15 Colo. 367 | Colo. | 1890
Upon sufficient proof of the contract, its breach and the damages sustained, the plaintiff was entitled
There is nothing whatever in the statute which gives the board the right to make a contract for a specific term, at a specified price, which shall not be subject to the legal consequences of a breach. The power of employment and discharge is not in terms beyond the control of the general law. It was always true that where a contract of hiring was entered into between two parties for a fixed period, at a definite price, the employee could not escape liability for a discharge without cause. If the contract was broken by the employer, a cause of action at once arose in favor of the one discharged, who might, upon the expiration of the period of hiring, recover the damages resulting from the breach. Ordinarily these are measured by the amount of the stipulated wages, though the recovery is- always subject to mitigation by proof either of earnings or their possibility.
The case, as made by the plaintiff, comes clearly within this well-established rule. He was hired for so many months at $70 per month, and discharged,, as shown by the record, without cause, and he brought this suit upon the expiration of the term of his employment for the wages unpaid and due from the day of discharge to the end of his term.
The appellant does not seriously controvert this well-established rule, nor offer any evidence to reduce the damages, but asserts, as a defense, the provision of the statute, that any person aggrieved by the decision of a district board of directors may, within thirty days from the rendition of the decision, or the making of the order, appeal to the county superintendent. Gen. St. § 3077.
It is contended that this section, ex vigore, ousted the courts of jurisdiction to hear and determine controversies of this character. This is not believed to be the law. In the absence of an imperative necessity, it should never be held that a tribunal which is incompetent to afford relief to the suitors, and which is regulated and restrained by none of the rules and methods of procedure essential to a satisfactory investigation, nor by those legal principles which are supposed to enter into and form a part of every contract, can oust the courts of the country of the jurisdiction and powers conferred upon them by the statutes and constitution. Our whole judicial system is at variance with the idea that, in the absence of specific, mandatory, legislative restrictions, the courts may not be appealed to, to determine^ the rights of contract between citizens, or between citizens and corporate bodies which the statutes have created. It might easily be conceded that there are certain classes of questions of which the board might well be given exclusive jurisdiction, and where the sole remedy in case of defeat would be by taking the appeal provided for by statute. In this case it is unnecessary to either define or limit that class of cases. The one under considera
No other defense of much importance was interposed by the school district. It set up a rule alleged to have been contained in the teacher’s hand-book which substantially provided that the tenure of office of all teachers, regardless of contract, should be at the pleasure of the board. Neither the rule nor its plea was of any value as a defense. It was utterly impossible for the board to make or publish any rule of that description which should be of the slightest force as to any contract of employment, for a definite period at a fixed rate, into which the board might enter. The rule
The judgment should be affirmed.
Richmond and Reed, CO., concur.
For the reasons stated in the foregoing opinion, the judgment affirmed.
Affirmed.