62 Mich. 153 | Mich. | 1886
Plaintiff sued defendant for a balance of wages as teacher, his contract, as he claims, being for $104, and the amount paid him being $52.
The chief controversy was upon the validity of the contract, and the right to recover at all. The circuit court took the case from the jury, and ordered a verdict for the defendant.
Under our previous decisions, we think several errors were committed. The plaintiff showed a contract entered in a book kept'by the district, signed by the director and assessor, but not by the moderator. The handwriting of both officers was shown, but it appeared they did not sign at the same time.
It was held in Everett v. Fractional School Dist. No.2 of Cannon Tp., 30 Mich. 249, that simultaneous signing was not necessary, and the contract, -therefore, was sufficient on its face, and was admissible in evidence. We do not think any stronger testimony is required in school matters than in other ■ corporate agreements, where a contract within the ordinary powers of the corporation is always presumed valid when regularly signed.
It is the business of school districts to keep up public schools, and it is the duty of the officers to provide teachers, and to make contracts with them. It is their duty to know under what conditions a teacher, whom they know to be teaching, claims to act. Plaintiff had a right to suppose his contract was a valid one when it was signed by a sufficient number of officers and he was, with the personal knowledge of the whole board, permitted, and apparently encouraged, •to proceed. A contract valid on its face, actually carried out in full with the acquiescence of all concerned, cannot be subsequently repudiated. The board cannot, by abstaining from holding meetings, and from doing its duty, set up its own wrong in defense of an honest claim. This case is within the principle of the recent case of Crane v. Bennington School Dist., 61 Mich. 299, where questions quite analogous were raised. We cannot but regret that any of our schools should be managed in the spirit shown on this •record.
The judgment must be reversed, with costs, and. a .new ¡trial granted. > •
See Eureka Iron & Steel Works v. Bresnahan, 60 Mich. 332.