State Ex Rel. Board of Education v. D'Aulisa

14 Conn. Super. Ct. 280, 14 Conn. Supp. 280, 1946 Conn. Super. LEXIS 84
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedJuly 13, 1946
DocketFile No.72678
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 14 Conn. Super. Ct. 280 (State Ex Rel. Board of Education v. D'Aulisa) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Board of Education v. D'Aulisa, 14 Conn. Super. Ct. 280, 14 Conn. Supp. 280, 1946 Conn. Super. LEXIS 84 (Colo. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinion

ALCORN, J.

The board of education of the city of Bridgeport, hereinafter referred to as the relator, brings this action on the relation of the state’s attorney for Fairfield County to compel the comptroller of the city, hereinafter referred to as the respondent, to certify for payment certain teachers’ and superintendents’ payroll items. Three teachers, two superintendents, and an assistant superintendent are named in the petition as joint plaintiffs. The court issued an alternative writ to which the respondent has filed a return denying all allegations and then affirmatively alleging in substance that the disputed items are continuing semimonthly payments which if aggregated for the fiscal year would exceed the total appropriation levied for the purpose and for that reason the respondent cannot certify the sufficiency of the appropriation.

The factual circumstances established at the trial disclose that the respondent at the time the action was brought was officially the assistant comptroller of the city but had been

designated as acting comptroller by the comptroller who was on leave of absence in anticipation of his retirement, which occurred on May 1, 1946. Since the latter date the respondent has been the comptroller.

In December, 1945, the relator submitted to the respondent its budget estimate for all school purposes for the fiscal year beginning April 1, 1946, and ending March 31, 1947, in the total sum of $2,748,994. Thereupon the respondent recommended to the city’s board of apportionment and taxation a *282 total appropriation for the relator of $2,564,462. Acting upon this request and recommendation, the board of apportionment and taxation made an appropriation to the relator for the fiscal year in the total sum of $2,588,414. This procedure was in accordance with § 95 of the charter of the city of Bridgeport, Revision 1939. See also § 275c, Cumulative Supplement to the General Statutes, 1935.

Included in the budget requested and recommended and in the appropriation as made was an item for “Miscellaneous Library Operation” which is not a board of education item and for which an appropriation of $210,270 was made. To arrive at the total appropriation actually to be expended by the relator, therefore, this item should be deducted, leaving a total appropriation of $2,378,144.

Included in the total appropriation is an item entitled “Reg. Teachers and Supervisors’ Salaries $1,837,995.” Other salary items in the appropriation were as follows: Under the heading “Business Office,” $32,610; “Principals’ Clerks’ Salaries,” $20,500; “Operation,” $183,000; “Evening Schools,” $33,100. The remaining items of the total appropriation are for purposes other than salaries of any sort.

In a distinct item of the city budget, entirely apart from the appropriation of the relator, the board of apportionment and taxation appropriated a sum for the benefit of city employees entitled “Reserve for Employees’ Bonus Payts. as Defined by Civil Service Comm.,” designed as a cost-of-living bonus. In computing the amount of this appropriation there was, however, taken into consideration the sum of $187,922 for the benefit of school teachers in ‘the event that the relator should take the necessary steps to have them participate in the benefits of the fund. The relator, however, has taken no action in order to have the teachers share in this fund.

The teachers and superintendent of evening schools are paid on an annual salary basis divided into substantially equal semimonthly payments over a period of ten months. The superintendent of schools and the assistant superintendent of schools are paid on an annual salary basis divided into substantially equal semimonthly payments over a twelve-month period. The customary procedure preliminary to each payment is for the comptroller’s office to prepare a payroll sheet setting forth the impending payments. The comptroller’s office sends this sheet *283 to the board of education which examines it and returns it to the comptroller with an indorsement of its approval and accompanied by a certification to the comptroller that the board has audited and approved the bills. The payroll sheet does not identify the individual payees but, instead, groups the payments according to schools or other classification. Both the payroll sheet and the certification by the board of education designate by symbol the particular item of appropriation against which a given payroll is charged.

On the first payment period under the current appropriation, in mid-April, 1946, the relator, following the established procedure, audited and approved payrolls for teachers and other employees, and other bills for the support and maintenance of the schools, for the first payment period. These were transmitted to the respondent for certification under the city charter, the pertinent part of which provides as follows:

“Said board shall audit and approve, semi-monthly, all bills for the ordinary current expenses of its department, and report the same to the comptroller who • shall thereupon certify whether or not the appropriation is sufficient for the payment thereof, and if sufficient he shall so certify to the city treasurer, and thereupon the same shall become due and payable.” Section 155, charter of the city of Bridgeport, Revision 1939.

The respondent thereupon notified the relator, by letter, in substance that he could not certify the teachers’ payroll, except for substitute and evening school teachers, and could not certify the items for salaries of the superintendent and the assistant superintendent of schools and the superintendent of evening schools, because when the payments approved for them were totalled and calculated for the entire fiscal year the payment would exceed the appropriation for the purpose. In arriving at this decision the respondent did not consider any item of the relator’s appropriation except the ones against which the questioned payments were allocated on the payroll sheet and the relator’s accompanying certification. The teachers’ salaries are charged against the appropriation of $1,837,995 designated as “Reg. Teachers and Supervisors’ Salaries.” The salary of the superintendent of evening schools is charged against the appropriation for salaries and wages under “Evening Schools” and the superintendent and assistant superintendent of schools is charged against the appropriation for salaries and wages *284 under the “Business Office.” To arrive at his decision the respondent calculated that the gross salary requirement at the rate indicated by the approved payments would, by the end of the fiscal year, amount to $2,088,964.

Based upon his twelve years experience as an assistant comp-trailer and his knowledge of the relator’s needs over the years, he deducted from that figure $20,000 to allow for adjustments due to turnover of personnel, leaving a net requirement of $2,068,964. In his entire- experience the only instance of the relator transferring one item of appropriation to another under its statutory authority (see § 275c, Cumulative Supplement, 1935) was a transfer during the fiscal year 1945-46 of $2500 unused in the salary appropriation and transferred to the purchase of land. He did not take into account the general appropriation for the benefit of city «employees because the board of education had taken no steps to make it available to teachers.

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Related

State Ex Rel. Board of Education of Waterbury v. Quinn
258 A.2d 476 (Connecticut Superior Court, 1969)
Brecker v. Nielsen
143 A.2d 463 (Connecticut Superior Court, 1958)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
14 Conn. Super. Ct. 280, 14 Conn. Supp. 280, 1946 Conn. Super. LEXIS 84, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-board-of-education-v-daulisa-connsuperct-1946.