Stanhope v. School Directors

42 Ill. App. 570, 1891 Ill. App. LEXIS 313
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 3, 1891
StatusPublished

This text of 42 Ill. App. 570 (Stanhope v. School Directors) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stanhope v. School Directors, 42 Ill. App. 570, 1891 Ill. App. LEXIS 313 (Ill. Ct. App. 1891).

Opinion

Boggs, J.

This was an action of assumpsit brought in the Jersey County Court by the appellant to recover damages which he claimed he had sustained by reason of the refusal of the appellees as school directors to comply with a written contract employing him to teach the public school in their district.

To this declaration the County Court sustained a demurrer which presented but one ground of objection to its sufficiency, and that is, that it does not aver that the plaintiff “ at the time the alleged written contract was made, had a certificate of qualification, obtained under the provisions of the school laws of the State, entitling him to teach during the entire term of his contract.” Appellant elected to stand by his declaration, the canse was dismissed, and he, by appeal, brings the record to this court for review.

The averments of the declaration, so far as they relate to the qualification of the appellant as a teacher, are as follows :

“For that, whereas, the plaintiff is now and still is possessed of a legal certificate for teaching said schools under the laws of this State, that the superintendent of schools of said Jersey County duly issued to plaintiff on September 7, 1889, a teacher’s certificate of the second grade, and that the superintendent on, to wit, September 6, 1890, did renew the said certificate for one year by his indorsement thereon in writing, after plaintiff had satisfactorily passed the examination required by the school laws of this State regarding the nature and effects of stimulants and narcotics.

“ Plaintiff further avers that he was a duly qualified teacher under the laws of this State, and was duly possessed of a certificate entitling him to teach during the entire term of his employment, commencing from the beginning of the school term in said contract, to wit, September 15, 1890, and ending eight (8) months thereafter.”

It is provided by Sec. 5, Art. 7, of the act in force July 1, 1889:

“ Ho teacher shall be entitled to any portion of the common school or township fund, or other public fund, or be employed to teach any school under the control of any board of directors of any school district in this State, who shall not, at the time of his employment, have a certificate of qualification, obtained under the provisions of this act, entitling him to teach during the entire term of his contract.”

By this section of the statute, the possession by the teacher at the time of his employment of a legal certificate of qualification entitling him to teach during the entire term of his contract, is made a condition precedent to his right to receive any portion of the public money for his services, and the facts necessary to constitute a compliance with the statute in this respect must he distinctly and affirmatively alleged in a declaration to recover for the services of a teacher, or to recover damages from the school district for a breach of' a contract to teach. It is not sufficient to allege generally that the teacher is “legally qualified ” or “ lawfully qualified.” Casey v. Baldridge, 15 Ill. 75; Smith v. Curry, 16 Ill. 147; Botkins v. Osborne, 39 Ill. 101.

Therefore the averment last appearing in the declaration, “ that he was a duly qualified teacher under the laws of the State,” and other averments in the declaration that he was then “lawfully qualified,” and “legally qualified to teach,” which we have not quoted, can in nowise be considered in the examination of .this question.

The facts shown by the declaration are, that when the contract was made (April 25,1890) appellant had a legal certificate of the second grade, dated September 7, 1889, which was valid for one year, that is, until September 7, 1890, and that, while having such a certificate, he, on the 25th of April, 1889, contracted with the appellees to teach a school for a period of eight months, to begin on the 15th day of September, 1890. The certificate which he had when he made the contract did not “entitle him to teach during the entire term of his contract,” on the contrary it entitled him to teach only until the 7th day of September, 1890, and his contract was that he would begin on the 15th day of September, 1890, to teach a term of eight months. His certificate of qualification expired eight days before the “ term of his contract ” to teach began, and under and by virtue of it he could not teach any portion of the time of his term, much less the “entire term of his contract.”

It is, however, contended that the term “ time of his employment,” used in the section of the statute under consideration, means the “ time -when, under the contract, he is to be first employed in actually teaching the pupils, and that if a teacher then has a certificate of qualification entitling him to teach the “ entire term,” the statute has been complied with. The appellant, according to the allegations of the declaration, on the 6th day of September, 1890, obtained from the school superintendent a renewal of his certificate good for one year, so that on the 15th day of September, 1890, which was the day when, under the alleged contract, he was first to be actually employed in teaching the school, he held a legal certificate of qualification which entitled him to teach for the whole period of eight months, according to the contract, and if the statute is to have the construction his counsel insist should be given to it, the ruling of the County Court sustaining the demurrer to the declaration is erroneous.

In support of this view it is said that the word “ employment ” means and is defined by Webster to mean, “the state of being employed; that which engages or occupies; that which consumes time or attention,” etc.

It is also said that our Supreme Court has recognized and adopted this definition and meaning of the word in more than one instance, and we are cited Casey v. Baldridge, 15 Ill. 75, where it is said, “the certificate must be presented to the directors before the commencement of the school,” and to Smith v. Curry, 16 Ill. 147, where a declaration by a teacher against school directors was held to be defective because it did not contain an averment “ that a certificate of qualification was presented to the directors before the commencement of the school,” and to Botkins v. Osborne, 39 Ill. 101, in which counsel for appellant argue the holding is, in effect, the same.

In order to obtain a correct understanding of the holding in each of these cases it will be necessary to consider them with reference to the statutes then in force.

The statute of 1849 governed the determination of the question when the cases of Casey v. Baldridge and Smith v. Curry were decided; it is as follows:

“ Ho teacher shall be entitled to any portion of the common school or township fund who shall not, before his employment, exhibit to the- school directors a certificate of qualification, etc., and valid for one year.”

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Related

Smith v. Curry
16 Ill. 147 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1854)
Botkin v. Osborne
39 Ill. 101 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1866)
Wells v. People ex rel. Daniels
71 Ill. 532 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1874)
Stevenson v. School Directors of District No. 1
87 Ill. 255 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1877)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
42 Ill. App. 570, 1891 Ill. App. LEXIS 313, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stanhope-v-school-directors-illappct-1891.