State Ex Rel. State Board of Education v. District Court of Bryan County

1955 OK 346, 290 P.2d 413, 1955 Okla. LEXIS 588
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 22, 1955
Docket37097
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 1955 OK 346 (State Ex Rel. State Board of Education v. District Court of Bryan County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. State Board of Education v. District Court of Bryan County, 1955 OK 346, 290 P.2d 413, 1955 Okla. LEXIS 588 (Okla. 1955).

Opinion

BLACKBIRD, Justice.

This original action involves a determination of the proper venue of an action now pending as Cause No. 20114 of the District Court in and for Bryan County, Oklahoma. Plaintiff, hereinafter referred *415 to as applicant, seeks a writ of prohibition from this Court to prevent said court and its judge (named as defendants, but hereinafter referred to as respondents) from trying said cause on its merits for the reason that the proper venue of such action is not in Bryan County, but in Oklahoma County where the State Capital and the office of the defendants, as members of the State Board of Education, is located.

The purpose of the Bryan County action, as revealed in the petition filed therein, is to declare null and void, as unconstitutional, a portion of the recent amendment to the Oklahoma School Code, enacted as Sec. 37 of House Bill No. 964 of the last, or Twenty-Fifth, session of our State’s Legislature, Tit. 70, Chap. A., S.L. 1955, pages 433, 434, 70 O.S.Supp. § 16-20a, and to enjoin defendants, as members of the State Board of Education from acting on, or pursuant to, the provisions of said section.

The plaintiffs in said action are certain school book dealers and sales companies of the City of Durant, in Bryan County, and others of Oklahoma cities outside Bryan County, together with said county’s school superintendent and one of its school districts.

For the purpose of determining the only question at issue in this action, it is necessary only to notice the general character of the Bryan County action. Sec. 37, supra, which the plaintiffs are therein seeking to have the Bryan County District Court nullify, makes various changes in the Oklahoma School Code with reference to the procurement of library books for all school districts of the State. Among other things, it provides that not later than November 30th, of each year, the State Board of Education shall “select an official list” of such books, and that publishers wishing the board to consider books for placing on said list, shall furnish said board “a sample copy of each book, stating the price thereof, with guaranty against increase thereof for one (1) year, which shall include cost of delivery to a school district.” Said section further provides: “All publishers submitting books for consideration shall agree to keep stocks of their books at a joint depository in Oklahoma in sufficient quantities to supply all immediate demands, where books of different publishers may be packaged and shipped in single orders.” Instead of allowing each school district to purchase, using State Aid funds, whatever library books it needs, the new amendment provides that such books shall, upon requisition of the school district, be purchased for it by the State Board of Education exclusively from the official list, said books to be charged to the district by the Board by deducting their price, together with the cost of shipping, from said district’s share of a “school library account” that the State Board creates by allocating thereto a portion of each district’s State Aid funds on a per capita basis, or formula, prescribed in the Act. The Act further provides that any school district’s portion of said school library account not used by June 30th, following the allocation, shall ■be re-allocated to other districts.

The gist of the charges against the Amendment contained in the petition filed in the Bryan County action by plaintiffs, both as book dealers, taxpayers and in their positions relative to the school system of said county, is that it is void and unconstitutional for the following reasons:

(1) Its title is insufficient under Art. V, sec. 56(7) of the Oklahoma Constitution ;
(2) It attempts to delegate legislative powers to the State Board and does not provide for judicial review;
(3) It provides no “trade books committee” to protect the public in the selection of “trade books” to go on the official list; it does not prescribe how the joint depository shall be selected; it provides no way for a publisher to ascertain how much freight is to be included in the price of a book he submits for placing on the official list in the event that books of that title are shipped from the depository to the various school districts with other publishers’ books on the list; it allows school districts to be charged with a double shipping charge when books are re-shipped from the joint *416 depository to them; it provides no maximum for the price of such books;
(4) Under the Act, the joint depository will be able to charge publishers an unlimited commission, passed on to the school districts, on books furnished from it to school districts;
(5) Besides destroying the freedom each school district had before passage of the Amendment to select, and use State Aid funds to buy “trade books” best suited to their own individual needs on the “open, competitive market * * * at the lowest possible price, at a consequent saving of taxes”, the provisions of the Act referred to enable one person, or group, designated as “the depository” to illegally control and monopolize the sale of all trade books sold to public schools in Oklahoma; they place an unnecessary and illegal burden on the sale of merchandise in interstate commerce; they deprive school districts of property without due process of law; and they will result in the perpetration of fraud upon the public and the squandering of public funds detrimental to the “general welfare” and “public policy” of the state.

Principal among the reasons applicant cites for its proposition that the above described suit should have been brought in Oklahoma County, rather than Bryan County, is Tit. 12, O.S.1951 § 133, which provides in part:

“Actions for the following causes must be brought in the county where the cause, or some part thereof arose:
* * * * * *
“Second. An action against a public officer for an act done by him in virtue, or under color, of his office, or for neglect of his official duties.”

Respondents do not seriously dispute the applicant board’s contention that it, or, each of its members, is a “public officer” within the contemplation of the above statute; and we do not think they could successfully do so, in view of that term’s comprehensive meaning. For definitions of “public officer” see City of Tulsa v. District Ct. of Tulsa Co., 174 Old. 470, 51 P.2d 511 and Pollack v. Montoya, 55 N.M. 390, 234 P.2d 336. However, they cite the fact that the members of the appellant board reside in different counties of the state and the further fact that the statutes do not specify where their meetings shall be held, in urging upon this Court what they term a broad or “liberal” interpretation of the above quoted statute and Tit. 12, O.S.1951 § 139, to the end that actions against members of the applicant board, besides being brought in Oklahoma County, situs of the State Capitol and seat of the State government, may also be brought in any county in which any of the individual members of the board reside or may be summoned, or in any county of the State, whose citizens, school districts or school officials are affected by the action of the board.

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1955 OK 346, 290 P.2d 413, 1955 Okla. LEXIS 588, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-state-board-of-education-v-district-court-of-bryan-county-okla-1955.