In October, 1871, Ransom C. Cox was elected sole trustee of the school district, and his term of office expired on the second Tuesday of October, 1872. In March of the latter year, he made an agreement with the plaintiff, hiring him to teach the district school for three terms, as follows: First term, of fourteen weeks, to commence March twenty-seventh ; second term, of fourteen weeks, to commence August nineteenth, and the last term, of sixteen weeks, to commence in-December. There was to be a short vacation after each term, and plaintiff was to receive sixteen dollars per week. Plaintiff taught the first two terms and was paid for them, the last *38 of said terms closing November twenty-third. At the annual school meeting on the second Tuesday of October, 1872, W. H. Sternberg was elected trustee of the district, and he held office until May thereafter, when the defendant, Ray, was appointed in his place. The trustee, Sternberg, refused to permit the plaintiff to teach the third term, and employed a new teacher for the school, and this action is brought by the plaintiff to-recover the damages sustained by him for the breach of the contract made with him by the trustee, Oox.
The main ground upon which this action is defended is, that the trustee, Oox, had no authority to hire a teacher for a period extending beyond his term of office, and this contention of the defendant presents the principal question for our consideration. - 1
School districts are
quasi
corporations, and trustees are officers of them, and when they act officially and within then* jurisdiction they bind the corporation which they represent, and their" legal contracts can be enforced against their successors in office.
(Silver
v.
Cummings,
The contention of the defendant would bé more plausible if there were a general rule that public officers could make contracts to continue only during their terms of office, but there is no such general rule; and as to officers who have general powers to contract, unless there is some limitation of their power, their contracts may extend beyond their terms, and bind their successors. The public exigencies demand that public officers should be clothed with such power, and protection against its abuse is found in official integrity, wMch is the rule rather than the exception, and also in the fact that contracts, the offspring of fraud or collusion,- may be safely repudiated.
The view thus taken of the statute is sanctioned by the opinion of a learned court in
Gillis
v.
Space
(
We have carefully examined the other exceptions to which our attention has been called, and it is sufficient to say of them that they are not well taken.
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
All concur, except Church, Ch. J., dissenting; Andrews, J., absent.
Judgment affirmed.
