City Of New Haven v. Town Of Torrington.

Decision Date14 June 1945
CourtConnecticut Supreme Court
PartiesCITY OF NEW HAVEN v. TOWN OF TORRINGTON.

OPINION TEXT STARTS HERE

Appeal from Superior Court, New Haven County; O'Sullivan, Judge.

Action by City of New Haven against Town of Torrington to obtain reimbursement for the expense to which the plaintiff was put in educating a number of children in a grammar school in New Haven. Trial to the court resulted in judgment for plaintiff and defendant appeals.

No error.

BROWN, J., dissenting.

Harry Ossen, of Torrington, for appellant.

A. Frederick Mignone and Vincent P. Dooley, both of New Haven, for appellee.

Before MALTBIE, C. J., and JENNINGS, ELLS and DICKENSON, JJ.

DICKENSON, Judge.

The plaintiff town sought to recover from the defendant town an expense incurred in the education of children which the plaintiff claimed was properly chargeable to the defendant under the provisions of General Statutes, Cum.Sup.1935, § 334c. The defendant has appealed from a judgment for the plaintiff, claiming no liability on grounds that the school in which the children were educated was not a public school; that there was no evidence that the children had legal settlement in the defendant town, and that the claim, in any event, was barred by the Statute of Limitations. A further claim of the defendant is that the particular provision of § 334c, subsection (e), upon which the court based its judgment, was not embraced in the allegations of the complaint.

The finding, on which no substantial attack is made, is as follows: Prior to 1880 there was, and ever since has been, in the city of New Haven a Roman Catholic charitable institution known as St. Francis Orphan Asylum dedicated to the care of orphans and neglected children. In 1879, the board of education of the city of New Haven pursuant to its duly passed vote, entered into an arrangement with the orphanage whereby it obtained the use of rooms in one of its institutional buildings for the purpose of establishing and maintaining a grammar school. The school was called the St. Francis Orphan Asylum School until 1934, when its name was changed by the board to ‘Highland Heights School.’ It has been maintained in the same building since 1879, which building is owned by the orphanage, a diocesan corporation having as its president the Roman Catholic bishop of the Hartford diocese. The building is not used exclusively for school purposes. There are eight rooms devoted to such purposes. Other rooms are used as a nun's waiting room, offices for two resident priests, a chapel for the celebration of religious exercises, and living quarters for nuns and priests. In another part of the building are dormitories where the inmates or pupils of the school live. Prayers are offered by them upon arising and before and after each meal; a retreat, lasting a week, is held for them once a year; and they attend mass on Sunday and on religious holidays. None of these religious exercises is held during the time allotted for school sessions. All of the inmates of the orphanage are of the Roman Catholic faith and all of them are required to attend the school except those who are too young or those who have completed their grammar school education and are attending local high schools, but the school has always been open to any child living in the neighborhood regardless of religious faith, and occasionally such children have been enrolled as pupils. The school day commences at 8:45 a. m. in conformity with the order of the board of education applying to all grammar schools in New Haven. An hour before, the pupils assemble in the classrooms and receive religious instruction from the nuns for one-half hour.

The teaching staff of the school consists of two lay women and eight nuns, and one of the latter is the principal. The nuns are attired in religious apparel while teaching and are employed as teachers because the practice conforms to the spirit of the orphanage. All of the teachers are appointed by the superintendent of schools of New Haven with the approval of the board of education and must be certified public school teachers. They are paid from the public treasury, their salaries being identical with those of similar classifications in the educational system of the city. They participate in the New Haven Teachers' Tenure and Retirement Acts. The board of education provides supplies for the school and the same textbooks which it uses in other grammar schools in the city, and the courses of study are those prescribed by the board for all schools. Special studies such as shopwork, manual training, physical education, art, cooking, sewing and music are conducted at times at the school by special supervisors who teach these subjects throughout the school system. Medical, nursing and dental care are provided in conformity with the practice in other grammar schools. The equipment in the classrooms conforms to the requirements of state law and the teachers keep standard registers required by the state board of education. A uniform type of diploma given at graduation exercises of grammar schools in the city is used. The school complies in all respects to the requirements of state law. At no time during the school sessions is any form of religious exercise permitted or given. The plaintiff, in addition to the school at the orphanage, maintains, among many others, grammar schools at the New Haven Orphan Asylum, the New Haven General Hospital and the Peabody Museum owned by Yale University.

