There has been no change in the boundaries of the district since 1862. However organized, it was legalized by Gen. St., c. 78, s. 3. School-District v. Pillsbury,
Although the school-money was assessed and assigned to the district before the defendants were selectmen, having refused to pay it over to the prudential committee, they are liable. The money belongs to the district, it is in the town treasury subject to their order, and it is their duty to pay it to the prudential committee on demand. Any board of selectmen, who fail to assess, assign, or pay over the school-money, are liable under the statute. The statutes directing the immediate payment to the town treasurer of all money belonging to the town, do not relieve the selectmen of this liability. Their authority is not thereby abridged; the manner of its exercise is merely regulated. Laws of 1869, c. 26; Laws of 1872, c. 19; Laws of 1874, c. 85. The school-money is still subject to their order for its legitimate purposes, the same as before.
The school fund for which the selectmen were originally made responsible was derived from an assessment on the polls and taxable estate in the town. The town is now permitted to apply the fund derived from the dog-tax to the support of schools. When so applied, it becomes, in effect, a part of the school fund, assign able to the districts in the same proportion as the rest of the school fund, and there is no reason why the selectmen should not be under the same obligation as to its payment. The same is true of the literary fund. But in this case the plaintiffs are not entitled *Page 370 to any part of the literary fund, having maintained no school. G. L., c. 94, s. 7.
Judgment for the plaintiffs.
ALLEN, J., did not sit: the others concurred.
