135 Wis. 619 | Wis. | 1908
The procedure adopted in determining the issues presented by the pleadings in this action was informal and irregular and cannot be approved. The demurrer to the return raised an issue of law, which should first have been disposed of, and, if overruled, leave should have been given to the relator, if he so desired, to withdraw the same and amend his petition, or to interpose an answer if an issue of fact was to be jmesented. The court and the attorneys for the respective parties evidently treated the demurrer as an answer to the return, as a consent order was entered referring the only controverted issue to a referee to report the testimony. There was no material conflict in the evidence, and upon the report of the referee the court filed an opinion determining the issues of law and fact in favor of the respondents, and overruling the relator’s der murrer to the return and denying his motion for a peremptory writ of mandamus. Formal findings were made in accordance with the opinion, upon which the judgment was entered. This summary method of trial has in the opinion •of the court met the substantial ends of justice, and the relator by consenting thereto is in no position to complain.
Error is assigned by the appellant upon the refusal of the court, to permit an amendment to the petition setting up the requirement of the school authorities that the suspended pupils should pay a penalty of forty cents each as a condition of reinstatement. Formal application to amend was not made until after judgment, and there is no appeal from the order denying the same.' TheNappeal being from the judgment, the subsequent order is not reviewable upon this
We are not called upon to approve the practical wisdom displayed by the school authorities in dealing with the hasty conduct of thoughtless school children, prompted by an older mate and abetted by the publisher of the paper, or to justify the strong resentment that must have prompted the relator in appealing to the courts for redress. The exercise of a little charity, forbearance, and good nature might have avoided the controversy, which must have been attended with more or less serious consequence to the suspended pupils as well as to the school and to the litigants here represented. Rut the cause is before us for decision and must be treated like any other lawsuit.
The remaining assignments of error relate to the power of the school authorities to suspend the offending pupils for tho misconduct, which was established by the undisputed evidence. The authority to suspend the pupils from the privileges of the school is denied by the appellant, unless the offense was a violation of some rule prescribed by the board, or involved moral turpitude, or was committed during school hours in the school room or in the presence of the master
“The statute does not authorize the board of directors to suspend pupils for acts tending to destroy the peace and harmony of the school, or inciting insubordination in others, or for ridicule of the directors, in the absence of any regulation prohibiting such acts.”
The case last cited was an action of mandamus to compel the reinstatement of a pupil in the school who had been guilty of misconduct which was of itself not a violation of any rule prescribed by the board or by the principal. It is said in tire opinion:
“While the principal or teacher in charge of a public school is subordinate to the school board or board of education of his district or city, and must enforce rules and regulations adopted by the board for the government of the school, and execute all its lawful orders in that behalf, he does not derive all his power and authority in the school and over his pupils from the affirmative action of the board. He stands for the time being in loco parentis to his pupils, and because of that relation he must necessarily exercise authority over them in many things concerning which the board may have remained silent. In the school, as in the family, there exist on the part of the pupils the obligations of obedience to lawful commands, subordination, civil deportment, respect for the rights of other pupils, and fidelity to duty. These obligations are inherent in any proper school system, and constitute, so to speak, the common law of the school. Eveiy pupil is presumed to know this law, and is subject to it, whether it has or has not been re-enacted by the district board in the form of written rules and regulations. Indeed, it would seem impossible to frame rules which would cover all cases of insubordination and all acts of vicious tendency which the teacher is liable to encounter daily and hourly.”
While the offense for which the pupil was suspended is not stated in the Burpee Case, it was apparently committed
It is clear, therefore, that a rule might have been adopted by the school authorities to meet the situation here presented. This court in the quotation already made from the opinion in the Burpee Case recognizes certain obligations on the part of the pupil which are inherent in any proper school system, and which constitute the common law of the school, and which may be enforced without the adoption in advance of any rules upon the subject.
This court therefore holds that the school authorities have the power to suspend a pupil for an offense committed outside of school hours and not in the presence of the teacher which has a direct and immediate tendency to influence the conduct of other pupils while in the school room, to set at naught the proper' discipline of the school, to impair the authority of the teachers, and to bring them into ridicule and contempt. Such power is essential -to the preservation of order, decency, decorum, and good government in the public schools.
By the Court. — The judgment of the court below is affirmed.