Board of School Com'rs of Mobile County v. Caver
Citation | 355 So.2d 712 |
Parties | BOARD OF SCHOOL COMMISSIONERS OF MOBILE COUNTY, etc., et al. v. Shelia CAVER and Rose Ann Caver. SC 2797. |
Decision Date | 10 February 1978 |
Court | Supreme Court of Alabama |
Leon G. Duke, Mobile, for appellants.
Joseph J. Boswell, Mobile, for appellees.
William H. McDermott, of McDermott, Slepian, Windom & Reed, Mobile, for the City of Chickasaw, amicus curiae.
This is an appeal by permission under Rule 5, A.R.A.P., by defendant Board of School Commissioners of Mobile County, Alabama, from an interlocutory judgment holding that the Board is not immune from suit for the negligence of its agents. We affirm.
Plaintiff, Caver, a student who was allegedly injured by a Mobile County School Board bus while she was standing in the school yard, brought suit for negligence, and the Board moved to dismiss her complaint because of sovereign immunity. The trial judge denied that motion. Later, the Board filed a motion to reconsider, which was denied, and the trial judge entered an interlocutory order, holding that the Board was not immune from suit in tort. This appeal is from that order.
Defendant, Board, contends that the issue of sovereign immunity was decided in its favor in Sims v. Etowah County Board of Education, 337 So.2d 1310 (Ala.1976), which held in a plurality decision, (based upon an interpretation of Tit. 52, § 99, Code of Alabama 1940) that a school board is immune from suit in tort.
Although at first blush, the Board's argument seems an appealing one, for Sims appears to foreclose further inquiry into this question, a close reading of Sims and an examination of Act No. 480, Acts of Alabama, Regular Session 1969, as well as § 270 of the Constitution of 1901, convinces us that the Mobile County School Board is amenable to suit in tort.
Mr. Justice Stakely, in Morgan v. Board of School Commissioners of Mobile County, 248 Ala. 22, 26 So.2d 108 (1946), gave the history of the Mobile County Board of School Commissioners. In that opinion, he pointed out that the Mobile County School Board has been exempted, in large part, from the general scheme of public school legislation ever since 1854 when the State of Alabama set up its first comprehensive school system.
That legislative policy, which is based upon the fact that Mobile County established its school system before the State did so, continues to this date, as evidenced by Section 270 of Article XIV of the Alabama Constitution.
Section 270 (in the Article on Education), Amendment 111, provides:
"The provisions of this article and of any act of the legislature passed in pursuance thereof for educational purposes, shall apply to Mobile county only so far as to authorize and require the authorities designated by law to draw the portions of the funds to which said county shall be entitled for school purposes and to make reports to the superintendent of education as may be prescribed by law; and all special incomes and powers of taxation as now authorized by law for the benefit of public schools in said county shall remain undisturbed until otherwise provided by the legislature."
This section makes it crystal clear that the Mobile County School Board is a somewhat autonomous county school board which is not subject to all general legislation concerning "educational purposes." In fact, the legislature has two specific restrictions on what sort of legislation it may pass. These restrictions are as follows:
Mobile, Alabama-Pensacola, Florida Building and Construction Trades Council v. Williams, 331 So.2d 647 (Ala.1976), quoting Morgan v. Board of School Commissioners of Mobile County, supra.
This limitation on legislative power is restrictive in its scope and purpose and is to be strictly construed. Mobile, Alabama-Pensacola, Florida Building and Construction Trades Council v. Williams, supra; Board of School Commissioners of Mobile County v. Hahn, 246 Ala. 662, 22 So.2d 91 (1945).
Act Number 480 (the latest amendatory act regulating the public schools in Mobile County) falls within neither one of these two exceptions. That act provides, inter alia, that, "The said Board shall be a body corporate; and may have a common seal; may sue and be sued . . ." (Emphasis supplied.) Clearly, the authority to "sue and be sued" is not one of those educational areas in which the legislature may not act concerning the Mobile County School Board.
We stressed in Sims v. Etowah County Board of...
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Smith v. DALLAS CTY. BD. OF ED., Civ. A. No. 79-0260-H.
...are part of the basis of the complaint in this case, are federally-created causes of action. See, e. g., Board of School Comm'r of Mobile County v. Caver, 355 So.2d 712 (Ala.1978) (tort liability exists because the Mobile County School Bd. is empowered to both sue and be sued); Enterprise C......
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Louviere v. Mobile County Bd. of Educ.
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