At various times during the years 1933 through June, 1937, eighteen children were committed by the juvenile side of the City Court of Torrington to the Litchfield County temporary home and almost directly thereafter were ‘placed out’ by the proper authorities in the St. Francis Orphan Asylum where they attended the Highland Heights School. The trial court found the per capita expense of tuition in the school and gave judgment for the plaintiff based on that finding.

Chapter 54, of which § 334c is a part, lays down certain limited basic requirements for the conduct of the educational program and provides that no state aid shall be granted any town unless its schools have been kept according to law. Section 334c provides as follows: ‘Reimbursement for nonresident children. (a) Any town responsible for the support or education of a child attending school in a town other than the one in which he has a legal residence shall reimburse such other town for his tuition at the rate of the per capita expense of tuition in such school. * * * (e) The school expense of any child placed out from a county home shall be paid by the town from which he was committed.’

A preliminary contention of the defendant is that the complaint was predicated on subdivision (a) of § 334c and the court based its judgment on subdivision (e) without support in the pleadings. The allegations of the complaint are broad enough to sustain a recovery under either subdivision of the statute, and as, without seeking a more specific statement, the defendant saw fit to file a general denial and go to trial it could not thereafter object; see cases, Conn.App.Proc., §§ 25, 26. Moreover, the point was not raised in the trial court and so presents nothing for our present consideration. Practice Book, § 363. The issue of liability under subdivision (e) was a principal one in the trial of the case and was one properly considered by the trial court.

The defendant assumes that ‘legal residence’ as used in the statute is the equivalent of settlement. The domicil of a child is ordinarily that of his parents. Yarborough v. Yarborough, 290 U.S. 202, 211, 54 S.Ct. 181, 78 L.Ed. 269, 90 A.L.R. 924; 17 Am.Jur. 625. But in Kelsey v. Green, 69 Conn. 291, 37 A. 679, 38 L.R.A. 471, we held that, as regards the jurisdiction of a probate court to appoint a guardian for a minor, he resided where he had his actual stated dwelling place even if his domicil was in another state by reason of his father's residence there, and we said (69 Conn. at page 301, 37 A. at page 682): ‘In other sections of our statutes, generally, the word ‘reside’ is used in a sense which includes all who are the actual, stated dwellers in any given place, even though they may have a technical domicile elsewhere.' This, no doubt, is the sense in which the words ‘legal residence’ are used in subsection (a) of the act. To hold otherwise would be to attribute to the legislature, by the passage of that act, an intent to make a drastic change in the whole theory of our school laws, or else to bring about a lack of harmony in their various provisions. The present school law does not base the obligation of a town to educate its children upon settlement. Section 323c continues the ancient requirements that each year there shall be in each town an enumeration of the children who shall ‘belong to’ it, and the principal grant of state money to the towns is upon the basis of that enumeration, § 325c.

In Yale v. West Middle School District, 59 Conn. 489, 491, 22 A. 295, 13 L.R.A. 161, we held that legal residence for school purposes does not necessarily mean domicil, but rather a residence in the ordinary and popular meaning of the word; that the state is interested in having all of its children educated and has framed its school laws accordingly; and that (59 Conn. at page 492, 22 A. at page 296): ‘If any child is actually dwelling in any schooldistrict, so that some person there has the care of it, and is within the school age * * * then that child must go to the public school.’ The child ‘belongs to’ that town. It is in this sense that subdivision (e) of § 334c must be construed, that the town whose duty it is to provide schooling for the child is liable for the cost of his education to the town where, by reason of his commitment, he is required to go to school. The defendant town made no claim in the trial court that the children lacked such a residence in it. Its claim that the plaintiff was required to...

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