Lemasters v. Board of Education of Grant District

141 S.E. 515, 105 W. Va. 81, 1928 W. Va. LEXIS 17
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 31, 1928
Docket5999
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 141 S.E. 515 (Lemasters v. Board of Education of Grant District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lemasters v. Board of Education of Grant District, 141 S.E. 515, 105 W. Va. 81, 1928 W. Va. LEXIS 17 (W. Va. 1928).

Opinion

Lively, Judge:

Plaintiff in error, Ruby LeMasters, brought an action of assumpsit for breach of contract against defendant Board of Education, in which she sought to recover $805.00 unpaid teacher’s salary and $12.50 institute attendance money. Judgment was for defendant. This writ followed.

The issues presented upon the trial, raised by the defendant’s pleas' of non-assumpsit and accord and satisfaction, were: (1) Did the plaintiff resign her position as teacher; and (2) if she did not resign, was she barred from maintaining this present action by acceptance of a contract to teach during *83 the next school year, in settlement of any claim against the hoard? Upon the submission of these issues to the jury, a general verdict for defendant was returned.

We will discuss first the question of the plaintiff’s alleged resignation. The evidence discloses that on September 30, 1925, the plaintiff, upon being informed by the president of the board of education that a petition had been filed with him asking for her removal, told the president that she would resign, and that same day she withdrew from the secretary of the board her contract and other papers that had been filed with him. It further appears that on September 30, 1925, the president of the board got in touch with the other two members who informally signified their 'willingness to accept the plaintiff’s resignation, which fact was communicated to her. Two days later, and before the defendant as a board had accepted the plaintiff’s tender of an offer to agree to a reeission of her contract, she notified the board that she had decided not to resign her position, and offered to file with the defendant’s secretary the papers she had withdrawn. However, the defendant took the position that the plaintiff had resigned, and appointed another teacher in her stead. It is clear that under these circumstances there was no resignation by the plaintiff, being an employee and not a public officer, she could not “resign” in the sense that the term is ordinarily used. However, she could offer to agree to a rescission of her contract, which offer when duly accepted by the proper authority would bring . about a termination of her contract of employment. She, in substance, desired to end the contract by mutual consent. She wanted to be relieved of the obligation by consent of her employer. That is the meaning of the “resignation,” so called. In the instant ease the plaintiff’s offer to “resign” was not accepted by the school board, a corporate body, acting as such, before the withdrawal of her offer. “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, al *84 though 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 [and the same rule would be applicable to the rescission of such a contract], 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.” Annotated note to Ryan v. Humphries, L. R. A. 1915 F, page 1047; Pa. L. R. Co. v. Board of Education, 20 W. Va. 360; sec. 45, chap. 45, Code.

Curtright v. Independent School District, etc., 82 N. W. (Iowa) 444, was a case in some respects similar to the instant one. There the plaintiff delivered to ■ the president of the-school board a writing in which he stated that, “I hereby tender my resignation as principal of schools. It has been made plain to me that the progress of the children is somewhat retarded by my position. To stand in their way would be an injustice to them. Therefore, in the interests of school harmony, I tender this, to take effect Friday evening, December 10th. Wishing my successor abundant success, I am the same F. D. Curtright.” The president of the board called a special meeting December 11th, and after the board had convened but before the tendered resignation had been acted upon, the plaintiff placed upon the secretary’s desk a writing, withdrawing his offer to resign. The board voted to accept the resignation, and plaintiff brought an action for breach of contract, and recovered in the trial court. In discussing the question of resignation, the Supreme Court of Iowa said:

Appellant’s first contention is that the paper of December 8th, ‘is in fact and in law a renunciation of the contract upon his part, and terminated all right of the plaintiff to in any manner enforce the contract.’ A number of authorities are cited to the effect that, having renounced the contract, the plaintiff cannot recover for the refusal on the part of the defendant to thereafter perform- it. We do not so construe.this writing. It is simply *85 a tender — an offer — to resign, to terminate the contract, and, until accepted, was not binding upon either party. If it had been accepted, both parties would have consented to the termination of the contract; but, if not accepted, both would continue to be bound by it. Being a mere offer, the plaintiff had the right to withdraw it at any time before it was acted upon by the defendant’s board, and this he did; wherefore it was as if no such offer or tender had been made, and at the same time the board acted it had no such offer to act upon. We do not think that this writing, nor the fact that the plaintiff drew the balance of pay due to him, nor that he delivered the key of the school house, on demand of the • board, prior to January 3d, shows an abandonment of the contract. He drew his pay to the end of the year because it was due him, and delivered up the key because it was demanded of him. The fact that the tender of resignation was handed to the' president, and retained by him, did not constitute an acceptance of it, as was the case of Gates v. Delaware Co., 12 Iowa, 405, for the reason that in this case it remained for the board to act upon the offer, while in that no further action was required. The principles involved in this inquiry are so elementary as to require no further citations.”

It is further contended by the defendant board, that whatever claim the plaintiff may have had against it was compromised and settled by the awarding of a contract to teach for another year in consideration of the plaintiff’s withdrawal of her suit against it. It is contended by the plaintiff that she did not enter into any such agreement with the board, but even if the evidence justified such a finding by the jury, the plaintiff would not be barred from maintaining the present action, because such a compromise would be contrary to public policy. .

Was such a contract void as against public policy? This Court said in Bias v. Atkinson, 64 W. Va. 486, quoting from 9 Cyc. 481, “ It is not easy to give a precise definition of public policy. It is perhaps correct to say that public policy is that principle of law which holds that no person can lawfully

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Bluebook (online)
141 S.E. 515, 105 W. Va. 81, 1928 W. Va. LEXIS 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lemasters-v-board-of-education-of-grant-district-wva-1928.