The named plaintiff, a minor, hereinafter designated the plaintiff, was permanently expelled from high school as a result of his alleged participation in a gang assault upon a student. The alleged attack occurred on September 28, 1972, on the grounds of Central High School in Bridgeport prior to the commencement of the school day. During the period of the plaintiff’s expulsion his mother expended the sum of $859 for private school tuition. In an action brought to the Court of Common Pleas, judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff enjoining the defendant board of education from continuing the expulsion and awarding $850 to the plaintiff’s mother, Anna Mitchell, who had joined personally as a plaintiff in the action. The defendants have appealed from that judgment.
In rendering judgment for the plaintiff, the court based its decision solely on the ground that § 10-234 of the General Statutes, which authorizes a school board to expel any student found guilty of “conduct inimical to the best interests of the school”
1
and
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under which the plaintiff was expelled, was invalid as an illegal delegation of legislative power. The legislative power to delegate is not unlimited. To be constitutionally sustained, “it is necessary that the statute declare a legislative policy, establish primary standards for carrying it out, or lay down an intelligible principle to which the administrative officer or body must conform, with a proper regard for the protection of the public interests and with such degree of certainty as the nature of the case permits, and enjoin a procedure under which, by appeal or otherwise, both public interest and private rights shall have due consideration.”
State
v.
Stoddard,
It is true that the modern tendency is liberal in approving delegation under broad regulatory standards so as to facilitate the operational functions of administrative boards or commissions, and it is unrealistic to demand detailed standards which are impracticable.
Forest Construction Co.
v.
Planning & Zoning Commission,
Distinct from, but often congruent with, the defect of vagueness is that of statutory over-breadth, that is, where the reach of the statutory language, no matter how precise, prohibits conduct protected by the constitution. See
Zwickler
v.
Koota,
The court’s decision as to the unconstitutionality of § 10-234 was not based on its application to the plaintiff. Eather, the court found the statute to
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be invalid as an illegal delegation because the language, “conduct inimical to the best interests of the school,” was too vague and indefinite to be regarded as a standard for expulsion of students. A statute must be construed as a whole since particular words or sections of the statute, considered separately, may be “lacking in precision of meaning to afford a standard sufficient to sustain” it.
Devaney
v.
Board of Zoning Appeals,
This court is mindful of the comprehensive authority of school officials to prescribe and control conduct in schools and the need for flexibility and reasonable breadth in statutes which guide them in their duties and which authorize them to accomplish educational ends. That authority, however, must be consistent with constitutional safeguards. See
Goss
v.
Lopez,
The defendants have assigned as error the court’s award of damages, and both parties have briefed the issue of the defendants’'immunity from liability. That issue will be treated as presented and briefed by the parties. It is the contention of the defendants that, as the suit was brought against them in their official capacity as public officers of the town of Bridgeport, they are immune from liability. The plainti "Uim that as the defendants were sued in *146 their official capacities, the real party in interest is the board of education of Bridgeport. The judgment is explicit that it is the board that is enjoined from continuing the expulsion and that it is the board that is ordered to reinstate the plaintiff in the school, “together with a judgment of $850.00 in favor of the plaintiff Anna Mitchell.”
A board of education is an agency of the state in charge of education in a town.
Murphy
v.
Berlin Board of Education,
There is error only as to the judgment awarding damages to the plaintiff Anna Mitchell; the judgment as to her is set aside and as to her the case is remanded with direction to render judgment for the defendants.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Notes
General Statutes § 10-234 provides in pertinent part: “The board of education of any town may expel from school any pupil regardless of age who after a full hearing is found guilty of conduct inimical to the best interests of the school.”
