Newton v. Town of Hamden

64 A. 229, 79 Conn. 237, 1906 Conn. LEXIS 35
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJuly 30, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 64 A. 229 (Newton v. Town of Hamden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Newton v. Town of Hamden, 64 A. 229, 79 Conn. 237, 1906 Conn. LEXIS 35 (Colo. 1906).

Opinion

Prentice, J.

The plaintiff sues to recover for his' services rendered and expenses' incurred as an attorney at law in the defense of an action- in the courts of this State. To his substituted complaint as it stood after certain of its allegations had been expunged upon motion, a demurrer was filed and sustained. This action of the court in sustaining the demurrer is assigned as error, The demurrer in terms specifies various reasons of demurrer. In substance, however, these reasons resolve themselves into two, to wit :t (1) because it appears that the services and expenses for which recovery was sought were of such a character that the defendant could not lawfully assume to pay therefor; and (2) because it did not appear that the deféndant had ever, by its own action or by that of any authorized agency, employed the plaintiff or agreed to pay him, or assumed to do so by the approval of his bill rendered.

The action which the plaintiff appeared to defend was one, as the complaint discloses, which was brought by *239 one Maud Hough, a former teacher in one of the public schools maintained by the defendant herein as a consolidated school district, against one Cook, a member of the town school committee, one Clarke, another member of said committee and an acting school visitor, and one Foote, an acting school visitor not a member of the committee. It alleged a conspiracy between said three defendants to force the plaintiff out of her position as teacher in said' school. The facts which furnished the foundation for this action are in the present complaint alleged in substance to have been that rumors derogatory to the moral fitness of said teacher, and charging her with misconduct in the school, having come to the ears of said Cook, Clarke and Foote, the latter two, as acting school visitors, made inquiries and visited said school for the purposes of investigation; that as the result of these inquiries and that investigation, and notwithstanding her denial, they became satisfied that she had misconducted the school as charged; that they then informed her of that fact, and in view of it and her denial suggested a further investigation or her resignation, and that she thereupon resigned. It is alleged that the action which said Cook, Clarke and Foote took in the premises was taken in good faith and in the performance of their duties as school officers, and that it was pleaded in defense of said action that it was so taken.

The first question presented is whether or not this défendant could lawfully indemnify the defendants in a suit so brought for the expense incurred by them in its defense, or, what amounts to the same thing, assume the burden of its defense. Cushing v. Stoughton, 6 Cush. (Mass.) 389; Cullen v. Carthage, 103 Ind. 196, 2 N. E. 571. The law regulating this subject is well settled in this jurisdiction. “ The officer or agent of a municipal corporation may be legally indemnified, provided he has acted in good faith in the discharge of his official duty in a matter in which the corporation has an interest and with respect to a duty imposed or authorized by law.” Gregory v. Bridgeport, 41 Conn. 76, 84. In Hotchkiss v. Plunkett, 60 Conn. 230, 234, *240 22 Atl. 535, the same principle is restated, but in. different language more clearly bringing out the three conditions which must coexist, to wit: first, that the officer must have been acting in a matter in which the corporation had an interest; second, that he must have been acting in the discharge of a duty imposed or authorized by law; and third, that he must have acted in good faith. We have but to ''apply these tests to the facts alleged in the complaint.

The defendant had assumed the control of the public schools within its limits. By virtue of such assumption it had come under a duty imposed by statute. This duty involved the maintenance of proper schools according to certain prescribed standards and under certain prescribed conditions. This duty of maintenance, and the financial burden incident thereto, included that of paying the salaries of teachers. Maud Hough, therefore, before her resignation, was in the pay of the town and in the conduct of a public institution whose support came from the town treasury. In its corporate capacity, therefore, as charged with the duty of maintaining a proper school and as expending its funds to support her as a teacher and her school, it had a very direct interest in seeing that a proper school was kept by her, and that its moneys paid out to her and in the maintenance of her school were not wasted or worse than wasted by being made to serve improper ends through her unfitness or misconduct. Cullen v. Carthage, 103 Ind. 196, 198, 2 N. E. 571.

In towns which have assumed control of the schools, the law makes the town school committee the agency charged with the duty of seeing that the required means of public instruction are provided, and proper instruction given. To the end that there may be no failure in this public dutjq they are clothed with large powers and vested with important duties. They are required to see that good public schools are maintained in the various parts of the town, and empowered to examine, employ and dismiss teachers therefor. General Statutes, § 2218. They are directed to appoint, from within or without their number, acting school visitors *241 upon whom the statutes impose important functions of visitation, inspection, report and recommendation. General Statutes, §§ 2165, 2166. It is clear that Cook and Clarke as committeemen, and Clarke and Foote as school visitors, were, upon the facts alleged, acting within their plain duty as such officials in the investigation which they set in motion or undertook for the purpose of ascertaining the fitness and propriety of conduct of one of the town’s teachers, against whom disparaging rumors were abroad. Nor can it be said that because two of them, who were making a personal investigation at the school, informed the teacher of its conclusion as to the truth of certain charges to which their inquiry had led them, and then suggested to her that in view of her denial a further investigation should be had unless she saw fit to voluntarily resign, they so transcended their powers as to make their action individual and not official. They, it is true, had no power of dismissal. They did not have the power of final judgment. The limits of their power were investigation and report to the commitee. But they did not undertake to either pass judgment or dismiss. They simply gave information. This information, so far as appears, concerned only their personal conclusions and their future personal action as investigators. So far as appears, it may well have been information requested or volunteered in the teacher’s interest. There is nothing to indicate coercion, or attempts at action. The situation presented in the complaint is therefore not one of which it can be said that official power was exceeded or official duty transcended.

The allegation of the complaint that the action of these officials was in good faith, disposes of the third condition, so that it appears that those reasons of demurrer whichtfall into the first one in our classification of them were not well assigned.

The trial court did not pass upon the reasons of demurrer which belong to the second group.

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Bluebook (online)
64 A. 229, 79 Conn. 237, 1906 Conn. LEXIS 35, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/newton-v-town-of-hamden-conn-1906.