Eastman v. District Township of Rapids
This text of 21 Iowa 590 (Eastman v. District Township of Rapids) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
[593]*593And in thus holding, there is the less difficulty, from the fact that the board did afterward, after a full hearing of both parties and all the testimony, ratify and confirm the action of the sub-director. This leaves but two questions. The one is, Was she properly dismissed the school ? If not, then secondly, Is she entitled to recover the contract price for the whole time fixed by the contract, or only at that rate for the time she taught, with damages resulting from the breach of the contract ?
We auswer the first inquiry in the affirmative, and this renders a response to the second unnecessary. The testimony satisfies us that the director had a clear right, by the terms of the contract, to dismiss plaintiff, and that there was such failure on her part to fulfill said contract as to justify his interposition.
It may be even conceded that plaintiff was not unfaithful in the discharge of her duties, and still the ruling should have been the other way. The fair inference is that the school was different, in the size of the scholars, many of them being larger than she had been accustomed to teach, and though she had the promised aid of the school officers, she could and did not control the school. In other words, she undertook more than she was able to accomplish.
This she could not know in advance, nor could any one very well. But though she was ever so faultless in her efforts, if she could not manage the school, and because of this inability “ the school was a failure,” “ the scholars were not subject to her control,” “ did not learn,” as the witnesses in these various forms express it, there was no obligation on the director to continue the school under her instruction, but upon being satisfied of these facts he could properly declare her engagement at an end.
We do not propose to refer to the testimony leading us to this conclusion. It is sufficient to say that there is no [594]*594conflict when we refer to the testimony of the scholars. Nor is there little, if any, when we refer to those sending to the school. In addition to this we have the deliberate action of'the sub-director, who seems to have made the order after a careful and candid examination of all the circumstances. After this the directors of the district made a like inquiry, having testimony from both sides, and reached the same conclusion. Without giving to this action any thing like conclusive weight, we nevertheless give it much consideration,, as we should in examining such a question. These local tribunals — acting, it is true, as the officers of the district, and yet 'really personally disinterested — must necessarily and properly, while acting within the scope of their powers, be invested with a large discretion, and great weight is deservedly due to their action. And in a case where we have the concurrent action of the board and sub-directoiy sustained by the decided weight of the testimony, the safer rule, a rule due alike to the interest of schools and warranted by the language and reason of the law, is to sustain the local tribunals. And our opinion, therefore, is that the court below erred in finding for the plaintiff to the full amount of her claim.
The cause will be reversed and remanded for trial de novo, unless plaintiff shall elect to accept the amount offered to be paid by defendant, in which event the court below will make the proper order on the subject of costs.
Reversed.
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21 Iowa 590, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eastman-v-district-township-of-rapids-iowa-1866.