State Ex Rel. Parish Board of Health v. Police Jury

108 So. 104, 161 La. 1, 1926 La. LEXIS 2002
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 29, 1926
DocketNo. 27781.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 108 So. 104 (State Ex Rel. Parish Board of Health v. Police Jury) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Parish Board of Health v. Police Jury, 108 So. 104, 161 La. 1, 1926 La. LEXIS 2002 (La. 1926).

Opinion

LAND, J.

This is a mandamus proceeding brought by the parish board of health of Calcasieu parish to compel the police jury of said parish to budget and appropriate the sum of $5,251 for the operation and support of said board of health during the year 1926.

From a judgment rejecting its demands, plaintiff board has appealed.

(1). In its budget of expenditures for the year 1926, the police jury of Calcasieu parish has placed the sum of $1,000 for the maintenance of the board of health of, that parish.

The estimate of expenses for the functioning of plaintiff board for the year 1926 is fixed at the sum of $5,251 in the budget adopted by said board, and submitted to the police jury of Calcasieu parish for approval.

The present litigation has arisen from the refusal of the police jury of said parish to consent to the budget proposed by plaintiff board of health; the police jury contending that it is the final arbiter in such matters in case of disagreement.

Act 79 of Ex. Sess. 1921 is the special law governing the case, and was passed to carry into effect section 11 of article 6 of the present Constitution, which ordains that—

“The Legislature shall create for the state and for each parish and municipality therein, boards of health, and shall define their duties and prescribe their powers. The parish and municipal boards of health shall be subordinate to the state board of health,” etc.

The language of the Constitution is mandatory, and, in order to put into efficient operation state, parish, and municipal boards of health, the Legislature in the year 1921 passed Act 79 of that year.

While it is provided in section 11 of said act that “the police jury of each parish shall * * * elect and appoint a parish board of health to consist of five members,” and while each parish board of health is the creature *5 of the police jury electing or appointing such board, yet it is made plain by the provisions of said act that the police jury of each parish has not been declared to be the final arbiter in disputes arising between its board of health and itself as to the alimony necessary for the maintenance of the board.

It is true that it is provided in paragraph 2 of section 11 of Act 79 of 1921 that—

“The salary of the parish health officer and the said assistants and inspectors shall be fixed by the boardwith the advice and consent of the police jury or other governing body of the parish, and paid by the parish.”

If the provisions of the act on this subject had stopped at this point, it would be clear that the police jury of each parish could control the salary of the health officer by merely refusing to consent to any other eompensa.tion than that determined by itself.

But the act goes much further, and expressly provides in section 14 that—

“The police jury of each parish * * * shall provide ample means for the maintenance and operation of said boards of health and for the promotion and conservation of the public health.’’

And in order to enforce the performance of this duty by the police juries as to the alimony of parish boards of health, it is also provided in section 15 of said act that—

“All necessary expenses, costs and charges of local sanitation, shall be borne by the district, parish or municipality in which the local board shall be established, and in case the authorities thereon shall refuse to budget for, appropriate or pay for the same, the local boards, or the state health officer, shall have the right to the writ of mandamus before a court of competent jurisdiction to compel the proper action by said district, parish or municipal authority.”

It is to be observed that the purpose of the writ of mandamus in such cases is not declared to be to compel the police jury to budget, appropriate, or pay the sum estimated and demanded by the parish board of health for its maintenance, but to compel “the proper action” by the parish, through a resort to the courts of the state. In other words, it is a matter to be acted on and decided by the proper tribunals, and not to be left to the mere discretion, either of the police jury or of the parish board of health, in case of disagreement between those bodies as to necessary expenses for the maintenance of the local board of health.

If the Legislature bad intended that the action of either the police jury or of the parish board of health should be final as to the alimony of the board, in ease of disagreement, it would have said so plainly without compelling the board to resort to the courts for a definitive decision as to such matter.

The writ of mandamus provided by section 15 of Act 79 of 1921 lies, not only for the purpose of compelling the police jury to budget, appropriate, and pay all “costs and charges of local sanitation,” but also “all necessary expenses” of the local health board. I

That the salary of the parish health officer is a necessary expense, and is protected by the writ of mandamus, is self-evident.

The parish health officer is the chief executive of the local board. He is required to be “a registered and licensed physician skilled in sanitary science, who shall serve in said capacity, exercise the powers and perform the duties usual and incident to such office. Said health officer shall have the power, and it shall1 be his duty to issue all orders and warrants as provided herein, and to take all necessary -steps to execute the sanitary laws of the state under the state health officer, and to carry out the rules, regulations and ordinances of the state and parish board of health made thereunder.” Section 11, Act 79 of 1921.

It is also made the duty of the parish health officer to isolate and communicate to the Louisiana state board of health any case of contagious disease, reported to, or coming to his knowledge. Section 16 of Act 79 of 1921.

*7 • The Legislature was well aware of the fact ■that a 'police jury, by failing, or refusing, to ■consent to a reasonable salary for the parish health officer could decapitate the local board, and render its proper functioning impossible, by depriving it of its executive head, if the matter of fixing the alimony of the local health board should be left to the discretion of the police jury. The Legislature has been careful to anticipate and to prevent such action on the part of the police juries of the various parishes in the state. It is not only provided that, in the event the police jury should fail, refuse, or neglect to appoint or elect a parish board of .health, such board shall be appointed by the state health officer, ■subject to the approval of the Louisiana state board, but it is also made the mandatory duty of the police jury to provide ample means for the maintenance and operation of local boards of health, and this duty may be enforced by writ of mandamus in all courts of competent jurisdiction. Sections 11, 14, 15, of Act 79 of 1921.

Act 79 of 1921 is pregnant with the legislative intent that local boards of health shall •,be established and maintained and shall function efficiently, to the end that the public health may be protected and conserved.

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Bluebook (online)
108 So. 104, 161 La. 1, 1926 La. LEXIS 2002, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-parish-board-of-health-v-police-jury-la-1926.