Appellants, professional employes of the Greater Conemaugh Jfeint School District, claimed additional compensation m the rate of $200 per annum which was denied by the joint school board. Thereupon, they took an appeal to the Superintendent of Public Instruction who affirmed the decision of the joint school board. Subsequently an appeal from the order of the Superintendent of Public Instruction was taken to this court.
Appellants had been professional employes of the Conemaugh Township School District prior to the date of the merger of that school district with the East Conemaugh Borough School District, thus forming the Greater Conemaugh Joint School District.
On March 11,1955, the jointure agreement between the borough and the township school district was signed. This agreement provided that all professional employes should retain their status “without any salary decrease”.
On March 25, 1955, in, spite of the prior execution of the jointure agreement which provided that the joint school board should have control of all professional employes, the township board alone issued contracts to appellants increasing their salary by $200 per annum.
On July 5, 1955, the joint school board authorized a $200 cost of living bonus to all professional employes of the joint school district including appellants as well as those who had been employed by the borough school district prior to the jointure.
On July 25, 1955, contracts were issued to appellants and all other employes of the joint school district whereby appellants received the $200 cost of living bonus in addition to the mandatory increment. A similar bonus was granted to appellants and the other professional employes for the succeeding school year.
Appellants now contend that the stipulation contained in the jointure contract to the effect that, all professional employes should retain their status “without any salary decrease” should be interpreted to mean that the joint school board has agreed to pay the same salaries to appellants that the township school board
Appellants Suggest that if they had remained in the township’s employ, that is if there had been no jointure, they would have been able to compel the township board to pay the $200 increase referred to in the resolution of February 28, 1955. This is correct. But the township board did enter into the jointure. It passed a resolution to that effect on February 28,1955, prior to granting the salary increase and it actually signed the contract of jointure prior to issuing the contracts to appellants reflecting the increase. Certainly, after signing the jointure contract, the township board had no power to issue employment contracts
Certainly appellants have not suffered a “demotion” as contended. They received not .only the salary they received for the prior year but also the mandatory increment and the $200 cost of living bonus. Moreover, the resolution of the joint school board creating the cost of living bonus was passed on July 5, 1955, prior to the time appellants signed their salary contracts with the joint school board. We agree with the reasoning in the opinion of the Superintendent of Public Instruction that: “. . . appellants, therefore, had full knowledge of all the circumstances when they agreed to the compensation recited therein. On signing the above agreement, the board thus became bound only to pay the amount stated, and appellants were only entitled to demand the bargain for which they contracted, and no more.” We, therefore, enter the following
Decree
And now, January 20, 1959, at 9 a.m., after argument and upon due consideration the appeal is dismissed at the cost of appellants and the order of the Superintendent of Public Instruction sustaining the decision of the Greater Conemaugh Joint School Board is affirmed.
