Patrick v. Fletcher
Patrick v. Fletcher
Opinion of the Court
Opinion of the Court by
Affirming.
This record contains nine appeals prosecuted from nine separate judgments involving the complicated affairs of educational*district No. 2 in Magoffin county.
One of the suits was brought by Silas Fletcher and T. J. Fletcher against Tom Patrick, F. M. Patrick, J. H. Adams and Martha B. Arnett. Six of the suits were brought respectively by Walter Caine against Harrison Coldiron, Frank Fairchild against Glenn Salyer, Blanche Salyer against Silas Fletcher, Daisy Patrick against Kelse Salyer, Cora Kelly against Joe G. Ar-nett and James M. Miay against Pearl Bailey. Two of the suits were brought respectively by Joe Marshall against J. W. Cole and Jack Rice against M. M. Salyer.
The suit of Fletcher against Patrick involves the title to the office of chairman of the board of educational division No. 2 and the title to the trusteeship in sub-district No. 3 of this educational division. The suits of Caine, Fairchild, Salyer, Patrick. Kelly and May involve the question as to whether the plaintiffs or the defendants had the right to teach six of the common schools in educational division No. 2 for the school year ending June, 1911. The suits of Marshall against Cole, and Rice against Salyer, involve the question as to whether
The controversy in these eases grows chiefly out of the facts appearing in the suit of Silas and T. J. Fletcher against the Patricks, Adams and Arnett, and, as the disposition of this suit practically settles the ■ questions arising in the other suits, we will dispose of it first.
In 1909 T. J. Fletcher was elected trustee of subdistrict No. 3 in educational division No. 2, and soon thereafter was selected as chairman of this educational division, which consisted of thirteen subdistricts and consequently thirteen trustees. In the fall of 1909, T. J. Fletcher went to some of the western States, where he remained until about the first of April, 1910. "Whether he left the State for the purpose of permanently removing therefrom or was only on a visit and sight-seeing, intending to return, is a question about which there is much dispute. Fletcher, insisting that he never had any intention of removing his residence from Magoffin county, but always had the purpose of returning as he did do in the spring of 1910; while Adams and the Pat-ricks insist that he left the State with the intention of remaining away, and thereby vacated his office as trustee and chairman. It appears, however, that during his absence J. II. Adams, who was a trustee in the educational division was designated as temporary chairman and as such chairman was authorized to and did sign, such reports as it was necessary the chairman should sign; and, that F. M. Patrick was elected by the members of the educational board to fill the vacancy supposed to exist in the trusteeship held by Fletcher. About the first of April, 1910, Fletcher returned to Magoffin. county, and, upon his return was recognized by the County Superintendent as the trustee- in the district in which he had been elected and. as chairman of the educational division. After this, and on June 8, 1910, Adams, who had been acting as chairman in place of Fletcher, and Patrick, who had been acting as trustee instead of Fletcher, filed their .petition with the County Superintendent of Magoffin county, asking that the County Superintendent recognize Adams as chairman and Patrick as trustee. To this petition,. Fletcher filed an answer, and, upon hearing the case, the County Superintendent, Martha B. Arnett, on the 13th of June, 1910, entered an order declaring that Fletcher was the duly elected, qualified and acting trustee in subdistrict No. 3, in educa
If the decision of the County Superintendent in the controversy between Fletcher and F. M. Patrick made on June 13, 1910, was such a decision as could not be reviewed or reversed by the Superintendent of Publiq Instruction or the State Board of Education, then on June 25th, Fletcher was the trustee in subdistrict No. 3, and the chairman of educational division board No. 2, and the teachers selected at the meeting presided over by him were legally selected and employed. On the other hand, if the decision of the County Superintendent recognizing Fletcher as trustee and chairman was subject to review by the Superintendent of Public Instruction or the State Board of Education or both, Fletcher was neither trustee nor chairman on June 25th, and so the meeting called and presided over by him was not authorized to select or employ teachers. Having this view of the matter, the
Subsection 4 of section 4426a of the Kentucky Statutes provides in part that the trustees of the various subdistricts of each educational division shall choose one of the trustees to be chairman and one to be secretary of the division board; and further provides that “any vacancy that may exist in the trusteeship of any school subdistrict shall be filled by appointment by the division of the educational division of which said subdistrict is a part, and to them petition may be made by the voters of the subdistrict. Should the office of chairman of a division board become vacant the County Superintendent, as soon as the election has been held to elect a subdistrict trustee as above provided, shall call a meeting of sáid division board and shall then proceed to elect another chairman, and until a chairman is so elected, such division board may choose one of its members as a temporary chairman.”
In section 4436, it is provided in part that “In case of controverted right to the office of trustee, the county superintendent is empowered to recognize a trustee among the contestants until the dispute has been settled.”
