Villyard v. Regents of University System

50 S.E.2d 313, 204 Ga. 517
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedNovember 17, 1948
Docket16414, 16415.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 50 S.E.2d 313 (Villyard v. Regents of University System) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Villyard v. Regents of University System, 50 S.E.2d 313, 204 Ga. 517 (Ga. 1948).

Opinion

Atkinson, Presiding Justice.

(After stating the foregoing facts.) The duties and powers of the Regents of the University System of Georgia are set forth in the Code, §§ 32-101 et seq. They are untrammeled except by such restraints of law as are directly expressed, or necessarily implied. “Under the powers granted, it becomes necessary . . to look for limitations, rather than for authority to do specific acts. . . Limited only by their proper discretion and by the Constitution and law of this State, they may ‘exercise any power usually granted to such corporations.’ ” State of Georgia v. Regents of the University System, 179 Ga. 210, 227 (175 S. E. 567).

Whether or not the operation of a laundry and dry-cleaning service by a State college at reduced prices for the benefit of students, faculty members, and persons connected with the institution, constitutes unfair competition, is a question of first impression in Georgia.

*521 In Davison-Nicholson Co. v. Pound, 147 Ga. 447 (4b) (94 S. E. 560), this court, in dealing with the powers and duties granted by the legislature to the board of trustees of a State educational institution, held that “the right to protect a public educational institution and its student body is equal to or superior to the right of one, as a merchant, desiring to deal with such institution or its students.”

In other jurisdictions, enterprises held to be reasonably related to the education, welfare, and health of student bodies, and therefore not to constitute unfair competition, include the following: cafeterias which were operated primarily for the student body, but which also served the faculty, and occasionally parents and visitors (Goodman v. School District, 32 Fed. 2d, 586, 63 A. L. R. 92 and Annotation on p. 100; Ralph v. Orleans Parish School Board, 158 La. 659 (2), 104 So. 490; Hempel v. School District, 186 Wash. 684, 59 Pac. 2d, 729; Bozeman v. Morrow (Tex. Civ. App.), 34 S. W. 2d, 654); rental of school property for opera, public dance, or community purpose, in competition with private business (Beard v. Board of Education, 81 Utah 51, 16 Pac. 900; Young v. Board of Trustees, 90 Mont. 576 (8), 4 Pac. 2d, 725; Merryman v. School District, 43 Wyo. 376, 5 Pac. 2d, 267, 86 A. L. R. 1181); operating a store for the purpose of selling books and; other student supplies to university students and professors upon a cost basis (Long v. Board of Trustees, 24 Ohio App. 261 (1), 157 N. E. 395); operating a university press for work done outside of that done for the university, the earnings being incidental to its use for university purposes (Fanning v. University of Minnesota, 183 Minn. 222 (5), 236 N. W. 217); maintenance of a recreation center (Dodge v. Board of Education, 298 Ky. 1 (2), 181 S. W. 2d, 406); operation of a university infirmary (Davie v. Regents of University of California, 66 Cal. App. 689, 227 Pac. 243); manufacture and distribution of hog-cholera serum to farmers and swine-growers at cost (Fisher v. Board of Regents of the University of Nebraska, 108 Neb. 666, 673, 189 N. W. 161).

Applying the above legal principles to the facts of the present case, if the operation of the laundry and dry-cleaning service, at a price less than the commercial rate for the benefit of those connected with the school, is lawful, it matters not that such enterprise is competitive with the plaintiffs’ business. “When free pub- *522 lie schools were first established, they competed with and ultimately drove from the field numerous private schools, but those who conducted the private schools could not complain of unfair competition since the state has the right to establish the free school system. Universities and colleges established by the states are in direct competition with privately controlled colleges, but the competition is not unfair nor unlawful because the state has the power to establish its universities and colleges, and to support them by taxation.” Beard v. Board of Education, 81 Utah 51, 56 (supra).

The petition alleges that the defendants do not operate laundry and dry-cleaning enterprises at all of their several branches of the University Educational System, and that the use of the reduced rates for the faculty members and employees as an inducement for their accepting employment, and as part payment of salaries and wages and to supplement the same, is discriminatory, arbitrary, and violative of article 1, section 1, paragraph 2, of the State Constitution (Code, Ann. Supp., § 2-102), which guarantees equal protection of the law, in that it unequally applies the law to persons of the same class as to their remuneration for the same kind of work, according to whether said enterprises are available to them at said branch where they are employed, thereby increasing remuneration for the same class of work to those persons at those branches of said system where said enterprises are located. The constitutional question made by this attack is not decided, since the petitioners are not in a position to raise the question. This is true for the reason it is not alleged that the petitioners, or any of them, come within that class of individuals who are alleged to have been discriminated against as faculty members or employees in branches of the University Educational System where laundry and dry-cleaning services are not furnished. Hazleton v. Atlanta, 147 Ga. 207 (4) (93 S. E. 202); Webb v. Atlanta, 186 Ga. 430 (5) (198 S. E. 50); Whittle v. Jones, 198 Ga. 538 (4) (32 S. E. 2d, 94).

The petition alleges that availability of such enterprise for the said customer-employees, including faculty members, and the doing of work and service under the bailment contracts, are illegal, in that they constitute obligations and debts created on behalf of the State, in violation of article 7, section 3, paragraph 1, *523 of the Constitution (Code, Ann. Supp., § 2-5601) because they subject the defendants on behalf of the State, to expense and loss in resisting the efforts of those who might claim under the contracts to enforce the same. This court has held that a debt of the Regents of the University System is not a debt of the State. State of Georgia v. Regents of the University System, 179 Ga. 210, 222, (supra). Therefore, it can not be said that the creation of a debt by the regents is unconstitutional for the reason urged by the petitioners, that such debt is a debt against the State.

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Bluebook (online)
50 S.E.2d 313, 204 Ga. 517, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/villyard-v-regents-of-university-system-ga-1948.