67 Vt. 150 | Vt. | 1894
The replication to the statute of limitations is demurred to. The replication seeks to bring the case within the statute that if, in an action commenced within the time limited, the writ fails of a sufficient service or return by unavoidable accident or by fault or neglect of the officer to whom it is committed, or is abated, the plaintiff may commence a new action for the same cause within a year; and it alleges, in effect, that this plaintiff seasonably commenced a former action for the same cause, and that the writ therein was served on the defendant only fifteen days before the return day, and that for that reason the defendant, being a corporation and therefore entitled to at least
The replication is not good as constituting an answer to the plea on the ground of a failure of sufficient service of the writ in the former action, for it does not allege that such failure was by unavoidable accident, nor by fault or neglect of .the officer to whom the writ was committed, as was necessary, to bring the case within the'statute.
Nor is the replication good as constituting an answer to the plea on the ground of abatement of the former action, for the abatement was caused solely by reason of the failure of service, and it would be illogical to give the abatement greater effect as an answer to the plea than is given to the thing that alone caused the abatement, such thing itself being, when occasioned as mentioned in the statute, substantive ground for allowing another action to be brought.
The offer to show that for eight or nine years the district had used this same form of warning in respect to having scholars instructed out of the district, was properly excluded. The statute required that warnings for school district meetings should specify the business to be transacted or question to be considered at such meetings. This warning contained nothing upon the subject of having scholars instructed out of the district, and usage could not supply the defect. The powers of the district being wholly statutory, they could not be enlarged nor diminished by proof of usage, x Dillon’s Municipal Corp., 2ded., 356. Abuses of power and violations of rights derive no sanction from time nor usage. Hood v. Mayor of Lynn, 1 Allen, 103.
The vote to have the scholars instructed out of the district being void, the plaintiff, as prudential committee, was at liberty to “appoint and agree with a teacher to instruct” a school in the district; and the question is whether he could
The parents in the district sent their children to school without objection, and the plaintiff kept the school register properly and duly returned it to the town clerk’s office, and the district drew public money according to the attendance that term ; and the question arises whether by reason of these things, or of any and which of them, the district became liable to the plaintiff for his services. If it did, it was upon the ground of assent and ratification.
It is said that when work done for a corporation without
Judgment reversed, demurrer sustained, replication adjudged insufficient, and cause remanded.