Perkins v. Board of Directors of the Independent School District

Beck, J.

The petition alleges that plaintiff is a minor„of the age of twelve years, and resides within the bounds of the school district of which defendants are directors; that under the law he has a right to attend defendants’ school, and did so *477attend until the superintendent, in obedience to an order of defendants, refused him admittance thereto, and that he is a .person of good moral character and has not been guilty of gross immorality nor of the persistent violation of any rule of the school. The petition shows that plaintiff was expelled from the school upon the following grounds:

. “That on or about'the 20th day of September, 1880, while he in company with other pupils of said school was engaged in playing ball, at a proper time, in the neighborhood of said school house, he unintentionally and by accident batted a ball through one of the windows of the school house, breaking a glass of the value of about three, dollars.

“That the defendants had made a rule as follows: ‘Scholars who shall be guilty of defacing or injuring any school property shall be required to pay for all damages. Notice of such damage shall be sent to the parents or guardians of the pupil, and in default of payment the case shall be reported to the-president of the board who may proceed with it according to law. Scholars thus reported to the president shall not afterward be allowed to attend until payment of damages shall have been made or the case otherwise adjusted.’

“That in pursuance of such rule, payment of- said damages was demanded and notice thereof sent to plaintiff’s parents, but plaintiff says that he is a child, without means, and unable to earn means to pay such damage, -and as a minor is not legally bound to pay the same.

“That his parents refused to pay for said glass, and that for such non-payment, and for no other cause, or excuse, or pretense of cause, the said Parish [the superintendant of the school] refused, and refuses, him admittance to said school, and the defendants ratified his refusal and have directed him, as aforesaid, not to admit plaintiff into said school until the payment of such damage.”

The plaintiff alleges that defendants have no authority to enforce the rules under which he was excluded from the *478school, and that the action of the defendants in expelling him is unjust and oppressive and in violation of his rights.

To the petition defendants demurred on the ground: 1st, that the court has no jurisdiction of the cause of action set out in the petition, the law creating a special tribunal to which plaintiff should appeal from the action of the board of directors; 2nd, the facts stated in the petition do not show the rule, under which plaintiff was expelled from the school, to be unreasonable or unlawful and in excess of the authority of the defendants in the government of the school.

i. schools-rectors :°mandamus. I. We shall first inquire whether the Circuit Court has jurisdiction of this action. The statute provides that any person aggrieved by any order or decision of the -directors of a school district may appeal to the county superintendent and from him an appeal may be prosecuted to the superintendent of public instruction. Code, sections 1829, 1835.

We need not inquire to what class of cases, wherein the directors may mate decisions and orders, appeals to the county superintendent are limited. That they are limited is very plain. It cannot be held that decisions and orders refusing the allowance and payment of claims against the district, or construing contracts, or affecting the possession of or right to property, when the interest of a citizen is affected thereby, may not be questioned except upon appeal. That many such decisions and orders cannot be reviewed under the statutes quoted upon appeal must be conceded. It is not necessary to inquire just what class may be appealed to the county superintendent and in what cases original actions may be prosecuted in the courts.

It is'very plain that in one class of cases appeals are not the exclusive remedy for reviewing or assailing the decision and orders of the school directors. This class includes all cases wherein the jurisdiction and power of the directors are brought in question and wherein questions arise involving *479the construction of statutes conferring power upon school officers. The courts of the State are arbiters of all questions involving the construction of the statutes conferring authority upon officers and jurisdiction upon special tribunals. It was certainly never the intention of the legislature to confer upon school boards, superintendents of schools, or other officers discharging quasi judicial functions, exclusive authority to decide questions pertaining to their jurisdiction and tlie extent of their power. All such- questions maybe determined by the courts of the State. Hence, when the rights of a citizen are involved in the exercise of authority by a school officer, the courts may determine whether such authority was lawfully exercised. o

The courts by mandamus may compel the directors of a school to admit a pupil who has been unlawfully excluded. See Clark v. The Board of Directors, 24 Iowa, 266; Smith v. Independent School District, 40 Iowa, 518; Dove v. Same, 41 Iowa, 689.

2,__ __; pupil. III. ¥e are next to inquire whether defendants, as school directors, had authority to promulgate and enforce the rule under which .plaintiff was. excluded from the school.

It will be observed that plaintiff was guilty of no breach of discipline or of any offense against good order.

By an accident and without any evil purpose he broke a window-glass. The rule requires him to pay the damage done and in default thereof authorizes the directors to exclude him from the school. We may admit that he ought to pay the damages and is liable therefor. But we think his omission to pefform this duty cannot be punished by expulsion from the school. The State does not deprive its citizens of their property or their liberty, or of any rights, except as a punishment for a crime. It would be very harsh and obviously unjust to deprive a child of education for the reason that through accident and without intention of wrong he des*480troyed property of the school district. Doubtless a child may be expelled from school as a punishment for breach of discipline or for offenses against good morals, but not for innocent acts.

In this case the plaintiff was expelled not because he broke the glass, but because he did not pay the damage sustained by the breaking. His default in this respect was no breach of good order or good morals. The rule requiring him to make payment is not intended to secure good order but to enforce an obligation to pay a sum of money.

We are clearly of the opinion that the directors have no authority to promulgate or enforce such a rule.

We conclude that the court erred in sustaining the demurrer to the petition.

Reversed.