Brownfield v. Tongate

109 S.W.2d 352, 1937 Tex. App. LEXIS 1131
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 20, 1937
DocketNo. 4791.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 109 S.W.2d 352 (Brownfield v. Tongate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brownfield v. Tongate, 109 S.W.2d 352, 1937 Tex. App. LEXIS 1131 (Tex. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

JACKSON, Chief Justice.

The record shows that the Red Onion Common School District was organized not later than the year 1917 and is composed of approximately 31½ sections of land all situated in Terry County, Tex. The existence of said district continued without any change in the boundaries thereof until August 6, 1935, on which date an attempt was made to detach 13 sections therefrom and attach said sections to the Union Independent School District of Terry County, Tex.

When the Red Onion School District was organized, all of the 31½ sections belong *353 ed to M. V. Brownfield and were used for grazing purposes. The record indicates that no trustees were ever appointed, elected, or served in said district, and it is conceded that said district had no property, money, or taxes, current or delinquent; that no school had been conducted therein for a period of five years prior to August 6, 1935, and fewer than ten children within the scholastic age resided in said district for the five years preceding said date; that the lands comprising the district are used almost entirely for grazing purposes, and the foreman of the ranch with his wife lives at the headquarters, and there were two or three families besides who resided in the district.

The Union Independent School District is situated in Terry County, duly organized, has school property, operates a public free school, has regularly elected and acting trustees, and owes a bonded indebtedness of $13,500, and the territory thereof is adjacent to the Red Onion School District. The trustees of the Union Independent School District made application to the duly elected qualified and acting County Board of School Trustees of Terry County to detach 13 sections of land from the Red Onion School District and attach such sections to the Union Independent School District, and, pursuant thereto, the County Board of School Trustees on August 6, 1935, considered such application, and by order granted the petition, and on September 2, 1935, thereafter, said order was amended by the County Board of School Trustees, and made sufficient, if valid, to detach the 13 sections from the Red Onion Common School District and attach them to the Union Independent School District.

On August 10, 1935, A. D. Brownfield, A. M. Brownfield, A. R. Brownfield, and Mrs. Effie B. Wilson, joined by her husband, Roscoe Wilson, as plaintiffs, instituted this action against the appellees, who constituted members of the County Board of School Trustees of Terry County, of whom O. K. Tongate was president, and also against the trustees of the Union Independent School District in their individual and official capacities, alleging the suit was brought as an original action against the defendants and also as an appeal from the order of the County School Board, and asked judgment decreeing the cancellation of such purported orders because void and illegal, and sought an injunction against said defendants restraining them permanently from putting into force and effect such orders.

The defendants urged as a defense the order made by the County School Board on August 6, 1935 and the amendment thereof on September 2d, thereafter; pleaded that such orders were valid and made for the best interest of the scholastics in the Red Onion School District, and also urged that the action of the County School Board of Terry County in detaching the 13 sections from the Red Onion School District and attaching said sections to the Union Independent School District had been validated by an act passed at the Second Called Session of the Forty-Fourth Legislature 1935, Senate Bill No. 19, chapter 460, page 1756 (Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St. art. 2742f note).

On September 4, 1936, the plaintiff suggested to the court the death of Roscoe Wilson, who was the husband of Mrs. Effie B. Wilson, now a widow, and the other plaintiffs were permitted to prosecute the suit in their own names. None of the plaintiffs were resident citizens of either school district.

Thereafter, the case was heard on its merits, and at a regular term of the court, on September 18, 1936, judgment was entered that the plaintiffs take nothing by this suit and the defendants go hence with their costs.

The validating act pleaded by appellees became effective November 14, 1935, and section 1 (article 2742f note) is as follows: “That all acts of any county board of school trustees in any county in the State of Texas with a population of not less than eight thousand eight hundred (8,800) and not more than eight thousand nine hundred and fifty (8,950), according to the last preceding Federal Census in laying out or attempting to establish, combine, abolish or change any independent or common school district in the county over which such county board of school trustees has jurisdiction, under and by virtue of Chapter 339, Acts Regular Session, Forty-fourth Legislature, 1935 (art. 2742f), or under Chapter 151, Acts Regular Session, Forty-fourth Legislature, 1935 (art. 2742m), are hereby in all things ratified, confirmed and validated, and that all elections held in any such county for the purpose of laying out, establishing, combining, abolishing or changing any such independent or common school district are also in all things ratified, confirmed and validated.”

*354 It will be observed that the provisions of the validating act limit its application to any county with a population of not less than 8,800 and not more than 8,950, according to the last preceding Federal Census, which referred, necessarily, to the Federal Census of 1930, an examination of which shows that Terry County had a population of 8,833, and, with the exception of Dimmitt County which had a population of 8,828, was the only county to which the act could apply. Under the authorities in this State it is apparently settled that a classification of counties, cities, or school districts based on population, in order to be valid, must not exclude the counties, cities, and school districts from the classification made which thereafter acquire the specified population.

Lewis’ Sutherland, Statutory Construction (2d Ed.) 397 et seq., and notes, is as follows: "A classification based upon existing or past conditions or facts and which would exclude the persons, places, things or objects thereafter coming into the same situation or condition, is special and void. Thus a classification of cities or counties based upon existing population or upon the population shown by specified census is of this character.” This, as we understand it, is the law announced in City of Fort Worth v. Bobbitt (Tex.Com.App.) 36 S.W.(2d) 470; Bexar County v. Tynan et al. (Tex.Civ.App.) 69 S.W.(2d) 193, affirmed (Tex.Com.App.) 97 S.W.(2d) 467.

Since under its provisions this act applied to Dimmitt and Terry Counties only and could never have affected any others, we conclude that Senate Bill No. 19 was a local law. The Legislature is permitted to provide for the formation of school districts by general laws only, Const. art. 7, § 3, and not by special laws, hence we are of the opinion that the Legislature was without authority to validate the order of the School Board of Terry County by such special act. Fritter, County Judge, et al. v. West et al. (Tex.Civ.App.) 65 S.W.(2d) 414.

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Bluebook (online)
109 S.W.2d 352, 1937 Tex. App. LEXIS 1131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brownfield-v-tongate-texapp-1937.