24 Mich. 350 | Mich. | 1872
This case originated in a justice’s court where the defendants in error obtained judgment. The plaintiff in error thereupon appealed to the circuit court, and the case being there tried without a jury, it resulted- as before, and the district brought error. The case was decided in the circuit court, upon a state of facts agreed upon, and the amount involved was substantially fixed by such statement at the sum specified in the judgment. The ground of defense was that the district was not liable at all.
It appears that in 1865, Snell was director, Booker moderator, and one Bemis, assessor of the district, and that having no books for district records, except one made cff foolscap sewed or pinned together and nearly full, these officers purchased for the district, on the recommendation of the superintendent of public instruction, a set of bound books and some blanks, known as “ Adams’ System of School Records.” The price was thirty-four dollars, which the district admits was the fair value, and there is no complaint that the books were not suitable for the purpose for which they were procured, and it is not pretended that the district was properly supplied with paper, blanks and record materials, at the time of the purchase. An order was drawn for the price, with interest at ten per cent., on the town
The necessity for clear, full and orderly kept records of the doings of school districts, is too palpable to require statement or explanation; and if there were no legislative regulations on the subject, the patent and unanswerable reasons for the preservation, in a suitable and durable form, of apt memorials of the organization and proceedings of these bodies, would require that appropriate books and blanks should be provided by somebody; and as the districts would naturally be the owners and controllers of their records, and strictly speaking the parties solely benefited, and as no one else would be under any. duty to furnish the books and blanks without compensation, it would seem to follow on general grounds, that the districts would be justly liable for the true value of necessary books and papers when obtained.
The articles here in question have been used for the
This dilemma affords an argument in favor of the view that if the statute were silent on the subject it would be for the board, or some member of it, in the exercise of a just discretion, to determine what record books and blanks and paper were necessary in the absence of any direction by the district, and to procuré them at the expense of the district. The .statute, however, is not silent on this subject. It is true that it contains no specific directions in precise and express terms as to the number or quality of the books to be provided, or as to the quantity and quality of paper and blanks to bo furnished, or as to the cost of these things. Neither does it point out in express words the number or kinds of pails or brooms to be provided, or the prices which may be paid for them. Any such minute regulations would be unwise if not impracticable. The law, therefore, in general terms in some cases, and by implication in others, confers the power, and imposes the duty, and leaves the details to the sound discretion of the director, to be exercised according to the circumstances of individual occasions. The fourth section of the primary-school law requires the' director first chosen, and before any funds are provided, and without any vote of the electors, to provide a book “ at the expense, of the district,” and therein to record the notice for the first meeting as “a part of the records of the district.”
By section five the director is required to record the
The director appears to be the officer specially intrusted with this power and made subject to the duty connected with it; and the exercise of the power and the performance of the duty necessarily require the exercise, of an honest judgment and discretion; and when this discretion is not abused or exceeded the district is bound. As already intimated, the defense here is based upon an alleged want of power, and not upon any imputed abuse of authority; and as the power existed, we may properly-defer any consideration of the legal consequences of an abuse or stretch of discretion given to the director until a case is presented which demands it.
According to the facts stated in the record, the district
But it is objected that the court erred in refusing to pass specially upon some of the points of law presented on the part of the plaintiff in error under the eighty-seventh rule of the circuit courts, and likewise in some of the findings of law upon the facts. The court seems to have passed upon all the points which were material, and nothing more was necessary. And it is a matter of no legal consequence upon this record whether the court- correctly or incorrectly stated the law upon some of the propositions relied on as leading to 'the ultimate result, since the final conclusion was such as a true view of the facts and law really required. If any fault was committed in the preliminary findings they worked no legal prejudice to the district and cannot be regarded on this writ of error.
The judgment should be affirmed with costs.