Pendry v. Edgar
Pendry v. Edgar
070rehearing
OPINION ON REHEARING.
SYLLABUS BY THE COURT.
Mandamus—Uniform Textbooks—Primary Reading Chart. A contract entered into between the school textbook commission and the author of a primary reading chart to supply the needs of the state for such chart' does not compel a school district board to purchase one of the charts for use in the district school.
The opinion of the court was delivered by
In a petition for rehearing it is stated that the school textbook commission entered into a contract with the author of the chart in question as
In the former opinion reference was made to the-omission of a reading chart from the regulations prescribing standards of quality and maximum prices in. the statute authorizing the adoption of textbooks. A standard is provided, viz., Wooster’s primary reading chart (Gen. Stat. 1909, § 7833), but a maximum price is omitted. A necessary correction is made accordingly in the opinion, but the conclusion is adhered to.
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This is an action in mandamus to compel the defendant school board to install a primary reading' chart in the district school and to pay the plaintiff $12 therefor.
The petition contains averments that the district has pupils for instruction in the primary course of reading, writing and orthography, and until a short time. before this suit had used a similar chart. A demand by the plaintiff and refusal by the board to purchase one of the charts is also alleged.
On this appeal from an order quashing the alternative writ the only question is whether the school board should be compelled by mandamus to install one of these charts and pay the plaintiff $12 therefor.
The statute authorizes the textbook commission to adopt a uniform series of school textbooks in the following branches:
“A primer, a primary reading chart, and a graded series of drawing books' or drawing portfolios, geometry, . . . Latin grammar, Latin exercises, Caesar, Cicero, Virgil, general history, history of Kansas, English history, rhetoric, English literature, botany, zoology, chemistry, word analysis, geology, German exercises, German grammar, and descriptive astronomy.” (Gen. Stat. 1909, § 7833.)
Another section of the statute following those just referred to provides:
“It shall be unlawful for any school-district board or board of education of .any city of the first or second class to purchase or contract for any chart, map,'globe, or other school apparatus, except scientific apparatus for high schools, unless the same shall have been submitted to the school textbook commission at a regular or special session, and by them approved, and a maximum price therefor fixed by said school textbook commission.” (Gen. Stat. 1909, § 7836.)
While a reading chart is included among textbooks in the section first quoted, it is manifest from the nature of the article that it is not intended for individual purchase and use as an ordinary textbook. This distinction is not only apparent from its adaptation to class instruction rather than individual use by pupils, but is recognized in its omission from the regulations prescribing maximum prices which apply to books to be purchased by patrons of the schools under contracts awarded by the commission. It will also be observed that charts are classified with maps, globes, and other school apparatus, and can only be purchased when approved by the commission and a maximum price is fixed therefor.
It seems from all these provisions that books which are to be purchased by patrons for individual use are the subject of competitive bidding and contract, and that approved charts may be purchased by school boards when a maximum price has been fixed therefor.
No statutory provision is found compelling the pur
We do not understand that the textbook commission has entered into any contract to supply charts under the provisions of the statute regulating the purchase of ordinary textbooks for individual use, but has merely adopted this chart and fixed the maximum price as authorized by statute.
If this chart is to be treated as an ordinary textbook it should be the subject of contract by the textbook commission and sale to patrons as a reader or speller is treated. Considered in the classification with maps, globes and other apparatus, such a contract is not authorized. In either case the court has no authority to compel a school board to buy or install this chart in the public school and to pay the manufacturer the maximum price therefor.
The judgment is affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- H. E. Pendry v. J. N. Edgar, as the School Board of District No. 35
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- SYLLABUS BY THE COURT. Mandamus—Uniform Textbooks—Primary Reading Chart. The uniform textbook law authorizes the state textbook commission to adopt a series of textbooks in various specified branches, including a primary reading chart. Standards of quality are prescribed, maximum prices are fixed, and provisions are made for letting contracts upon competitive bids for supplying the textbooks named in the list—-but a maximum price is not fixed for a primary reading chart. The statute also declares that “It shall be unlawful for any school-district board . . . to. purchase or contract for any chart, map, globe, or other school apparatus . . . unless the same shall have been . . . approved, and a maximum price therefor fixed by said school textbook commission.” (Gen. Stat. 1909, §7836.) It is held (1) that the Arnett primary reading chart, described in the petition, is intended and adapted for class instruction and not for individual use by pupils as an ordinary textbook, and (2) that a school-district board will not be compelled by mandamus to buy or install a primary reading chart for class instruction in a district school and pay to the manufacturer the maximum price fixed therefor by the textbook commission, although the commission has adopted the chart for use in the public schools.