It appears from the averments of the petition filed in the court below that the defendant School District No. 18 of Sheridan County, on August 5, 1886, entered into a written contract with the Union School Furniture Company whereby it agreed to furnish the defendant with certain school furniture of the stipulated value of $150, payment to be made, at the option of the defendant, in cash on the delivery of the furniture or an order on the treasurer of the school district for said amount payable -on September 25, 1890; that the furniture was received by defendant and placed in the schoolhouse, and, pursuant to the terms and conditions of said contract, on October 18, 1886, the defendant issued to said Union School Furniture Company a warrant for $150, bearing interest at the rate of eight per cent per annum from the date thereof, payable September 25, 1890, and the plaintiff J. B. Markey is the present owner of said contract and order. A general demurrer to the petition was sustained by the district court, and the action dismissed. Plaintiff brings error.
The contract and order in question each required the amount therein specified to be paid at a date which had *481not then arrived. School district officers can contract for the furnishing of schoolhouses only with reference to money on hand and at the time available for that purpose. The officers of the school district possessed no authority to make a contract or give a district order payable at a future time. This principle has been frequently stated and applied by this court.. (School District v. Stough, 4 Neb. 360; State v. Sabin, 39 Neb. 570; Andrews v. School District of McCook, 49 Neb. 420; Pomerene v. School District, 56 Neb. 126.) It follows that the contract and order in question, at their inception, were illegal and void.
. It is argued that the contract is enforceable, because the same was subsequently ratified by the voters of the' district. The averment in the petition, on that point, is “that at a meeting of the voters of said defendant school district, held on the 4th day of October, 1887, the buying of said bill of school furniture, thereinbefore described, was ratified by said legal voters.” This is the statement of a mere conclusion, and not an allegation of an ultimate or issuable fact, and therefore a ratification of the contract was not sufficiently pleaded. There is also in the petition an averment to the effect that at a meeting of the legal voters of the district a proposition was unanimously carried to issue bonds to pay the debt sued for in the present action, and it is insisted, in argument, by counsel for plaintiff that this constituted a ratification of the action of the district board. The contract being void for want of authority to make the same, it was incapable of ratification by the school district, or the voters thereof, only upon the observance of the conditions essential to the making of a valid contract in the first instamce. (Gutta Percha & Rubber Mfg. Co. v. Village of Ogalalla, 40 Neb. 775; Tullock v. Webster County, 40 Neb. 211; Townsend v. Holt County, 40 Neb. 852.) These essential prerequisites to a legal contract the petition does not state were observed in the attempted or alleged ratification.
*482A recovery cannot be had in this case upon a quantum meruit, for the reason such cause of action, if it ever existed, arose, as disclosed by the petition, not later than October, 1886,' and the action was not instituted until February 4, 1895, more than eight years after the acceptance of the furniture by the defendant. The action was fully barred by the statute of limitations when the petition was filed in the court below. (Pomerene v. School District, 56 Neb. 126.) An action to recover for an implied assumpsit is barred in four years after the cause of action arose.
The petition alleges that certain letters were written to the plaintiff by a director of the defendant district acknowledging the validity of the indebtedness, and promising to pay the same. It is obvious that a single officer of a school district cannot bind the district by acts not authorized by the board, or the majority of the members thereof when convened and acting as a board. It is not alleged that the director had been previously authorized by the district or district board to write the letters relied upon to prevent the running of the statute of limitations. The defendant, therefore, is not bound by the acknowledgment of the debt by the director, or the mere promise made by him to pay the same. (People v. Peters, 4 Neb. 254.)
The demurrer to the petition was properly sustained. The judgment is
Affirmed.