State Ex Rel. Herman v. Walker

16 Conn. Super. Ct. 335, 16 Conn. Supp. 335, 1949 Conn. Super. LEXIS 100
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedOctober 6, 1949
DocketFile 12673
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 16 Conn. Super. Ct. 335 (State Ex Rel. Herman v. Walker) 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. Herman v. Walker, 16 Conn. Super. Ct. 335, 16 Conn. Supp. 335, 1949 Conn. Super. LEXIS 100 (Colo. Ct. App. 1949).

Opinion

MOLLOY, J.

The alternative writ of mandamus recites that on June 7, 1949, the defendants, acting as members of the school committee of the town of Winchester, voted to and has discon' tinued an elementary school which had been maintained in that portion of the town known as Winchester Center and there' upon provided educational facilities for the children of Win-Chester Center in the schools in the city of Winsted within said town. The writ further alleges that the town of Winchester did not legally authorise the discontinuance of the school in Winchester Center by vote of a town meeting and that the defendant committeemen have refused and failed to revoke the order discontinuing said school.

*336 The matter is now before this court upon the respondents’ motion to quash the alternative writ. This is equivalent to a demurrer and thus all the allegations of fact in the writ are ad' mitted. State ex rel. Foote v. Bartholomew, 103 Conn. 607. The chief claim of the respondents in support of their motion is that as members of said board of education they are given sole authority to designate the schools which shall be attended by the various children within the town, and therefore the relator has no clear legal right to have the school in question opened, nor are the respondents under'a duty to continue said school. They rely mainly upon the provisions of §§ 1501 and 1561 of the General Statutes.

It is provided under § 1501: “Boards of education shall maim tain in their several towns good public elementary and secondary schools and such other educational activities as in their judg' ment will best serve the interests of the town; . . . shall have charge of the schools of their respective towns; shall have the care and management of buildings . . . shall designate the schools which shall be attended by the various children within their several towns

Section 1561 concerns “Discontinuance of small schools. Transportation,” and provides: “When the number of pupils in any district for any term of school is so small that, in the judgment of the board of education, the maintenance of a separate school in such district for such term is inexpedient, said board of education may unite the school of such district with the school of an adjoining district or districts . . . .” Provision is then made for transportation of such pupils.

Chapter 146, Public Acts, 1909, is entitled “An Act concerning Town Management of Public Schools,” and in § 4 thereof it is provided that boards of education “shall maintain in their several towns good common schools, of the different grades, at such places and times as in their judgment shall best subserve the interests of education, and as shall give all the scholars of the town as nearly equal advantages as may be practicable; . . . they shall designate the schools which shall be attended by the various children within their several towns.”

Section 982, Rev. 1918, contained the same language, as did § 974, Rev. 1930, and § 296c of the 1935 Cumulative Supplement. However § 240g of the 1943 Supplement omitted the words “at such places and times,” so that the provision reads: “Boards of education shall maintain in their several *337 towns good public elementary and secondary schools and such other educational activities as in their judgment will best serve the interests of the town. . . .” This is the language of the presently existing statute, § 1501, Rev. 1949.

It is the omission of the words “at such places and times” in § 240g, presently § 1501, which prompts the claim of the relator that such omission took away the power of boards of education to establish or discontinue schools in their several towns. In other words, the relator emphasizes the thought that under the statutory provisions prior to § 240g the school board had the power to establish a school “at such places and times” as in their judgment would best serve the interests of education, whereas now with the omission of the words “at such places and times” they do not have such power; that their power is limited to maintaining the schools once they are established by vote of town meeting.

As to this contention the respondents rely principally upon State ex rel. Huntington v. Huntington School Committee, 82 Conn. 563, 565, wherein it is stated, “The respective rights of towns and town school commitees, however, with reference to discontinuing or reopening a public school in towns containing but a single school district, were substantially the same before the Act of 1909 took effect as since. The town must meet the cost of maintaining proper schools; the town school committee must see that this is done; and for that purpose is clothed with large discretionary powers. In exercising these it is the agent not of the town, but of the law. Newton v. Hamden, 79 Conn. 237, 240. Connecticut has for centuries recognized it as her right and duty to provide for the proper education of the young. Town school committees exist as part of her agencies for regulating the due performance of this obligation. If elected by the towns, it is simply because the State has thought this mode of choice expedient. She might have selected them herself. Her concession of a right of election to the town does not recognize or imply that it has a right of control over the committee, when elected ....

“It was the former policy of the State to make the management of schools in large measure a neighborhood affair, to be worked out by the creation of numerous small territorial divisions, which were sometimes formed from parts of several contiguous towns. Under this scheme of administration, each local school district had considerable authority over its school com *338 mittee .... For many years towns have been permitted to consolidate all the districts within their limits, and such a consolidation has now been made compulsory. The statutes under which this change of plan has effected must be interpreted in view of their general purpose, which, in accordance with the economic trend of the times, is to unify and centralize the functions of local school administration.- So construed, the defendants were not subject to the control of the town, in regard to the maintenance of the school in question.”

It appeared in that case that the school committee of the town of Huntington closed a certain school in what was known as the Lower White Hill District. Subsequently, the town voted that its best interests required that this school should be reopened, and the town school committee be directed to reopen it; and a special committee was appointed to see that it was reopened and to take all proper legal proceedings for that purpose. The town school committee, nevertheless, refused to reopen the school. The position of the school committee was upheld as stated above.

“It has been held that in the maintenance and management of public schools the school committee or board of education is the agent, not of the town but of the law and so, in matters pertaining thereto — including provision for transportation of pupils — is not subject to the control of the town.” Groton & Stonington Traction Co. v. Groton, 115 Conn. 151, 155, referring to the State ex rel. Huntington v.

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Sestero v. Town of Glastonbury
110 A.2d 629 (Connecticut Superior Court, 1954)

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Bluebook (online)
16 Conn. Super. Ct. 335, 16 Conn. Supp. 335, 1949 Conn. Super. LEXIS 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-herman-v-walker-connsuperct-1949.