Trustees of Washington Academy in Salem v. Cruikshank

43 Misc. 197, 88 N.Y.S. 330
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1904
StatusPublished

This text of 43 Misc. 197 (Trustees of Washington Academy in Salem v. Cruikshank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Trustees of Washington Academy in Salem v. Cruikshank, 43 Misc. 197, 88 N.Y.S. 330 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1904).

Opinion

Kellogg, John M., J.

The Washington Academy, founded 1780, incorporated 1791, has managed its property, maintained its organization • and conducted its school ever since. In 1851 the board of education of the village of Salem, under the authority of chapter '206, Laws of 1851, leased a part of the plaintiff’s building and conducted the village schools therein until 1886, when the lease and contract in question were executed, by which the board of education leased a part of the Academy building for the use of the schools of the village, and the plaintiff was to maintain its Academy in the remainder of said building. This action is brought nominally to enforce specific performance of said contract, but in fact to prevent the defendant from hiring the principal for said Academy and paying him a larger salary than that provided in the contract between the plaintiff and the defendant and between the plaintiff and said principal, and to prevent the defendant and said principal from introducing into said Academy nonresident pupils free. Both acts complained of are in clear violation of the terms of said lease and contract. The defendant, however, seeks to justify itself by the claim that the contract was ultra vires and invalid. The alleged defense of the defendant is no justification. The contract and lease are the only pretended authority for the defendant to occupy any part of the building or to have any relation whatever to the Academy. Aside from it the plaintiff is entitled to the possession of its property and the absolute control of its business so far as the defendant is concerned.

While it is true that the principal’s salary eventually comes from the defendant unless the receipts of the Academy are sufficient to otherwise pay it, and the fees from the nonresident pupils would belong to the defendant, if paid, and it might at first seem that the plaintiff was not injured by the acts of the defendant, although wrongful, nevertheless the assumption by the board of education of the right, under its lease or otherwise, to hire a principal for the plaintiff and to determine upon what terms nonresident pupils may be received into the Academy is an unlawful interference with the plaintiff’s business and property rights. The defendant [199]*199has hired the principal for the school years 1903 and 1904, and thereupon the plaintiff served upon him the ninety days’ notice required by his contract, terminating his employment as principal of the Academy on the 25th day of ¡¡November, 1903. Considering the public interest involved and the importance of a determination as to who may be the principal of the Academy, and the fact that a tenant introduced into the property with special rights now assumes to exercise such unwarranted rights in the property as tend to give it the absolute control and dominion over it, makes this a proper case for a court of equity to interfere by injunction and to restrain the action of the defendant from interfering with the school which the plaintiff has conducted so long, has insisted upon maintaining in its integrity and has the right to maintain. The acts of the defendant complained of are not only a violation of the contract itself, but irrespective of the contract, are acts which the defendant has no right to do, and against which the plaintiff is entitled to the protection of the court.

But counsel urge upon the court a consideration of the validity of the contract. It is clear that a board of education has no right to. delegate its authority and contract out its judgment and discretion to another person or corporation, and that it has no right to expend the public money raised for school purposes except for such purposes and for the purposes which are authorized by law. If the board of education has by this contract turned over to the Washington Academy any discretion as to the conduct of the common schools of the village of Salem, such act is unauthorized. But this contract does not have that effect. The academy is not a part of the public schools, under the control of the board of education, and could not become so even by act of the Legislature without the consent of the corporation owning that institution.

The following provision of the contract requires consideration : The Principal of the Academy shall have the general superintendence of all the schools taught in said Academy edifice; those of the said Academical department [200]*200under the direction of said Trustees and those of the said Board of Education under its direction, his' salary as Principal being deemed his only compensation therefor.” The parties to the contract have put upon this clause as it seems a practical construction by which the plaintiff in employing the principal causes him to agree that he will act as superintendent of the public schools if the board of education elect him to that position, without other compensation, and the board of education thereafter appointed him such superintendent of public schools. It is fair to assume that the same method has previously been pursued. So far then as the present principal and probably his predecessors have acted as superintendents of the.public school, it has been pursuant to an election by the board of education, he to act under its directions; and the principal, acting at the time of the commencement of this action, as we have before seen, seems not only to have been elected by the board of education superintendent of the public schools but also to have been deemed by it a competent and proper person to be elected principal of the Academy.

The village charter, Laws of 1851, subdivision 14, section 98, provides: “And said board may organize and maintain primary, secondary or high schools, or either of them in, or cause the same to be taught in connection with the Washington academy on such terms and conditions, and for such time, not exceeding ten years, as shall be deemed expedient by and between said board of education and the trustees of said academy.” And by section 108 it has power “ to lease from the said trustees the academy building and grounds adjacent, or contract for the joint or several occupation of the same, or so much thereof, or such privileges therein, or appertaining thereto, on such conditions, and for such time not exceeding two (by amendment changed to ten) years, as they shall deem advisable.” Under the provisions and the general scheme of the statute, had the trustees and the board deemed it wise, they practically could have made the Academy an academical department of the Union School. But they did not do so. They seem simply to have had in mind the causing to be taught, in connection with the Washington [201]*201Academy, a high school, or high school studies, thus covering about the same ground as is now authorized under the Consolidated School Law, where any union free school may adopt an academy as the academic department thereof and contract for instruction therein of pupils of the academic grade residing in the district. Consolidated School Law, as amended, Laws of 1902, chap. 325, § 27a. Section 27 of the law authorizes the trustees of an academy to resign and turn the academy over as an academical department of the school. This last statute (§ 27a) provides for a case where the academy is to remain in the control of its trustees and officers, hut the union free school contracts for the right to have its pupils taught there. Such right to contract necessarily implies the power to pay therefor.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Gunnison v. . Bd. of Education
68 N.E. 106 (New York Court of Appeals, 1903)
Town of Mt. Morris v. . Thomas
53 N.E. 214 (New York Court of Appeals, 1899)
People Ex Rel. Wakeley v. . McIntyre
49 N.E. 70 (New York Court of Appeals, 1898)
Bath Gas Light Co. v. . Claffy
45 N.E. 390 (New York Court of Appeals, 1896)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
43 Misc. 197, 88 N.Y.S. 330, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trustees-of-washington-academy-in-salem-v-cruikshank-nysupct-1904.