Ayres v. Board of Trustees

98 So. 847 | Miss. | 1924

Cook, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellants, W. B. Ayres and L. C. Chamblee, filed their declaration in the circuit court of Leake county against the board of trustees of the Leake county agricultural high school and the board of supervisors of *370Leake county, seeking thereby to recover from the defendants a balance claimed to be due for lumber and material furnished under a certain contract entered into between themselves and the board of trustees of tne agricultural high school, by the terms of which they were to furnish certain lumber and material to be used in erecting the buildings of said school.' Separate demurrers to this declaration were filed by the board of supervisors and the board of trustees, and from a judgment sustaining these demurrers and dismissing the suit, this appeal was prosecuted.

The separate demurrer of the board of supervisors challenges the right of the appellant to maintain this suit against it, and presents for decision the question of whether or not there is any liability upon the board of supervisors under a contract entered into by the board of trustees of an agricultural high school for material or supplies furnished such school.

The agricultural high schools of the state have been created and established under and by virtue of the provisions of chapter 122, Laws of 1910, and amendments thereto (sections 3419 to 3433, inclusive, Hemingway’s Code), and from an examination of these sections it will be seen that these schools can only be created and established by the county school board, and that after the school is established the government and control thereof is vested exclusively in a board of trustees created for that purpose. Section 3419 of Hemingway’s Code provides that the county school board of each county is “authorized and empowered to establish not more than two agricultural high schools in the county.” Section 3421, Hemingway’s Code, provides:

“The government and control of county agricultural high schoools in any county shall be vested in a board of five trustees, one from each supervisor’s district, two of whom shall be elected by the board of supervisors, two by the county school board and the county superintend*371ent of education shall constitute the fifth member; two of the number first elected shall serve for a term of two years, and their successors shall serve for a term of three years, and two shall serve for a term of four years; all regular terms shall be for a term of four years. The trustees shall have control of the property, _ elect and fix salaries of all teachers in the agricultural department of the school and shall have full power to do all things necessary to the successful operation of said school.”

Section 3426, Hemingway’s Code, provides: “The board of trustees of the schools provided for in this act shall make detailed statements of receipts and disbursements to the board of supervisors and county superintendent of education annually on the first Monday of July, and the county superintendent of education shall transmit to the state superintendent of education a copy of said detailed statement which shall be embodied in his biennial report to the legislature.”

Section 3420, Hemingway’s Code, contains the following provisions: “The board of supervisors of any county where an agricultural high school shall have been established by the school board, shall levy on the taxable property in the county at the time the annual tax levy is made for the support and maintenance of said school. . . . The tax collected shall be deposited with the county treasurer, -to be paid out by him on the order of the board of trustees for the high school or high schools.”

Under the provisions of section 3432, Hemingway’s Code, the board of supervisors of a county in which an agricultural high school has been established may issue bonds to provide funds to aid in the building, and equipment of the school, but under the provisions of section 3433, Hemingway’s Code, the proceeds of the sale of such bonds “shall be disbursed by the board of trustees of the agricultural high school.”

From an examination of these various statutory provisions it will be noted that, in the organization of these *372schools, the only right conferred upon the board of supervisors is that of selecting two of the five trustees who shall have full power to control and govern the school and to do all things necessary for its successful operation. The board of .supervisors is vested with full power and authority to levy county taxes, and it is made the duty of the board of supervisors to levy a tax on the taxable property of the county for the support and maintenance of these schools after they have been established but it has nothing to do with the disbursement of the funds derived from such levy. In the case at bar the board of supervisors could not and did not establish the school, and it had no power to contract for materials used in the construction of buildings, and it has not undertaken so to do. The board of trustees of the school was in no sense the agent of the board of supervisors, as contended by appellant, and consequently the demurrer was properly sustained.

The demurrer interposed by the board of trustees challenges the rig’ht of appellants to maintain the suit against it upon several grounds, one of which is that the “defendants are not liable to suit; that plaintiffs, under the law, have no right of action against the defendants as trustees of the Leake county agricultural high school.” This presents for decision a question which has not been heretofore decided in this state, and, that is whether a suit may be maintained against an agricultural high school.

These institutions are created by and are agencies of the state, and it has been repeatedly held by this court that the state and its subdivisions and agencies are not subject to suit unless made so, expressly or by necessary implication, by some statute. Bradham v. Hinds County, 54 Miss. 363, 28 Am. Rep. 352; Freeman v. Lee County, 66 Miss. 1, 5 So. 516; Mississippi Centennial Exposition Co. v. Luderbach, 123 Miss. 828, 86 So. 517; Mississippi *373Live Stock Sanitary Board v. Williams et al. (Miss.), 97 So. 523.

This being true it becomes necessary to review the various statutory enactments which it may be contended confer the right to maintain this suit. Is this a suit which may be treated as a suit against the county because it.involves a question of county interest, and which may be maintained under section 309, Code of 1906 (.section 3682, Hemingway’s Code) ? We think not. This section provides that — “Any county may sue and be sued by its name, and suits against the county shall be instituted in any court having jurisdiction of the amount sitting at the county site; but suit shall not be brought by the county without the authority of the board of supervisors, except as otherwise provided by law.”

Section 311, Code of 1906 (section 3684, Hemingway’s Code), provides as follows:

“A person having a just claim against any county shall first present the same to the board of supervisors thereof for allowance; and, if the board shall refuse to allow it, may appeal from the judgment of the board to the circuit court, or may bring suit against the county; and, in either ease, if such person recover judgment, the board of supervisors shall allow the same, and a warrant shall be issued therefor.”

