Times Publishing Company v. White

50 A. 383, 23 R.I. 334, 1901 R.I. LEXIS 140
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedNovember 15, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 50 A. 383 (Times Publishing Company v. White) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Times Publishing Company v. White, 50 A. 383, 23 R.I. 334, 1901 R.I. LEXIS 140 (R.I. 1901).

Opinion

Tillinghast, J.

We think the petition states a- case for mandamus, and that the demurrer must therefore be overruled. It appears from the petition that the petitioner has a just claim against the city, which was properly contracted by the school committee thereof ; that said claim has been duly passed upon and ordered paid by said school committee; that there are funds in the hands of the defendant subject to the order of said school. committee, which are properly applicable to and aré sufficient for the payment of said claim, and that he has no defence whatever which could be set up in any court against the payment thereof. In short, the case shows the mei’e refusal on the part of the defendant to *335 discharge a plain ministerial duty; and it is clear that in such a case mandamus will lie. Portland Stone Ware Co. v. Taylor, 17 R. I. 35.

The demurrer is therefore overruled.

We now come to the consideration of the answer or return • set up by the defendant, which is in effect as follows : That on the 8th day of June-, 1901, the city council of Pawtucket passed a joint resolution by which it appropriated the following sums, “or so much thereof as is necessary, for the purpose of making repairs to the following schools -. High Street School, $194; South Woodlawn, $26; Pidge Avenue, $196; Prospect Street, $78; Lincoln Avenue, $302; Brook Street, $209; Garden Street, $1,325; Capital Street, $130; Quincy Avenue, $157 ; Cherry Street Kindergarten, $171 ;• Church Street, $772; Grove Street, $405; total, $3,965.” That the city treasurer was authorized to borrow on the notes of the city such sums as the exigencies of the city treasury might from time to time require. That upon the presentation by the petitioner of said account against the city, the defendant returned the bills to the school committee, with the following communication:

‘ ‘ Office of City Treasurer,
“Pawtucket, R. I., Aug. 14, 1901,
T. P. Corcoran, Esq., Clerk School Committee,
“Paivtucket, B. I.:
“Dear Sir:
“I return enclosed bills handed me this morning, and request that you comply with the instructions in my letter to you of the 23d ult., i. e., ‘the expenditures on each school building must -be separated, and in conformity to the amount specified in a Joint Resolution of-the City Council passed May, A. D. 1901.’
“ Further, I will refer you to the opinion of the City Solicitor, and also to a vote passed by the Joint Standing Committee on Finance both attached to my communication to you of the 23d ult. ' I am,
“Very respectfully yours,
“ J. Ellis White,
City Treasurer.”

*336 As the defendant does not inform us of the nature of the joint resolution referred to in said communication, of the vote of the joint standing committee on finance, or of the opinion of the city solicitor, we have no means of knowing what they were, and hence cannot consider them.

(1) As the powers and duties of the school committee in the premises, as well as those of the city council and city treasurer, are fixed by statute, however, we do not think said resolution, vote, etc., are material to the determination of the questions before us.

The defendant further says that he has never refused to pay said bills, but has always been ready and willing to pay the same whenever the proper authentication is made by said school committee as to what appropriation they shall be charged. That he has no money in his hands for the use of public schools, save the annual appropriation for said schools, save as appears by said resolution appropriating certain specified sums for the repair of certain school buildings, and that in accordance with said resolution he can pay money from the city treasury for no other purpose. And, finally, the defendant says that he has no funds in his hands and that no appropriation has been made by the city council of Pawtucket applicable to the claim which is set out in the petition.

The return or answer taken as a whole, although inconsistent, simply comes to this: That so long as no special appropriation has been made by the city council for the payment of these particular bills, and so long as the school committee has not seen jit to direct them to be paid out of some one of said appropriations, or to apportion said bills pro rata amongst the various schools for which appropriations were made, as aforesaid, he is not authorized to pay the same.

This position of the defendant, to say nothing of its being practically impossible of performance by the school committee, in so far as a pro rata apportionment is concerned, is untenable in law. Under the city charter of Pawtucket and the general laws of the State, the school committee have full control' and management of the public schools and school property in said city and are not subject to the supervisory *337 control of the city council or city treasurer in this regard, except that they are dependent upon the former for the city appropriation for carrying on said department. In other words, the school committee constitutes a distinct department of the city government and has certain well-defined statutory powers and duties; and while acting within the limit of these powers it is not subject to the control of any other branch of the local government.

To be more specific: the city council of Pawtucket has no more control over the management of the public schools or school property of the city, except in the matter ’ of making appropriations as aforesaid, than the school committee has over the control and management of those departments of the city which, by statute, are made subject to the control of the city council. Each body is independent within its own sphere of action, and is responsible only to the people whom it is elected to serve.

The charter of the city of Pawtucket, passed in. 1885 (see Pub. Laws R. I. cap. 474, § 7, clause 2), provides “that the expenditure of the moneys appropriated for public schools shall be by and under the direction of the school committee of said city in the same manner that the school committee of the town of Pawtucket has heretofore had direction of like expenditures in said town. ” Clause 3 provides that ‘‘ The city council shall have the care and management of all the property of the city, excepting that the care and management of the school property of the city shall be in the school committee.” Section 20 of said charter provides, amongst other things, that “Said schqol committee shall make their annual report to the city council at such time as may be required by ordinance.; and they shall- annually elect a superintendent of public schools, who shall not be a member of the.

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Bluebook (online)
50 A. 383, 23 R.I. 334, 1901 R.I. LEXIS 140, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/times-publishing-company-v-white-ri-1901.