33 N.W.2d 56 | Minn. | 1948
Lead Opinion
The above act, which went into effect on July 1, 1945, provides that no person may teach barbering in Minnesota without first being issued a certificate of registration as a teacher by the State Board of Barber Examiners. Under the act, a certificate may be obtained in either of two ways, namely, (1) by satisfying certain requirements as to age, education, and examination; or (2) by qualifying under the grandfather clause of M. S. A.
"Any person now operating and instructing orteaching in a school of barbering duly licensed under the laws of Minnesota may be issued a license under this section, without taking such examination, upon payment of the fee herein prescribed." (Italics supplied.)
Relator, who does not have a high school education, has not taken steps to establish the equivalent thereof and is not eligible to acquire a certificate by examination. He asserts, however, that he is entitled to a certificate without examination under the above grandfather clause. Relator became a licensed barber in 1934 and has held his barber's license ever since. After 1934, he did further study in all phases of scientific barbering and upon a conclusion of those studies passed an examination given by the National Educational Council of Associated Master Barbers of America. In 1937, he was awarded a diploma as a teacher of barber science. As a full-time member of the teaching staff of the Moler Barber College of Minneapolis, he taught barbering from 1934 to 1938 and again from 1940 to April 1943. During the period from 1938 to 1940 he operated a beauty parlor. The trial court specifically found that relator from April 1943 to June 1945 was employed in a war plant, and that during *461 this period he obtained time off from such employment on an average of about once a month, when he returned to the Moler Barber College to assist the operator thereof in the teaching of barbering. Uncontradicted testimony justifies an amplification of these findings, to the effect that by reason of the war large numbers of men were inducted into the services whereby the number of students at the barber college, at and shortly prior to April 1943, had decreased to such an extent that only one full-time teacher was needed. As a result, relator's services were no longer required on a full-time basis. Relator was also subject to the selective service act, and in common with other men of his age was urged by his draft board to enroll in the armed forces or engage in defense industry. The draft board urged him to go into defense work because his age made him unsuitable for active military service. It was under and by reason of these circumstances that relator gave up full-time teaching and engaged in war-plant employment.
Relator applied on May 17, 1946, for a teacher's certificate under §
1. Appellant has neglected to include in the printed record the trial court's order (or a summary thereof) allowing the settled case. Without such order there is no settled case, and without a settled case no consideration can be given upon appeal to a determination of whether the evidence sustains the findings of fact. In the absence of a settled case, the findings of fact are presumed correct, and the only question is whether such findings sustain the conclusions of law. Hammond v. Flour City Coal Oil Co.
2-3-4. Are the findings of the trial court that the respondent board did not act in an arbitrary and capricious manner to be sustained? What is meant by the statutory provision that "Any person now * * * teaching in a school of barbering * * * may be issued a license * * * without taking such examination * * *"? The words "now * * * teaching," as used in §
Illustrative of this principle of reasonable interpretation, in keeping with the manifest intent of the legislature, is the Tucker case, wherein petitioner sought a writ of mandamus to compel the state pharmacy board to transfer his registration certificate from his old drugstore to a new one at a different location. The grandfather clause of the New York pharmacy statute provided (
"* * * any person, not a licensed pharmacist * * *, who at the time of the passage of this act owns a registered pharmacy or a registered drug store * * *, may continue to own andconduct the same in accordance with the provisions of this article." (Italics supplied.)
Petitioner owned a drugstore when the statute was enacted, but on May 10, 1925, he was dispossessed of his store building by legal proceedings. The following August he moved his store to his new location, whereupon the state pharmacy board refused to transfer his license to the new store. The court in granting the writ said (
"It would be a very narrow and arbitrary construction of the exception to hold that, if a particular drug store conducted by a person not a licensed pharmacist was destroyed by fire, or the property was condemned for the public use, or the landlord refused to renew a lease of the premises in which the store was conducted, the privilege granted by the exception should thereupon cease and determine. All that was intended by the exception in question was that the person who was conducting a drug store as an unlicensed pharmacist, in order to be permitted to go on with the business, must continue to own and conduct a drug store not uninterrupted in the absolute sense.He continues the business uninterrupted, within themeaning *465 of the statute, even if he experiences temporaryinterruption, when he does not abandon the conduct of thebusiness. Whether or not he abandons the business of conductinga drug store or pharmacy depends upon the circumstances, and isa matter to be determined upon the facts of each case. If, for example, a building in which a drug store is being conducted by an unlicensed pharmacist is totally destroyed by fire, and it is impossible or impracticable for the druggist to continue business at that location, he would not be held to have abandoned the conduct of the drug business during a reasonable time required for him to adjust his affairs, obtain a new location, and restock his store." (Italics supplied.)
5. In the instant case, relator was indeed compelled by circumstances beyond his control to give up full-time teaching temporarily. Surely he had no control over the reduction in the number of barber college students arising from a world war that absorbed the entire man power of the nation. He was not required, in order to manifest an intent not to abandon his trade, to remain idle and not engage in other useful employment. If we assume that he was in fact not urged or practically compelled by his draft board to enter a war plant, it obviously would not have been to his credit if he had voluntarily chosen not to make a useful contribution to the war effort. He continued to manifest a permanent and continued interest in barber teaching by regularly engaging therein on a part-time basis. He who adapts himself to the requirements of his country in time of war is not to be penalized. It is also to be noted that the statute in using the word "teaching" does not indicate whether the teaching must be full-time or part-time. The general rule is that a practitioner of a trade or profession, in the contemplation of the grandfather clause, is one who habitually holds himself out to the public as such (Hart v. Folsom,
The judgment of the trial court is reversed.
Reversed.
Dissenting Opinion
I dissent.