197 Mass. 468 | Mass. | 1908
In execution of the trust created by the will of Oliver Putnam, and under the enabling statute of incorporation, the private school for which he provided had been successfully founded and maintained. St. 1888, c. 85. At some period this school and the high school of the city of Newburyport had been unitedly administered, yet the arrangement for a joint administration does, not appear to have been perfected until the agreement and plan of co-operation were adopted and made permanent in 1885. If the educational functions of the united schools were substantially similar, the foundations upon which they rested were legally distinct. The high school maintained by the city was a public institution supported by taxation, and subject to the exclusive control of the school committee, while the Putnam Free School was a private institution maintained by the income derived from the fund, and subject only to the control and supervision of the trustees under' the act of incorporation. They could not delegate to the school committee the discharge of their fiduciary duties, nor could the committee
It was open, under the second count, however, for the jury to find, that the plaintiff had been originally elected at a salary of $2,000, which he understood had not been changed during the succeeding years, and although in the annual notice received from the committee, it was stated to be $1,600, this sum represented only the amount paid by the city, while the difference, until the last year, had been regularly paid to him by the defendant. Notwithstanding this, the contention is made that upon receiving the last notice he should have understood that his position for the year had become that of principal of the high school only, as the trustees were powerless either to dismiss or retain him, and, if he chose to remain, any services rendered in the instruction of private pupils was purely gratuitous. But it nowhere appears that he had any knowledge of the contents of the joint agreement, or ever received from the defendant any notification of their official action. In a general way, from the comment in the public press, his attention may have been called to some of the particulars of the meeting of the school committee, at which the defendant was represented, but this information also included the explicit statement, that the city solicitor, who was in attendance, advised that under the vote of the trustees his election as principal must be considered valid. While copies of the subsequent votes by which the defendant declined to pay any part of the salary were promptly sent to the committee, yet the plaintiff, who testified that he never had been aware of any dissatisfaction on the part of the trustees as a body, or possessed any direct information of their official action, remained unnotified. The general course of dealing previously followed, and his lack of any authoritative knowledge, due to the inaction of the defendant, would warrant a finding, that when the plaintiff began the term, he had reasonable cause to believe, that under a contract which in form of expression did not differ from those of former years, even if later it turned out to be binding only on the city, he was serving as the principal of both schools. After
The case, therefore, was properly submitted to the jury, and the verdict in favor of the plaintiff must stand. Van Deusen v. Blum, 18 Pick. 229. Zerrahn v. Ditson, 117 Mass. 553. Day v. Caton, 119 Mass. 513, 515. Worthington v. Plymouth County Railroad, 168 Mass. 474. Spencer v. Spencer, 181 Mass. 471.
Judgment for the plaintiff on the verdict.