Mayo v. Morton School District
Mayo v. Morton School District
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
The issue raised by the pleadings involves the good faith and legality of the action of the school authorities of the school district of the Borough of Morton, in assigning the plaintiff’s children to a school maintained in what is described as the old school building, rather than in a new building which had been erected to enlarge the accommodations of the public schools of the Borough of Morton. The plaintiff is a colored man, a resident, and a taxpayer of the borough. His allegation was that the board of school directors, and the superintendent, and . certain teachers of the school, had illegally classified or graded the pupils of the schools, so that all of the colored pupils, including two of the plaintiff’s children, who were in the first six grades of the school, were placed or in-instructed in the old school building, and all the white children of the same grades were placed in the new building. This action was alleged to be discriminatory and violative of the second proviso of Section 1405, of the Act of May 18, 1911, P. L. 381, which declares: “It shall be unlawful for any school director, superintendent, or teacher, to make any distinction whatever on account of, or by reason of, the race or color of any pupil or scholar who may be in attendance upon, or seeking admission to, any public school.” The answer of the defendants specifically denied each of the allegations of the plaintiff, and expressly averred that upon the opening of the two school buildings, in the Borough of Morton, provided for the education of the children in the said borough, the said board of school directors, together with the principal, proceeded to grade the pupils according to their respective averages, grades, and discipline, having in mind solely and only the betterment of the discipline, the proper education and grading of all the resident pupils or children of school age within the said district of Morton, and without respect to the race
The first error complained of is that the court did not sustain the demurrer of the plaintiff to the defendants’ answer, and Kaine v. Commonwealth, 101 Pa. 494, is cited as an authority in support of this proposition. The cases are not alike, however, in this respect that in the case cited there was not “a specific denial of the charge of discrimination and distinction; while in the case before us not only every material averment is denied, but there is a definite explanation of the manner in which, and the purpose for which, the classification of the pupils was made which negatives the inference or allegation of a distinction on account of color. It was the duty of the court, therefore, to refer the case to a jury. The third, fourth, sixth, seventh, eleventh, twelfth, thirteenth and fourteenth assignments of error cover objections made to the rejection and admission of evidence, and to the answers of the court to points presented by the plaintiff. It was proposed to be proved by the plaintiff that his children who were sent to the schools in the old school building were eligible for admission to the new school building. The court held that they were prima facie eligible, but that the plaintiff was not competent to pass on their qualifications. It was also contended that the action of the board of school director’s in the matter of the grading of the pupils should be evidenced by the minutes of the board, and that the testimony of the
The answers of the trial judge to the third, fourth, fifth and sixth points were in strict accord with the issue and the law governing the subject. In every aspect of the case, the question for consideration was whether the assignment of the plaintiff’s children to the school which they attended was on account of race or color. There was no legal presumption that a distinction was made, and the fact was, to be affirmatively found by the jury, if such fact existed. However much one might be impressed with the belief that the consideration of color had influenced the action of the school authorities in the distribution of the pupils, taking into view the results of the grading, the only tribunal to try the question has exonerated the defendants from such an imputation. The charge of the learned trial judge brought plainly to the attention of the jury the point in controversy, and the duty of the jurors could not have been misapprehended by them. There was no denial of the testimony of the principal that he had graded the pupils on the basis of their intelligence and deportment and without any ref
The judgment is affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.