When these two sections are considered tog*ether, it appears that the framers of the law intended that ‘ ‘ suits against the county” should only embrace those based upon claims which the board of supervisors had power to allow or to refuse to allow. It is thereby made a condition precedent to the institution of a suit against the county that the claim upon which it is based shall have first been presented to the board of supervisors for allowance and by the board disallowed, and upon the recovery of a judgment in any such suit against the county_ the board of supervisors are required to allow the same and issue a warrant therefor. If no suit can be main*374tained against a county until the claim upon which it is based has been presented to and disallowed by the board of supervisors, the claim must be one which the board has authority to allow or disallow.

We have already noted herein the provisions of the statutes which require that all funds of agricultural high schools shall be disbursed by the board of trustees and shall be paid out only on the order of the board of trustees. The board of supervisors has nothing to do with the disbursement of any funds of the agricultural high schools of the county, and fias no authority to allow or disallow -any claim against any funds of such schools. If a judgment should be recovered against a county upon a claim or debt contracted by the board of trustees of an agricultural high school, the board of supervisors would have no authority to allow the same or issue a warrant on the funds of such school in accordance with the requirement of the same section 311, Code of 1906.

That a suit for a breach of a contract entered into by a board of trustees of an agricultural high school is not embraced within the provisions of these sections authorizing suits “against the county” is indicated by the fact that sections 3422 and 3423, Hemingway’s Code, provide that the school boards of two adjacent counties may unite in establishing an agricultural high school which is to be governed by a joint board of trustees, five chosen from each county and the eleventh chosen by the other ten. It is clear that a suit could not be maintained against either county for the breach of a contract entered into by such joint board of trustees, and we do not think authority to maintain any suit, against an agricultural high school can be found in the section authorizing suits against a county, and if this suit can be maintained we must look elsewhere for the statutory authority.

Counsel for the appellants insists that it must have been the intention of the legislature to confer, in some manner, the right to maintain suits against the boards *375of trustees of these institutions, hut in his search for the statutory authority he admits that ‘ ‘ at every stage of the procedure I have been forced to return to that section of Hemingway’s Code which provides, that — “The trustees shall have control of the property, elect and fix salaries of all teachers in the agricultural department of the school and shall have full power to do all things necessary to the successful operation of said school.” Section 3421.

The language of this section does not expressly confer the right to sue or he sued, and it only remains to consider whether it arises by necessary implication from the language used, and in considering this question it will be of advantage to consider the language used by the legislature in creating and conferring powers on other governmental agencies, and the legislative construction of such language.

The legislature has enacted various statutory schemes for the organization of drainage districts, which may he entirely within one county, or may include territory in adjoining counties with joint boards of commissioners, and by section. 1707, Code of 1906 (section 4295, Hemingway’s Code), it was deemed'necessary to expressly provide that a drainage district “in its corporate name, by its commissioners, henceforth, shall have power to contract and he contracted with, to sue and be sued, to plead and he impleaded, and to do and perform, in the name of such district, all such acts and things for the accomplishment of the purposes for which it was organized. ’ ’

When the Mississippi Centennial Exposition Company was created by chapter 113, Laws of 1916, a section of the act (section 5690, Hemingway’s Code), provided that the Mississippi Centennial Commission was#“empowered and authorized to select all necessary officers and employees necessary to properly conduct the exposition; to make all rules relating to the placing of exhibits, the *376conditions under which, exhibits may be made, and do any and everything necessary to properly establish and maintain such exposition.” This section conferring powers on the centennial commission is very similar to, and equally as comprehensive as, the language conferring powers upon the boards of trustees of agricultural schools, and upon which appellants rely for their authority to maintain this suit; but, in order to confer the right to sue this Exposition Company, the legislature of 1918 deemed it necessary to pass an additional act (chapter 241, Laws of 1918), expressly authorizing the Mississippi Centennial Exposition Company to be sued, the act providing, in part, as follows:

“Section 1. Be it enacted by the legislature of the state of Mississippi, that the Mississippi Centennial Exposition Company, created by statute approved March 28, 1916, shall be subject to suit by any person, firm or corporation now having an existing cause of action against said company for material contracted for by, or furnished to said company, and such suit may be instituted and prosecuted in any court of competent jurisdiction in Harrison county.”

In the ease of the Mississippi Centennial Exposition Co. v. Luderbach, 123 Miss. 828, 86 So. 517, a suit for damages for the breach of a contract, this court had occasion to construe this statute authorizing the centennial commission to be sued, and the language of the statute was there given a restricted meaning, and it was held that it did not authorize a suit for damages for breach of contract, but only for material furnished. Afterwards the legislature by chapter 264, Laws of 1922, conferred full authority on the centennial commission to sue and be sued.

In conferring powers on the boards of trustees of various institutions and governmental agencies the authority to be sued is specifically given in some instances, while in others the legislature has withheld this authority. Au*377thority to be sued is no more necessary in the case of agricultural high schools than in other governmental agencies of the sovereign state where no such authority exists, and we do not think the grant of this power is necessarily implied from the phrase giving the trustees “full power to do all things necessary to the successful operation of the s'chool. ’ ’ Authority to be sued is not. a necessary prerequisite to the successful operation of the school, and, since it is not clear that, in the statute now under review, the legislature intended to surrender the immunity from suit enjoyed by these governmental agencies, we do not think the statute should be extended by construction so as to do so. Only the legislature can surrender this privilege of the sovereign state and its governmental subdivisions or agencies, and we do not think it has done so in any of the acts affecting the establishment, or the government and control of agricultural high schools.

It follows from the views herein expressed that the judgment of the court below must be affirmed.

Affirmed.

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