an award in the case on the ground that a state agency was not involved within the meaning of the jurisdiction of the court of claims. We were therefore confronted with the question of interpretation of article 2, chapter 14 of the code as amended by the 1941 acts of the Legislature, pertaining to the purpose and jurisdiction of the court of claims.

Section 1 reads as follows:

“The purpose of this article is to provide a simple and expeditious method for the consideration of claims against the state that because of the provisions of section thirty-five, article six of the constitution of the state and of statutory restrictions, inhibitions or limitations cannot be determined in a court of law or equity; and to provide for proceedings in which the state has a special interest.”

[145]*145The first subsection of section 13, defining the jurisdiction of the court, states that jurisdiction shall extend to the following matters:

“1. Claims and demands, liquidated and unliqui-dated, ex contractu and ex delicto, against the state or any of its agencies which the state as a sovereign commonwealth should in equity and good conscience discharge and pay.”

It is conceded that this is such a claim that no action can be maintained in a court of law or equity against the board of education of Calhoun county for the reason that it is a part of the educational system of the state established in compliance with article 12, Section 1, of our constitution for the purpose of administering the state system of public education.

“The exemption of the government from liability is based on the theory of sovereignty. The acts of the government were those of the king. In our state, instead of the king being the sovereign, the powers of government reside in all the citizens of the state. The idea was also that certain things worked for the good of the many, and the welfare of the few .¡must be sacrificed in the public interest.” Krutili v. Board of Education of Butler Dist., 99 W. Va. 466, 129 S. E. 486.

In a worthy case the king, however, must have been impressed by the fallacy shown by the petition on which he granted equitable relief in the first instance thereby creating a basis for what we now have, known as equity jurisdiction in the judicial sense.

The free school system which the Legislature is directed to provide by article 12 of the constitution, is a matter of general state concern, and not a municipal or district affair, as much or more so than its highway system. The word “system” itself imports a unity of purpose as well as an entirety of operation, and the direction to the Legislature to “provide, by general law, a thorough and efficient system of free schools” [146]*146means one system. City of Ardmore v. State, 109 Pac. 563, 26 Okla. 366; Kennedy v. Miller, 97 Cal. 429, 32 Pac. 558.

And the idea of unity of purpose and entirety of operation is emphasized and made more apparent by the term “the free school system of the state” found used in section 9 of article 12 of the constitution.

Webster’s new international dictionary, second edition, defines the word “system” as follows:

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1 Ct. Cl. 142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richards-v-board-of-education-wvctcl-1942.