State Ex Rel. Cowan v. Morgan

106 So. 820, 141 Miss. 585, 1926 Miss. LEXIS 459
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 1, 1926
DocketNo. 25420.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 106 So. 820 (State Ex Rel. Cowan v. Morgan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme 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. Cowan v. Morgan, 106 So. 820, 141 Miss. 585, 1926 Miss. LEXIS 459 (Mich. 1926).

Opinion

Cook, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

A petition was filed in the circuit court of Jackson county seeking the issuance of a writ of mandamus to compel the county superintendent of education to employ and contract with a teacher for the Steede public school ’ for the scholastic year 1925-26. The petition averred that the Steede public school district had been lawfully established, and -had been maintained for many years, and the orders of the school board defining the boundaries of the district were attached as exhibits thereto. The petition further alleged that the Steede school is located in a sparsely settled portion of the county where it is not practicable for the children within it to attend any other school, the nearest other school being the Vancleave school, which is from eight to ten miles distant; that there are within said Steede school district twenty-four or more educable children who will be deprived of the privilege of attending any public school unless said Steede school is maintained. The petition further averred that the trustees of said Steede school, within the time required by law, duly selected a competent and qualified teacher who held a valid license to teach in the public schools of the county; that they reported this selection of a teacher to the superintendent and recommended her for employment for the scholastic term of 1925-26, but that the superintendent, without lawful excuse, refused to contract with and employ such teacher, or any other teacher for said school. The petition fur *589 tlier alleged that the superintendent has unlawfully refused to contract with and employ a, teacher for said Steede public school; that he has announced a purpose of compelling the patrons thereof to send their children to the Yancleave public school, which cannot lawfully be done without the written consent of the trustees of said Steede school and Yancleave school, and without a petition signed by a majority of the qualified electors of the Steede school district asking that said children be transported to the Yancleave school; that said written consent of the trustees of the Steede school has not been - secured, and no petition has been signed by the qualified electors of said district; that the defendant is trying to evade his duty to contract with a teacher for the Steede school by providing, at the expense of the school fund of the county, the means of transportation of the children of the Steede school to and from the Yancleave public school, but that this proposed transportation of said children .is impracticable and would impose an undue hardship on said children for the reasons: First, that there is no authority of law for the transportation of the children of the said Steede school district to and from said Yancleave school at the expense of the public school fund; and, second, even if said arrangement to so transport said children could lawfully be made, it would be impracticable for the reason that the distance is too great, and said children, or many of them, do not live on or near any public highway or road over which they could be transported, and consequently such an arrangement would be of no benefit to many of said children, and would amount to a denial of any opportunity for them to attend a public school. The prayer of the petition is for the issuance of a -writ of mandamus commanding the defendant to forthwith employ and contract with the teacher selected by the board of trustees of the Steede school, or if for any lawful reason the defendant may fail or refuse to contract with the teacher so elected, that he be commanded to forthwith employ and *590 contract with some other lawfully qualified and licensed teacher to teach the said Steede school. Upon the final hearing-the court below dismissed the petition, and from this order this appeal was prosecuted.

The testimony offered at the trial was not noted by a stenographer, but the substance thereof is preserved in a bill of exceptions approved and signed by the trial judge, and from this bill of exceptions it appears that the Jackson county school board met in regular session on the 6th day of June, 1925, and adopted and entered on the minutes of said board the following- order:

‘ ‘ The following schools were ordered discontinued because there were less than forty-five children therein respectively, as required by law: Americus, Robinson, Lilly Orchard, Bonnie, Dead Lake, Steede, with recommendation that they be transported to larger schools.”.

On the 14th day of September, 1925, the defendant, the county superintendent of education, changed the order appearing on the minutes of the school board so as to. cause it to read as follows:

“The following school districts were ordered abolished on motion duly secondqd and passed, because there were less than forty-five children therein, respectively: Americus, Robinson, ¡Lilly Orchard, Bonnie, Dead Lake, Steede.”

The order passed by the county school board did not attempt to abolish the Steede school district, but simply ordered that the school in that district be discontinued. The unauthorized act of the defendant in changing the order was a mere spoliation, and could not have the effect of changing the order from one attempting to discontinue this school to one abolishing the district. The county school board has not attempted to abolish this school district, and the county superintendent of education has no authority to do so. The question then recurs as to whether or not a county school board may discontinue the school in a regularly established and existing district.

*591 Section 205 of the Constitution of 1890' provides that “a public- school shall be maintained in each school district in the county at least four months during each scholastic year,” while section 91 of chapter 283, Laws of 1924, requires that the schools be kept in contintious session four months, and as much longer as the school fund of the scholastic year will maintain them. Section 39 of said chapter 283, Laws of 1924, also requires that at least one public school shall be maintained in each school district, but authorizes the superintendent to discontinue any school when the average attendance shall be less than five for any month. Under this constitutional mandate and the various statutes herein referred to, it is clear that the county school board cannot dis.eontinue all schools in an established and existing district. Neither does the fact that there were less than forty-five educable children in the Steede school district authorize the school board to discontinue the school in that district. While it is true that section 391 of chapter 283, Laws of 1924, provides that a regular school district shall not be established which contains less than forty-five educable children of the race for which the district is established, “except where too great distance or impassable obstructions would debar children from school privileges, in which cases the board may, in its discretion, establish a regmlar district containing’ not less than fifteen educable children,” the admissions of the pleading’s in the case at bar bring the Steede school district within the exception.

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Bluebook (online)
106 So. 820, 141 Miss. 585, 1926 Miss. LEXIS 459, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-cowan-v-morgan-miss-1926.