Taggart v. School District No. 1

188 P. 908, 96 Or. 422, 1920 Ore. LEXIS 174
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedApril 6, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 188 P. 908 (Taggart v. School District No. 1) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Taggart v. School District No. 1, 188 P. 908, 96 Or. 422, 1920 Ore. LEXIS 174 (Or. 1920).

Opinions

BURNETT, J.

This is a proceeding under the act of February 7, 1913 (page 69), passed “to provide for the employment and discharge of teachers, officers, and other employees in school districts now having or which at any time hereafter shall have a population of 20,000 or more persons,” which legislation is commonly known in school circles as the “tenure of office act.” Another statute on this same subject is embodied in Chapter 152 of the Laws of 1917, entitled

“An act to amend Chapter 37 of the General Laws of Oregon for 1913, and to provide for the employment and discharge of all officers, agents and employees, and for the employment, transfer, investigation, trial and discharge of all teachers, classifying of teachers and instructors, creating a non salaried commission for the investigation and trial of teachers and instructors in school districts now having, or which shall have a population of 20,000 or more persons.”

1. It is contended by the defendants that the acts of 1913 and 1917 are unconstitutional, in that they do not set forth at full length the act revised or section amended. It is claimed that the first of these enactments is amendatory of Section 4052, L. O. L., subdivision 7, relating to the manner of making contracts with teachers, and the second is a revision of the legislation of 1913, in both of which instances the legislature has not complied with Article IY, Section 22, of the state Constitution relating to the manner of enacting amendments, in that the amendment is not set forth at full length. We do not find [427]*427it necessary to consider this branch of the case, and in deference to the co-ordinate branch of the state government, the legislative department, this court, as a part of the judicial department will decline to consider the constitutionality of legislation unless it is necessary to the decision of the case before us.

2. It is an axiomatic principle in the construction of laws that all legislation on the same subject must be taken in pari materia and all given effect where possible. This precept is enunciated in the proviso of Section 17 of the act of 1913, where it is said:

“All acts and parts of acts in conflict herewith are hereby repealed. Provided, however, that all general laws of this state relating to public schools shall be applicable to districts under this act except in so far as the same may be in conflict with the provisions hereof.”

In Section 1 of this same act it is said:

“The board of directors of each school district in this state now having or which at any time hereafter shall have a population of 20,000 or more persons shall have the power and authority to appoint and remove, hire and discharge all teachers, officers, agents and employees as it may deem necessary, and to fix their compensation.”

At the same session at which this law was enacted,1 the legislative assembly passed the act of February 25, 1913 (Chapter 172, Laws 1913), “to provide for the duties and powers of district school boards, including their acts in connection with recurring indebtedness of their districts and funding and refunding the same, and to repeal Sections 4052, 4053 and 4054 of Lord’s Oregon Laws relating thereto.” In subdivision 7 of Section 1 of that act, treating of the duties of the board of directors, it is said:

[428]*428“The hoard at a general or special meeting called for that purpose, shall hire teachers, and shall make contracts with such teachers which shall specify the wages, number of months to be taught, and time employment is to begin, as agreed upon by the parties, and shall file such contracts in the office of the district clerk.”

It is further said in subdivision 17 of the same Section:

“Any duty imposed upon the board as a body must be performed at a- regular or special meeting, and must be made a matter of record. The consent to any particular measure obtained of individual members when not in session is not an act of the board, and is not binding upon the district. If a contract is made without authority of the board, the individual making such contract shall be personally liable.”

Section 2 of the Tenure of Office Act lays down this definition:

“The word ‘teacher’ or ‘teachers’ as used in this act shall include supervisors and principals and instructors who are in the employ of the school district or districts specified in this act.”

This is amplified in the legislation of 1917 on the same subject, thus:

“The word ‘teacher’ or ‘teachers,’ as used in this act, shall include all supervisors and principals and instructors who are in the employ of the school district or districts specified in this act, and all teachers and instructors are classified, for the purposes of this act, into the following branches of service, to wit: First, supervisors; second, high school principals; third, grade school principals; fourth, assistant supervisors; fifth, heads of departments in high school[s]; sixth, high school instructors; seventh, grade school teachers; eighth, special teachers. All teachers and instructors shall be placed or graded [429]*429in one of the foregoing branches of service for all purposes mentioned in this act.”

Teachers are further classified by the Tenure of Office Act according to the length of their service. During the first two years thereof, they are known as probationary teachers, after which they are denominated permanently employed teachers. Section 4 of the original act and Section 4 of the act of 1917 are substantially the same, and read that:

“Teachers who have been employed in the schools in any such district or districts as regularly appointed teachers for not' less than two successive annual terms shall be placed by the board of directors upon the list of permanently employed teachers.”

The third finding of fact to which allusion has been made, reads thus:

“For three and one-half annual terms next preceding the 27th day of January, 1919, said plaintiff was continuously employed by said district as a regularly appointed teacher in the science department of the Lincoln High School, one of the schools of said district; and she taught in said position during every session of said school during said period and performed all of the duties thereof; and, at the' time of the wrongful dismissal hereinafter mentioned, she was, by virtue of law, upon the list of .permanently employed teachers of said district. Plaintiff was appointed to her position by Superintendent Alderman in September, 1915, during the illness of the teacher in that department, and plaintiff so continued teaching in said department after the death of said teacher, and until plaintiff was discharged. She never signed a contract with said district. ’ ’

3. Construing subdivision 7 of Section 1 of the act of February 25, 1913, in an opinion by Mr. Jus[430]*430tice Harris in Foreman v. School District No. 25, 81 Or. 587 (159 Pac. 1155, 1168), it was decided that when the school board hires a teacher a written contract must be made and filed, specifying the wages, number of months to be taught, and time employment is to begin as agreed upon by the parties.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
188 P. 908, 96 Or. 422, 1920 Ore. LEXIS 174, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taggart-v-school-district-no-1-or-1920.