131 Ky. 537 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1909
Reversing.
By this action instituted against appellee in the court below, appellant sought to retain, as a teacher, possession of the sehoolhouse in, common school district 113, Pike county, and to teach the common school therein, which she . claimed to have been legally employed to do by a written contract made with the trustees of the district before beginning the school. It was alleged in the petition that although appellant had been in possession of the sehoolhouse and conducting -the school for a month under employment of the trustees, two of whom had signed tin? contract by which she had secured the right to teach it, the appellee wrongfully and forcibly attempted to obtain possession of the sehoolhouse- and to oust her therefrom and deprive her of the right to teach the school, under a claim of having himself been employed by two of the trustees to teach it. At the time of filing the petition appellant obtained a temporary restraining order to prevent appellee from interferring with her possession of the sehoolhouse and depriving her of th'e school. The appellee’s answer contained a traverse of such of the averments of the petition as set forth appellant’s- employment and right to teach the school and charged him with the use of force in trying to get possession of the sehoolhouse. and alleged : That the contract under which she claimed to have been employed to teach' the school was void; that one of the two- alleged' trustees of the district whose name appeared to the contract was .without authority to enter into the same and was at the time illegally acting as a trustee and disqualified under
The record' contains an agreed statement of the facts out of which the controversy arose, which are few and simple. Appellant was employed by the trustees to teach the school. Two' of the then acting trustees of the district, M. D. E. Greer and U. M. Johnson, signed the contract, but the third trustee, J. M. Sanders, did not do so: Appellant was put in possession of the schoolhouse and in charge of the school, which she began at the time fixed by her contract with the trustees, and taught for a month, and until interfered with by the appellee. There was no complaint of her
It must be admitted that the offices were incompatible, for the law mates them so, and the courts have held' that both can not be held at the same time by one person; but, notwithstanding that fact, M. D. L. Greer was during the entire time of his exercise of the duties of the office of school trustee a de facto officer. Manifestly, he was not a usurper,- for he did not intrude upon the office and without color of right assume to exercise its functions. On the contrary, he was appointed to it by the county superintendent of schools, a superior officer of the same government, who had the authority to fill the vacancy that then* existed in the office by appointment, though without power to appoint an ineligible person; but, having done so, by the long-continued performance by the appointee, of the duties of the office, with the approval of the superintendent, the other trustees, and the acquiescence of the public, he became a de facto trustee. In M-echem on Public Officers, section 321, it is said: “Contra-distinguished from the officer de facto, is the mere usurper, or intruder, who is one who has intruded upon the office and assumed to. exercise its functions without either the lawful title or the color of right to it. His acts therefore are entirely void. He may, however, as- is stated in the last section, grow into an officer de facto, if his assumption of the office is acquiesced in.” We are further told by the same learned author, in section 324: “Where the law has provided that the office may legally be filled, then the
Testing the acts of M. D. L. Greer, while assuming to perform- the duties of a- school trustee, by the doctrine announced by the authorities, supra-, we must conclude that he was a de facto trustee a.t the time of the .employment of appellant to teach the school in question, and as the written contract evidencing her employment was in due form and agreed to and signed by M. D. L. Greer and U. M. Johnson, the first a de facto and the second a de jure trustee, and the two constituted a majority of the hoard of trustees of the school district, it was binding upon the board of trustees and the district as well. Therefore
Wherefore the judgment is reversed, and cause remanded, with direction to the lower court to set aside the judgment appealed from, and in lieu thereof enter another giving appellant possession of the* schoolhouse and adjudging her entitled to teach'the common school in district 113, Pike county, for and during the term for which she was employed under her contract with Greer and Johnson, and enjoining appellee from interfering with her right to do so-.