Landers v. Board of Education of Town of Hot Springs

116 P.2d 690, 45 N.M. 446
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 13, 1941
DocketNo. 4580.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 116 P.2d 690 (Landers v. Board of Education of Town of Hot Springs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Landers v. Board of Education of Town of Hot Springs, 116 P.2d 690, 45 N.M. 446 (N.M. 1941).

Opinion

SADLER, Justice.

The plaintiff (appellant) sued defendant board of education for breach of an alleged contract with her under which she was to serve as principal of the high school at the town of Hot Springs for the four-year period beginning September 1, 1937, and ending June 30, 1941, at an annual salary of $2,000. After trial, the court rendered judgment for the defendant and the plaintiff appeals.

The defendant board met in regular session on April 13, 1937, with all members present. During the formal session of the board, the matter of plaintiff’s employment was not discussed. Following adjournment of the meeting, however, and after two of the members had departed, the contract here involved was prepared by plaintiff’s former husband (the retiring superintendent of schools at Hot Springs) and the blanks for the term and salary to be paid filled in by him. He then presented the contract to the three remaining members of the school board who signed the same in the name and on behalf of said board.

These recitations of fact conform to the court’s findings touching the matters mentioned., Certain other findings follow:

“V. The Court further finds that the plaintiff in this case, after having the contract signed by three of its members, who the Court finds, were not in regular session, proceeded to get the signatures of the remaining two members two or three days after said so-called meeting.
“VI. The Court further finds that the plaintiff accepted employment under and by virtue of said contract during the month of September, 1937, and performed her duties up and until the end of said school term.
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“VIII. The Court further finds that the plaintiff is duly qualified under the laws' of the State of New Mexico to teach school in said State.
“The Court further finds that the school authorities and the Board of Directors refused to allow the said plaintiff to further teach school and that the Superintendent so advised her that her services had terminated.
“IX. The Court further finds that no charges were filed against said plaintiff as provided by law, nor that she was given a hearing.”

The court concluded on these findings that the contract was invalid, saying: “That said contract entered into by and between the three members of the Board and the plaintiff was not binding upon said municipality and that the plaintiff is not entitled to compensation or damages by and under the terms of said contract, in that the contract was handed to her after an adjourned meeting by the remaining members.”

We are asked to determine the validity of this contract as finally executed. It had none. The power to employ and discharge teachers for municipal schools is reposed in municipal boards of education, N.M.S.A.1938 Supp., §§ 120-906 and 120-804. And where a duty is intrustéd to a board composed of different individuals, the board can act officially only as such, in convened session, with all the members or a quorum' thereof present. The informal, separate and individual action of a majority of the board, or even of- its entire personnel, will not suffice to bind it. 24 R.C.L. 615, § 72, “Schools”; 56 C.J. 389, § 316, “Schools”; Case note: “Employment of teacher by school board without formal meeting”, L.R.A.1915F, 1047; State v. Kelly, 27 N.M. 412, 202 P. 524, 21 A.L.R. 156; Aikman v. School District No. 16, 27 Kan. 129; Dunfield v. School District No. 72, 138 Kan. 800, 28 P.2d 987; Board of Education v. Watts, 19 Ala.App. 7, 95 So. 498, certiorari denied Ex parte Watts, 209 Ala. 115, 95 So. 502; School District No. 39 v. Shelton, 26 Okl. 229, 109 P. 67, 138 Am.St.Rep. 962; City of Tulsa v. Melton, 175 Okl. 581, 54 P.2d 159; Cloverdale Union High School Dist. v. Peters, 88 Cal.App. 731, 264 P. 273; Barnhardt v. Gray, 15 Cal.App.2d 307, 59 P.2d 454; Crawford v. Board of Education, 215 Ill.App. 198; Shortal v. School Directors of District No. 27, 255 Ill.App. 89; Harris v. Joint School District No. 6, 202 Wis. 519, 233 N.W. 97.

The author of the annotation in L.R.A.1915F, 1047, begins his review of the cases with a declaration which we think fairly represents the state of the law on the subj ect. The declaration follows:

“It is an elementary principle that, when several persons are authorized to-perform a public service, or to do an act of a public nature, as an organized body, which requires deliberation, they should be convened in a body, that they may have the counsel and advice of every member, although they are not all of the same opinion as to the matter in hand. Accordingly, the great weight of authority is to the effect that, in order for a school board to bind the district in ■ the employment of teachers, it is necessary that the members of the board act as a board, and that to do so it is imperative that all meet together, or at least be notified of such meeting, and have an opportunity to meet together, to consult over the employment of such teachers.”

In State v. Kelly, supra [27 N.M. 412, 202 P. 532, 21 A.L.R. 156], we accepted as a matter of course counsel’s argument that such is the true rule. We said: “It is argued, and correctly, that, where a duty is intrusted to a board composed of different individuals, that board can act officially only as such, in convened session, with the members, or a quorum thereof present.”

The same view is expressed in Williams v. Board of Commissioners, 28 Mont. 360, 72 P. 755, 756, where the court said: “To bind the county by its contracts, it must act as an entity, and within the scope of its authority. Its members may not discharge its important governmental functions by casual sittings on drygoods boxes, or by accidental meetings on the public streets; and its chairman, unless lawfully authorized by the board to do some act, or acts, has no more power than has any other member of the board. The statutes do not vest the power of the county in three commissioners acting individually, but in them as a single board; and the board can act only when legally convened.”

Some of the cases we have cited, it is true, involve statutes requiring official business to be transacted at formal sessions of the board or denying the right to transact it otherwise. They merely declare the general rule of decision obtaining in the absence of statutory direction. The reason for the rule is well supported by considerations of sound public policy.' “All the benefit, in short, which can flow from the mutual consultation, the experience and knowledge, the wisdom and judgment of each and all the members, is endangered by any other rule.” Paola & Fall River Railway Co. v. Commissioners of Anderson County, 16 Kan. 302.

We conclude that the so-called four-year contract, attempted to be entered into between the plaintiff and the five members of the board, acting individually, does not bind the defendant school district as a contract valid when executed. The trial court was correct in so holding. If then, the plaintiff is to prevail, it must be on the theory of ratification, next to be considered.

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Bluebook (online)
116 P.2d 690, 45 N.M. 446, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/landers-v-board-of-education-of-town-of-hot-springs-nm-1941.