Section 4418 provides that “The County Superintendent shall decide all questions of difference or doubt touching the administrative duties of the officers and teachers of common schools in his county, but appeals from his acts and decisions may be had on petition of any interested person to the Superintendent of Public Instruction.” * * *
Section 4396 provides in part that “The Superintendent of Public Instruction shall at the written request of any County Superintendent of common schools decide any question of difference or doubt touching the administrative duties of the officers and teachers of the common schools of his county. The decision of the Superintendent of Public Instruction shall in such case be final, unless appeal be prosecuted from his decision to the State Board of Education within thirty days.”
It will be observed that under section 4436 it is the right and duty of the County Superintendent when a controversy arises as to who is entitled to hold the office
■ The case of Stephens v. Marrs, 19 Ky. L. R., 623, is not' in conflict with the view we have expressed that the Superintendent of Public Instruction has no power to decide in case of a contest who is entitled to the office of trustee. In that ease the question arose under section 4417 of the Kentucky Statutes, providing in substance that the County Superintendent may suspend or remove a trustée for incompetency, neglect of duty, immoral conduct, or other disqualifications; and the only matter decided by the court upon the point under consideration ■jvas that where the County Superintendent under authority of this section removed a trustee, the trustee so removed had the right of appeal to the Superintendent of Public Instruction.
As it is necessary however on the appeal of. Patrick from the decision of the lower court dismissing his counterclaim in which he asserted his right to the office of trustee, that we should pass on the question as to whether Patrick or Fletcher was entitled to the office, we are of the opinion from an examination of the evidence that Fletcher by his temporary absence did not vacate the office of trustee. It follows from this that the judgment holding that Patrick was not entitled to the office should be 'affirmed. The lower court dismissed the petition of Fletcher, in which he asserted title as against Patrick to the office, but there is no appeal from this judgment, and hence we cannot decide that Fletcher was entitled to the office of trustee, but this fact does not interfere with his right to hold the office under the recognition of the Cqunty Superintendent. Nor is it really material because his term of office expired before the appeal was prosecuted.
In the suits of Silas Fletcher and T. J. Fletcher against Tom Patrick, F. M. Patrick, J. H. Adams and Martha B. Arnett, Tom Patrick who claimed that he was elected and employed by the meeting presided over by Adams .to teach the school that Silas Fletcher was. selected and employed to teach at the meeting presided over by T. J. Fletcher, asserted his right to teach this school in the suit brought by Fletcher; but, the court dis
The petitions of Walter. Caine against' Harrison Coldiron, Frank Fairchild against Glenn Salyer, Blanche Salyer against Silas Fletcher, Daisy Patrick against Glenn Salyer, Joseph Kelly against Cora 'C. Arnett and James M. May against Pearl Bailey, in which the plaintiffs respectively sought to be adjudged the right to teach the schools in place of the respective defendants, were each dismissed by the lower court. As the plaintiffs in these suits were selected and employed at the meeting presided over by Adams, and the defendants in each of these suits were selected and employed at the meeting presided over by Fletcher, and as each of the defendants did in fact teach the schools, the judg-. ments in each of the cases for the reasons heretofore stated must be affirmed.
The suits of Marshall against Cole, and Bice against Salyer, were brought for the purpose of haying it adjudged that Marshall and Bice and not Cole and Salyer were entitled to the offices of trustees in two of the sub-districts in’ educational division No. 2. There was a vacancy in subdistrict No. 13 caused by Wallis Cole accepting the office of justice of the peace, and a cacancy in subdistrict No. 2 caused by the removal of Cul Whittaker who was a trustee from the subdistrict; and,'these vacancies were filled at the meeting of the trustees called and presided over by Fletcher by the election of Marshall in place of Wallis Cole, and by the election of Bice in place of Whittaker. At the meeting called and presided over by Adams, John W. Cole was attempted' to be elected to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Wallis Cole, and M. M. Salyer was attempted to be elected to fill the vacancy caused by the removal of Whit-taker. The suits of Marshall against Cole, and Bice against Salyer, were brought to enjoin John W. Cole and M. M. Salyer from attempting to exercise the duties of trustee in these subdistricts. In their answer to these
It is, therefore, ordered that the judgments appealed from by Tom Patrick, F. M. Patrick, J. H. Adams, Walter Caine, Blanche Salyer, Frank Fairchild, Daisy Patrick, Cora Kelly, James May, John W. Cole and M. M. Salyer, and each of them, are affirmed in so far as the -judgments may be deemed to have determined that neither of these parties was entitled to the relief sought; and, so much of the judgment in the cases of Walter Caine against Harrison Coldiron, Frank Fairchild against Glenn Salyer, Blanche Salyer against Silas Fletcher, Daisy Patrick against Kelse Salyer, Cora Kelly against Joseph Arnett and James M. May against Pearl Bailey as adjudged that Silas Fletcher, Harrison Coldiron, Glenn Salyer, Kelse Salyer, Joseph Arnett and Pearl Bailey, as adjudged that the defendants who taught the schools in the several districts were entitled to the school money, is affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.