18 Colo. App. 49 | Colo. Ct. App. | 1902
On Rehearing.
The complaint alleged that the defendants were trustees of The Colorado State School of Mines, having authority and control over the administration of the. affairs of that institution, with power to make rules and regulations for the government of the students, to provide and direct suitable methods for their education, and to confer degrees upon those taking the prescribed line of study; that at the September term, 1893, the plaintiff entered the school, and was enrolled therein as a student, and continuously pursued his studies, until the close of the ses
The defendants demurred to the complaint on the ground that it did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. ° The demurrer was overruled, and, the defendants declining to plead further, judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff according to the prayer of his complaint. The defendants haye brought the case here by appeal.
The question presented by this demurrer is whether, upon the averments of the complaint, the plaintiff is entitled to the relief which he seeks. From the statements in that pleading, it appears that, as an essential prerequisite to the conferring upon him of a degree, he must pass an examination to the satisfaction of the faculty.
The following is section 3074 of Mills’ Annotated Statutes: “The State School of Mines shall have for its object, to furnish such instruction as is provided for in like technical schools of a high grade, and may, by its board of trustees, confer all degrees appropriate to the courses of study pursued. ’ ’
The school furnishes the instruction through its faculty. In the conferring of degrees, it is represented by its board of trustees. It belongs to the faculty, by whom the instruction is imparted, to say whether a student possesses the proper qualifications to entitle him to a diploma. The necessary examination must, therefore, be conducted by it. It is the school which confers the degree, and the agency through which it acts in so doing is its board of trustees. The board has no power to issue a diploma except when required to do so by the school, speaking through its faculty. In a given case the faculty determines by an examination whether the candidate is
The plaintiff did not pass the required examination. The complaint charges his failure upon the hostility of the faculty. If the faculty wrongfully deprived him of an advantage to which he was entitled, possibly he had a remedy; but their conduct, whether wrongful or not, gave him no right of action against the trustees.
This suit was instituted to compel the defendants to do something they have no authority to do, and which cannot lawfully be done by them; and the demurrer should have been sustained. See People v. Medical College, 20 N. Y. Supp. 379.
The judgment will be reversed. Reversed.