delivered the opinion of the Court.
Thе people of New Jersey have ordained by their constitution that the legislature “shall provide for the maintenance and support of a thorough аnd efficient system of free public schools” . . J In fulfillment of this command a comprehensive school law was adopted in 1903 by which boards of education werе set up for cities, towns, and school districts throughout the state.
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2
Section 106 empowered these boards to make rules and regulations governing engagement and employment of teachers and principals, terms and tenure of such employment, promotion, and dismissal, salaries and their time and mode of paymеnt, and to change and repeal such rules and regulations from time to time.
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This general school law was amended by the act of April 21, 1909,
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§ 1 of which provides:
“The service of all teachers, principals, supervising principals of the public schools in any school district of this State shall be during good behavior and efficiency, after the expiration of a period of employment of three consecutive years in that district, unlеss a shorter period is fixed by the employing board; . . . No principal or
Appellants, who were principals, teachers, and clerks employed by the apрellee, petitioned the Department of Public Instruction, in accordance with the school law, praying that the action of the board be set aside. The Commissioner of Education dismissed the petition and, upon appeal from his action, the State Board of Education affirmed the decision. The appellants applied for certiorari from the Supreme Court, assigning among other
The position of the appellants is that by virtue of the Act of 1909 three years of service under contract confer upon an employe of a school district a contractual status indefinite in duration which the legislature is powerless to alter or to authorize the board of education to alter. The Supreme Court holds that the Act of 1909 “established a legislative status for teachers, but we fail to see that it established a сontractual one that the legislature may not modify. . . . The status of tenure teachers, while in one sense perhaps contractual, is in essence deрendent on a statute, like that of the incumbent of a statutory office, which the legislature at will may abolish, or whose emoluments it may change.”
This court is not bound by the decision of a state court as to the existence and terms of a contract, the obligation of which is asserted to be impaired, but where a. statute is claimed to create a contractual right we give weight to the construction of the statute by the courts of the state.
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Here those courts have сoncurred in holding that the act of 1909 did not amount to a legislative contract
It appeаrs from a stipulation of facts submitted in lieu of evidence that after a teacher has served in a school district under yearly contracts for three years it has not been customary to enter into further formal contracts with such teacher. From time to time, however, promotions were granted and salary raised for the ensuing year by action of the board. In the case of many of the appellants there have been several such increases in salary.
Although after the expiration of the first three years of service the employe continued in his then position and at his then compensation unless and until promoted or given an increase in salary for a succeeding year, we find nothing in the record to indicate that the board was bound by contract with the teacher fоr more than the current year. The employe assumed no binding obligation to remain in service beyond that term. Although the act of 1909 prohibited the board, a crеature of the state, from reducing the teacher’s salary or discharging him without cause, we agree with the courts below that this was but a regulation of the conduсt of the board and not a term of a continuing contract of indefinite duration with the individual teacher.
The resolution of June 23, 1933, grouped the existing salaries paid by the board into six classes the lowest of which comprised salaries between Twelve hundred dollars and Nineteen hundred and ninety-nine dollars; and the highest included salaries ranging between Four thousand dollars and Fifty-six hundred dollars. The reduction in the lowest class for the coming year was ten per cent; that in the highest class fifteеn per cent. Salaries in the intermediate classes were reduced eleven,
We think it was reasonable and proper that the teachers employed by the board should be divided into classes for the application of the percentage reduction. All in a given class were treated alike. Incidental individual inequality resulting in some instances from the operation of the plan does not condemn it as an unreasonablе or arbitrary method of dealing with the problem of general salary reductions or deny the equality guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment.
Judgments affirmed.
Notes
Art. IY, § VII, ¶ 6, 1 N. J. Comp. St. p. Ixxv.
Act of Oct. 19, 1903; Laws of N. J. 1904, 5; 4N. J. Comp. St. 4724.
4 N. J. Comp. St. 4762.
Chap. 243 N. J. Laws 1909, Pamph. L. p. 398, 4 N. J. Comp St. 4763, 4764.
Chap. 12, N. J. Laws 1933, Pamph. L. p. 24.
Two writs were issued. The only difference between the two cases, which -were heard as one, is that in the Phelps case the employe refused to accept the reduced salary. In the case of Askam et al., the employes took the reduced salary under protest.
115 N. J. Law 310;
116 N. J. Law 412,
Freeport Water Co.
v.
Freeport,
