35 Wis. 59 | Wis. | 1874
It is first claimed by the counsel for the defendant, that the court below should have granted the motion
We shall spend no time in the consideration of this point in the case, for the reason that we are fully agreed upon a question of law involved which is fundamental, and underlies the cause, and is entirely decisive of every other question arising upon the record. And as this is a question of some practical importance as affecting the duties and powers of teachers in our public schools, we deem it best to decide it in the present case. The facts upon which this question of law arises, as established on the trial, are in brief these:
About the 18th of November, 1872, the plaintiff, a qualified teacher, under a contract with the district school board, commenced teaching a district school in Grant county. The defendant, an inhabitant of the district, sent his son, a boy about twelve years of age, to the school. The defendant wished his boy to study orthography, reading and writing, and also wished him to give particular attention to the study of arithmetic, for very satisfactory reasons which he gave on the trial. In addition to these studies the plaintiff at once required the child to also study geography, and took pains to aid him in getting a book for that purpose. The father, on being informed of this, told his boy not to study geography, but to attend to his other studies; and the teacher was promptly and fully advised of this wish of the parent, and also knew that the boy had been forbidden by his parent from taking that study at that time. But, claiming and insisting that she had the right to direct and
Now we can see no reason whatever for denying to the father the right to direct what studies, included in the prescribed course, his child shall take. He is as likely to know the health, temperament, aptitude and deficiencies of his child as the teacher, and how long he can send him to school. All these matters ought to be considered in determining the question what particular studies the child should pursue at a given term. And where the parent’s wishes were reasonable, as they seem to have been in the present case, and the teacher, by regarding them, could in no way have been embarrassed, her conduct in not respecting the order given the boy was unjustifiable. If
These views are decisive of this case. Under the circumstances, the plaintiff had no right to punish the boy for obedience to the commands of his father in respect to the study of geography. She entirely exceeded any authority which the law gave her, and the assault upon the child was unjustifiable.
By the Court — So ordered.