West v. Board of Trustees

181 N.E. 144, 41 Ohio App. 367, 11 Ohio Law. Abs. 505, 1931 Ohio App. LEXIS 315
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 1, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 181 N.E. 144 (West v. Board of Trustees) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
West v. Board of Trustees, 181 N.E. 144, 41 Ohio App. 367, 11 Ohio Law. Abs. 505, 1931 Ohio App. LEXIS 315 (Ohio Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

Ross, P. J.

This case is presented to this court on appeal from the court of common pleas of Butler county.

The issues are contained in the amended petition and answer.

The suit was instituted by Jean West, a minor, by her father, her natural guardian.

She alleges that she is a graduate of the public grade and high schools of the city of Portsmouth, Ohio, which has always been her legal residence; that she holds a diploma from such high school, which is of the first grade as defined by Ohio law; that the Miami Normal School is an institution established and maintained by the state of Ohio, is attached to Miami University and governed by the board of trustees of such university; that Alfred Horatio Upham is the president of the university and its administrative head; that Ernest James Ashbaugh is the dean and administrative head of Miami Normal School; that possessing the necessary qualifications on the 10th of September, 1930, she was admitted to such normal school and completed a course of study in the first semester, ter *369 minating February 4, 1931, paid the required fees and charges for entrance upon the second semester, and continued her attendance in such school until notified on April 3, 1931, by the president that she was about to be excluded and barred from admission to classes, and that on April 14, 1931, “the Faculty of Miami University passed an order directing that plaintiff be excluded from said school,” and that “said order of exclusion is not being entered because of any violation upon her part of any lawful regulation or any rule of conduct reasonably necessary for the preservation of moral conduct or discipline,” and that “said order of expulsion is unlawful and will deny to plaintiff her legal right to attend said school and to participate in the instructions given therein.”

She prays that upon final hearing a permanent injunction shall issue against the defendants, including the board of trustees of Miami University, restraining them from putting into effect the order of exclusion and that the defendants may be ordered “to admit and receive the plaintiff as a student in said school.”

The answer admits; the residence, previous education, matriculation of the plaintiff in the so-called Miami Normal School and the identity and status of the administrative boards and officers as alleged. The other allegations of the amended petition are denied, and it is alleged that the Miami Normal School, so-called by plaintiff, is a part of the school of education of Miami University, established by the board of trustees of Miami University in June, 1927, having since operated under the rules promulgated by the faculty of Miami University; that at *370 the time of plaintiff’s matriculation in such “College of Education, ’ ’ designated by plaintiff as a normal school, there was a regulation requiring freshmen in the two-year course entered by plaintiff to earn 25 credit points for the first semester and 60 credit points for the entire year in such course and that failure so to do should result in the dismissal of the student; that there was a further rule in such school and university, and adopted by the faculty thereof, that a student reported low in studies at the end of any grading period or semester might be placed upon probation by action of the academic council of the university, and when so placed upon probation might be later dropped if grades fell below the probation standard.

It is further alleged that the plaintiff during the first semester attained less than the number of credit points necessary to meet the scholastic requirements provided for in the rules, in that her credit points earned were 23 as against the required 25 points, and that plaintiff, therefore, was requested to withdraw from the university, but that thereafter, at her request, she was permitted by the faculty of the school to enter the second semester, upon probation, under terms requiring her at the end of nine weeks to have earned 30 credit points, that at the end of such period she had earned only 19 points and failed to meet the requirements of her probation, and that thereupon on April 7, 1931, the academic council of the university requested plaintiff to withdraw from the university, and her father was so notified, and, in accordance with information given him by the council, took an appeal to the faculty of Miami University, which unanimously *371 affirmed the decision of the council that plaintiff should withdraw from the university, it being further alleged that such dismissal is but temporary and only for the remainder of the semester, and that the plaintiff has a right under the rules to enter the second semester of the succeeding year.

The answer further alleges “that the scholastic requirements with which the plaintiff failed to comply are in nowise arbitrary or unreasonable, are uniform, affecting all students in the same course of study in the same manner, and that the same do not constitute an abuse of discretion on the part of the faculty of said university and of said School of Education described in plaintiff’s petition as Miami Normal School.”

No reply having been filed to the answer, the new matter alleged therein may be taken as admitted to be true by plaintiff.

The facts are as follows:

Jean "West, a resident citizen of Ohio, holding a diploma from a first grade high school at Portsmouth, Ohio, on September 10, 1930, entered a two-year course in the normal school at Miami University for the purpose of acquiring the necessary education to become a teacher.

The university had adopted certain rules and regulations previous to the admission of plaintiff, among which were the following:

“No student shall be dropped during the college year unless his parents were notified before that time of his poor work, but re-enrollment may be denied according to the rule below. ’ ’
“A student who has been dropped twice for poor scholarship shall not be re-admitted.”
*372 “A student dropped for scholarship shall not be readmitted until after one entire semester has elapsed.”
“A student dropped for scholarship during or at end of second semester shall not be admitted to summer school during the period of his suspension.”
“Rules for minimum scholastic requirement: (Each college or school may designate additional scholastic requirements, to fit its special aims.)
“Freshman:
“a. Probation if less than 19 credit points.
“b. Warned if from 19 to 22 credit points.”

Under the rules of the normal school (or as it is styled in Miami University, “School of Education”), in force some time before the admittance of plaintiff, an average grade of C was required of students enrolled in the two-year course selected by the plaintiff. Two credit points are allowed for each semester hour of “ C ” work.

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Related

Greenhill v. Bailey
378 F. Supp. 632 (S.D. Iowa, 1974)
Foley v. Benedict
55 S.W.2d 805 (Texas Supreme Court, 1932)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
181 N.E. 144, 41 Ohio App. 367, 11 Ohio Law. Abs. 505, 1931 Ohio App. LEXIS 315, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/west-v-board-of-trustees-ohioctapp-1931.