Downs v. Bruce Independent School District No. 49

SMITH, J.

Section 7492, Revised Code 1919, provides that appeals may be taken to the circuit court from decisions of school boards relative to school matters.

Plaintiffs, who are appellants here, appeal from “the decision and action” of the board of education of respondent district. Thei notice of appeal recites the act of the ’board as follows:

“The decision * * * wherein said board adopted a certain report of the teachers’ committee of said board * * * discharging these appellants and each of them as teachers in the * * * schools maintained by said * * * district.”

As required by statute, the clerk of the school board transmitted to the clerk of the court a certified copy of the record of the proceedings of the board and all original papers filed in his office in such matter, including the notice of appeal. In the record thus transmitted was a copy of the report of the teachers’ committee referred to in the notice of appeal. Respondent moved for an order dismissing the appeal, which was granted by the trial court. From this order plaintiffs appeal to this court. The report of the teachers’ committee referred to in the notice of appeal and contained in the record, recites that—

“On October 14th the resignations of Miss Mabel Anderson and Miss Eva Downs were received and accepted by the commit*330tee. Miss Eva Thompson and Miss Alice Grape were secured by the committee to fill the vacancies.”

The action of the board is recited as follows:

“Moved, the report of the teachers’ committee be accepted. Seconded, and unanimously carried.”

[1] The acts and findings of fact of the teachers’ committee were thereby adopted and became the acts of the board itself. Respondent based its motion in the lower court for dismissal of the appeal upon nine grounds: (i) that the circuit court had no jurisdiction to hear, try, or determine said attempted appeal; (2)that the statute does not provide for appeals from the action or proceedings of boards of education of independent school districts; (3) that the action attempted to be appealed from is not appealable; (4) that the action attempted to be appealed from is not in a school matter; (5) that the notice of appeal did not state the decision appealed from in a clear or concise manner, in that (6) the action appealed from was one adopting and approving the report of the teachers’ committee, accepting the resignation of appellants, whereas the record shows that the only action of the board was the adoption of the report of the teachers’ committee and was not an act discharging appellants as teachers; (7) that a joint appeal will not lie, in that (8) the interests of appellants are not joint; (9) that the decision appealed from involves the exercise of discretion, and abuse of discretion is not shown.

[2] That the action appealed from was “a school matter,” and that the circuit court has jurisdiction to try such an appeal, are too clear to require discussion. It is equally clear that the statute providing for such appeals makes no distinction between, and authorizes appeals from, the decisions of both independent and other school districts.

[3] Respondent’s contention that the notice of appeal is insufficient in that it does not correctly describe the action or proceeding appealed from is too technical to require serious consideration. The identity of the action of the board appealed from is sufficiently disclosed by notice of appeal and the return of the clerk, and respondent is not in a position to complain that it was not fully advised by the notice of appeal of the particular matters to be reviewed in the appellate court.

*331[4] Respondent also earnestly contends, in support of the action of the trial court, that the facts recited in the return made by the board of education must be accepted as final and conclusive, and cannot be controverted or disputed in -the appellate court, and for that reason an appeal would be ineffective and idle, and no prejudice could result from the order dismissing the appeal, and in support of this contention cites Ontjes v. Thomas (S. D.) 184 N. W. 795. We are of the view that the rule announced in that case is correct, but has no application here. 'Briefly stated, it was held that, where the record sent up shows that the order complained of and purporting to be appealed from was never, in fact, made by the trial court, the record was conclusive, and a motion to dismiss the appeal would be sustained. Of course, in such case a mere defect in the record could have been remedied on a Suggestion of diminution of the record, and an application to require a corrected record t,o be sent up. But no question of the correctness of the record is presented in this case. The only question is the right of appellants to a trial de novo upon, the matter contained in the record. There are many cases holding that the record of school districts cannot be drawn in question collaterally. Such cases are referred to in 23 R. C. 160, one of them being Andrews v. Boylston, no Mass. 214, to the effect that omissions in such records cannot be corrected or supplied by parol. See Culhane v. Etting, 35 S. D. 544, 153 N. W. 301; Brink v. Dann, 33 S. D. 81, 144 N. W. 734. The question before us is not whether the return made by the board is a verity, but whether appellants are entitled to a review on appeal of the identical proceeding of the board recited in the record.

