Thе Leslie County Board of Education by a majority vote of three to two, acting without the recommendation of the county school superintendent, .entеred into a contract with a certified public accountant to make a general audit of the school records. The two dissenting members of the board filed this action to enjoin the expenditure of school funds for this purpose. The trial court refused to grant the injunction and dismissed! the petition.
Appellants are here contending that the board of education has no authority for its action and that school funds cannot be used in paying for the servicеs of an accountant. Alternatively it is insisted that even if such authority exists, the board in no event , can employ an accountant who has not been reсommended, by the superintendent.
There is no statutory provision specifically authorizing a school board to engage the services of an acсountant to make a complete general audit of the school records. Nevertheless, a board of education, like a municipality or оther governmental agency created by the Legislature, possesses not only the powers specifically conferred by statute, but also such impliеd powers as are reasonably inferred from the express powers and the objects to be attained by its creation. Dalzell v. Bourbon County Board оf Education,
Among the powers of the board not specifically conferred but recognized to exist by implication are those of employing a full-time health nurse, Board of Education of Bowling Green v. Simmons,
Concerning other governmеntal agencies created by the Legislature, it was held in Estill County v. Wallace,
It seems сlear to us that incident to the power of the board to control and manage school funds and public school property, the board has the implied power to employ and pay an accountant to make a general audit of the school records.
Appellants insist that under the maxim, “expressio unius est exclusio alterius”, it must be assumed from the fact that the Legislature expressly authorized independent audits of certain school recоrds that an audit of records not included within the class specified by the Legislature, was forbidden.
KRS 160.476 and KRS 160.477 relate to school building funds created under these sections and direct the boards to require an annual audit of the specific funds by a certified public accountant or an' accountant approved by the State Department of Education.- These sections are not mere grants of power but create an absolute duty which the boards are requirеd to perform... • . .
KRS 160.560 prescribes the duties of the treasurer of the.school board and authorizes the board to require an audit by an outside agent of the аccounts and records of an outgoing treasurer. KRS 160.570 in providing for a depository of school funds, authorizes the board to have an audit made of the records of the depository.
We conclude that these statutory powers were merely additions to the powers of the board and were hot intended as limiting or restricting the inherent power to conduct its fiscal affairs. ' Obviously, the maxim, “expressio unius est exclusio al-terius”, is not applicable. The Supreme Court of the United States in Ford v. United States,
“This maxim properly applies only when in the natural association of ideas in the mind of the reader that which is expressed is so set over by way of strong contrast to that which is omitted that the contrast enforces the affirmative inference that that which is omitted must be intended to have opposite and contrary treatment.”
Appellants assert that audits of the records of county and independent districts are conducted by the Superintendent of Public Instruction and it is, therefore, unnecessary to employ private accountants for that purpose. This Court cannot substitutе its judgment for that of the board and determine the wisdom of the proposed contract. Our inquiry is necessarily confined to the power of the board to еnter into the agreement.
KRS 156.200 provides in substance that the Superintendent of Public Instruction shall receive and examine all reports required by law or by the Stаte Board of Education; shall .examine and advise on expenditures and business methods of the boards of education, and shall see that all financial and educational accounts are ac
It will be seen that the Statute does not require audits by the Superintendent of Public Instruction. In his supervisory capacity he may require reports, advisе on expenditures and provide a standard of record keeping and reporting which the several boards must follow. Although the power to audit all of thе records of the board necessarily rests in the Superintendent of Public Instruction, he is not required to make such an audit.
Finally we reach the question of whethеr or not an accountant engaged to perform professional services on behalf of the board becomes a public school employee as that term is used in KRS 160.380, which provides that all public school employees shall be employed only upon recommendation of the cоunty school superintendent.
A public accountant, like an attorney, is a person generally regarded as in the pursuit of an independent business or profession. He undertakes to do a specific piece of work, using his own means without becoming subject to the control of the person for whom the work is being done in respect to all its details. An independent contractor is distinguished from an employee, in that he renders service in the course of an independent occupation representing the will of his employer only as to result and not as to the means by which the work is accomplished.
In Talbot v. Public Service Commission,
As a general rule, independent contractors are not considered within the purview of statutes, the scope of which is restricted to “servants” or "employees”. 27 Am.Jur., Sec. 3, Page 483.
We are of the opinion that a public accountant in the performance of services for the board acts as an independent contractor, and that the recommendation of the county school superintendent is not a prerequisite to his selection.
The judgment is affirmed.
