School Commissioners v. State Board of Education

26 Md. 505, 1867 Md. LEXIS 24
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 12, 1867
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 26 Md. 505 (School Commissioners v. State Board of Education) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
School Commissioners v. State Board of Education, 26 Md. 505, 1867 Md. LEXIS 24 (Md. 1867).

Opinion

Weisel, J.,

delivered the opinion of this Court.

We have had no difficulty in coming to a conclusion upon the questions presented by the record in this case.

It is an appeal from an order of the Superior Court of Baltimore city directing a mandamus to issue, on the application of the State Board of Education, against the School Commissioners of Baltimore city, commanding them to use in the public schools and in the high schools of Baltimore city, such text-hooks as have been or may be prescribed by the State Board of Education, as the uniform series of textbooks to he used in the schools of the State.

The petition of the State Board of Education states that they claiming the right, have adopted certain books as text-hooks, for use in the public schools and high schools of Maryland, including the city of Baltimore, and charges that the School Commissioners of Baltimore city have refused to recognize this right of the petitioner, to prescribe a uniform system of text-books to he used in the schools of that city, and have introduced ídIo said schools of the city •certain other text-bpoks not adopted by the State Board to be used in the public schools of the State. This is not denied but admitted by the appellants, and is claimed as a right independently of the authority of the State Board of Educa[513]*513tion, and regardless of the demands, in that behalf, of the State Superintendent of Instruction to use in the public high schools of Baltimore city, such books only as the said hoard consider proper to he used therein.

This conflict of claim and authority is to he determined by tbe true construction of the 3rd section of the 8th Article of the Constitution of the State ; and this is, as was truly remarked by the learned counsel of the appellants-in his concluding argument, the only question for our consideration.

The General Assembly of this State, at its session in 1825, (chap. 162,) passed' an Act to provide for the public instruction of the youth throughout the State in primary schools, hut to take effect and he valid only in those counties which, by a majority of their voters respectively at the next election of delegates to the General Assembly after its passage, should declare in its favour. But with regard to Baltimore city, it provided, in the 21st section, as follows:

“That the establishment and regulation of public or primary schools within the city of Baltimore, shall be vested in the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore; provided, that if the said Mayor and City Council shall not, within the space of five years after the passage of this Act, estab-r lish a system of public education within said city, then this Act to be in full effect within the city of Baltimore.”

The city of Baltimore exercised the power vested in its authorities by this Act, and established a system of common school education which was in full and successful operation, ( as it is now,) when the present Constitution of the State was framed and adopted. It grew up and matured under various laws of the State and ordinances of the city, which it is not necessary for us to notice. By an ordinance in 3858, ( Revised Ordinances of that year, No. 40,) it was provided, among other things, that the Board of Commission[514]*514ers of the public schools of the city, created by that ordinance, should have charge of said schools, employ teachers, determine their salaries, prescribe the courses of study, and the hooks to he used, &c., &c. ■

In 1864, when the Convention assembled to remodel the Constitution of the State, the subject of public instruction was made a distinct Article of the organic law. That-Article provides for the appointment of a State Superintendent of Public Instruction, and imposes on him the duty of reporting to the General Assembly within thirty days after the commencement of its first session under the Constitution, a uniform system of free ptiblic schools. It created a State Board of Education, consisting of the Governor, Lieutenant-Governor, the Speakór of the House of Delegates, and the State Superintendent of Public Instruction, with such duties as the General Assembly might direct. It then, in the 3rd section, provides for the appointment in each county of the State, by the State Board of Education, of such number of School Commissioners as the State Superintendent should deem necessary, to perform such duties as the General Assembly or the State Superintendent might direct; and then proceeds in immediate connexion, in these words : The School Commissioners of Baltimore city shall remain as at present constituted, and shall he appointed, as at present, by the Mayor and City Council, subject to such alterations and amendments as may he made from time to time by the General Assembly, or the said Mayor and City Council.”

The next section required the General Assembly at its first session after the adoption of the Constitution, to provide a uniform system of free public schools, by which a school shall he kept open and supported free of expense for tuition in -each school district, for at least six months in the year, said system to he subject to such alterations, conformable to this Article, as the General Assembly may from time to time enact.

[515]*515At the session of the General Assembly in January, M865, (which was the first after the adoption of the Constitution,) an Act, (chap. 180,) was passed, entitled, “An Act to add a new Article to the Code of Public General Laws to be entitled, ‘Public Instruction,’ providing a uniform system of free public schools for the State of Maryland, and to repeal all existing laws inconsistent therewith.”

Under various sections and clauses of this law, the State Board of Education (the appellees in this cause) claim the exercise of the right and power to supervise and control the public instruction in the city of Baltimore, to contract for and prescribe the text-books for the use of the schools therein, to be uniform with those used in all the schools of the State, and to perform other duties imposed upon them.

On the part of the appellants, the School Commissioners •of Baltimore city, it is contended, that by the last clause ©f the 3rd section of the 8,th Article of the Constitution, -( quoted above,) the system of public instruction in the city of Baltimore, as it existed at the time of the adoption of the Constitution, and all the laws of the State and ordinances of the city by which it was established and sustained, became a part of the Constitution itself, and that system was declared a separate and distinct one, not to be affected by the law which the General Assembly was to pass at its •first session after the adoption of the Constitution, but only by such laws or ordinances as the General Assembly or the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore should after-wards pass in relation to that system itself.

This Court has carefully examined all the sections of this Article of the Constitution, and regarding the object in view, and noting the phraseology of all its parts, we cannot embrace the construction put upon the clause of the •3rd section referred to by the counsel of the appellants and -supported by the zeal and ability exhibited in the ar.gu*= [516]*516ment. The Article contemplates a system of public school instruction throughout the State, and it does not except the city of Baltimore from its operation in express terms.

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Related

McCarthy v. Bd. of Education of AA Co.
374 A.2d 1135 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1977)
Raney v. County Commissioners
183 A. 548 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1936)
Leeper v. State
48 L.R.A. 167 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1899)
Hooper v. New
37 A. 424 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1897)
Farnen v. Hooper
1 Balt. C. Rep. 634 (Baltimore City Court, 1897)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 Md. 505, 1867 Md. LEXIS 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/school-commissioners-v-state-board-of-education-md-1867.