[5, 6] That the school board did exactly the things recited is conceded, and appellants are not seeking to dispute the fact that such action was taken. The board, by its action adopting the report of the teachers’ committee, in effect found as a matter of fact that these appellants had resigned. To say that such finding cannot be reviewed on appeal would entirly destroy the right of appeal given by the statute. If the action of the board cannot be reviewed de novo in this case, because their record is conclusive on appeal, every appeal from the action of a board of education in a school matter involving disputed matters of fact can be dismissed on motion for want of jurisdiction, and the *332statute giving the right of appeal rendered null and meaningless. Again, it is suggested that this appeal will not lie even from an order discharging appellants, for the reason that, if wrongfully discharged, they have an adequate remedy by an action at law to recover the salaries due under their contracts. It is sufficient to observe that the right of appeal given by the statute is not conditioned upon the existence of any other remedy. It is again urged that neither mandamus, injunction, nor any other writ can be issued by any court to compel a school district or school board to permit a teacher to occupy her place in a school, where her right rests solely upon contract.

[7] It is true, of course, as a general rule and with very few, if any, exceptions, that such writs may not be employed to enforce rights resting wholly in contract. It is quite evident, however, that the 'Legislature, in the rightful exercise of its legislative authority, has seen fit in this particular class of cases to authorize the appellate court to review the acts of school boards and. to enter its judgment or order in such form as the “circumstances and very right” of the particular case may require, which order or judgment, by the very terms of the statute itself, may be enforced by an appropriate writ, whether it be execution, mandamus,. prohibition, or attachment for contempt. The statute (section 7492, Rev. Code 1919) provides that in this class of cases the appeal shall be placed on the trial calendar to be heard at the first regular term, that the trial shall be de novo, and declares that the court “shall enter such final judgment or order as the circumstances and very right of the case may require, which judgment or order may be enforced by writ of execution, mandamus or prohibition, or by attachment as for contempt.” And if upon a trial de novo it should be made to appear that appellants never did in fact resign, “the very right of the case” would demand an annulment of the proceeding or action appealed from. And, furthermore, it would seem to be clear that upon the trial de novo the only issue of fact which could be tried would be whether or not appellants in fact had or had not resigned, that question being the precise matter of fact upon which the action of the board was predicated. And this would be true for the further reason that the board itself is conclusively bound by its own record, and would not be at liberty to allege or prove any other grounds of *333removal or dismissal o£ appellants as the basis of their action, under the rule laid down in 23 R. C. L. 160. I think, too, this rule is a sufficient answer to the suggestion that there is no statute limiting the grounds for which the school board may dismiss a teacher, for the reason that respondent’s own record discloses no other ground for their action than the fact of their resignations.

[8] Again it is urged that the clause in the notice of appeal reciting that the appeal is from the action of the 'board dismissing appellants did not give the court jurisdiction to try the question whether or not appellants had resigned. Such a contention is extremely technical, and it is sufficient to observe that; if appellants had not in fact resigned, the action of the board, in its legal effect, was neither more nor less than a wrongful “dismissal” of appellants. But the notice of appeal was sufficient to identify the action appealed from, and to give the court jurisdiction, and upon a trial de novo this particular recital in the notice of appeal could hardly be urged as a variance in pleading which would justify the exclusion of evidence tending to show that appellants had not in fact resigned.

[9,10] It is next contended that the action of the board involved the exercise of discretion, and abuse of discretion is not shown. If any such question is or can be presented upon the trial de novo, it would be before the trial court, and cannot be determined by this court on a motion to dismiss the appeal. Again it is urged that appellants cannot maintain a joint appeal, in that their rights and interests are distinct, and not joint. It is quite true that appellants could not maintain a joint action for damages, and equally true that a j oint appeal could not be maintained from separate judgments in such cases. But the appeal in this case is from a single action or decision of the board, which affected the rights of both parties alike, and with which both are “dissatisfied,” and, in the absence of a statute requiring it, we see no reason for requiring separate appeals and separate trials on appeal.

In Kaehler v. Halpin, 59 Wis. 40, 17 N. W. 868, it is said:

“All the defendants having a like interest in these questions, we think it very clear that they not only may join in an appeal from the order, but that the better practice is to require them to do so, if they desire to appeal at all. * * * If the parties appealing *334are jointly interested in the questions decided in the action, they ought to appeal jointly. It is a saving of time and expense to permit them to do so, and we know of no rule of law which prevents them from doing so.”

To the same effect is In re Cal. Mutual Life Insurance Co., 81 Cal. 364, 22 Pac. 869.

We are of the view that the order of the trial court must be reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings in accordance with law.