Carlile v. Peevy

138 S.W.2d 233
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 15, 1940
DocketNo. 2276.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 138 S.W.2d 233 (Carlile v. Peevy) 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
Carlile v. Peevy, 138 S.W.2d 233 (Tex. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinions

TIREY, Justice.

Mrs. L. E. Peevy, joined pro forma by her husband, brought this suit for mandamus to compel appellant, Miss Shelma Car-lile, County Superintendent of Public Schools for Freestone County, Texas, to approve a contract of employment made by a majority of the trustees of Pyburn Common School District No. 30 in Freestone County with appellee as an' elementary teacher for a term of seven consecutive months for the school term of. 1939-40. The cause was tried before the court without the intervention of a jury and the court ordered the writ of mandamus to issue, requiring the appellant to approve the contract. This is an appeal from said judgment.

Plaintiff’s petition is ample to support the judgment awarded to her. A plea of intervention was filed by the Pyburn Common School District, by and through a majority of its trustees, in which they set out that they entered into the written contract in question with the plaintiff to teach in said school, and they adopted the pleadings of plaintiff on which she went to trial, and asked that plaintiff’s contract be approved, and that she have judgment as prayed for in her pleadings. The defendant answered substantially to the effect that in refusing to approve the contract in question she acted in her official capacity and in the discharge of her duties as such, and in doing so she exercised that discretion vested in her by the statutes of the State of Texas, and that she was not acting arbitrarily nor dictatorily, but was acting for reasons deemed by her to be good and sufficient. She further averred that the said District had been classified by the County Board as an eleven grade school, which classification was and is necessary in order to include all pupils in said District remaining untransferred, thereby giving said school the greatest number of scho-lastics possible, and averring that appellee holds a certificate entitling her to teach in the “elementary grades” only. She further alleged that the contract in question was ill-advised and that it would entail a waste of public funds, and that her refusal to approve same was and is to the best interests of the pupils, patrons, taxpayers and citizens of Pyburn Common *234 School District No. 30 in Freestone County, Texas.

The court in its judgment found substantially the following facts: That on the 26th of April, 1939, the said School District, acting by and through a majority of its school board, made a written contract with plaintiff, employing her as an elementary teacher in said school for a term of seven consecutive months of the school term for the year 1939-40, at a salary of $595; that said contract is in the regular form prescribed, and that said contract is legal as to both form and substance;- that plaintiff is the holder of a valid permanent first grade1 teacher’s certificate; that she is a person of good moral character and. is in every way qualified to teach in the elementary grades of the public schools, and that she is an efficient teacher; that said School District was by the County School Board of Freestone County duly classified to teach the elementary grades for the school year 1939-40; that before the execution of the written contract in question said school board, acting by a majority of its trustees, decided that only the elementary grades would be taught in said school for white children for the year 1939-40 school term; that plaintiff duly filed her teacher’s certificate and her teacher’s contract with the county superintendent, as provided by law, and that the county superintendent, on the 2d of October, 1939, without legal excuse and without legal cause but acting arbitrarily, did disapprove said written contract; that plaintiff duly appealed to the County School Board of Trustees for Freestone County, Texas, and that said Board considered said appeal and in acting thereon failed and refused to order the superintendent to approve said contract and did make and enter an order affirming the action of the county superintendent in disapproving said written contract; that plaintiff elected to appeal from the decision of the county board to the District Court of Freestone County, and that she duly perfected her appeal to said court; that the approving of the written contract in question will not create a deficiency in the school fund of said common school district; that at the time of the execution of the written contract in question neither the plaintiff nor the trustees who executed the contract for said Board knew that any of the patrons of said District desired that said school be contracted for the said term to. an adjoining school district, and that the contract in question was made in good faith; that the plaintiff is the only teacher employed by said school district to teach the elementary grades of the white school; that the school board instructed the plaintiff to begin teaching on October 2, 1939, and has been since said date engaged in the performance of her contract.

The action of the trial court in awarding a writ of mandamus has been assailed on two grounds:

“1. Mandamus will not lie to compel appellant to approve appellee’s contract to teach in the Pyburn School District No. 30, for the ensuing scholastic year, appellant being a public officer and such approval calling for the exercise of the judgment of appellant on matters of fact.
“2. The Legislature of the State of Texas has clothed appellant, she being County Superintendent of Public Instruction of Freestone County, Texas, with supervisory .power over the contracts between trustees,teachers and others as a check upon the powers of such trustees to make contracts and if in the opinion of appellant, supported by any pertinent matter before her at the time, she acted in refusing to approve appellee’s contract, her action will not be disturbed in-any court.”

The question presented by appellant’s brief raises one of some difficulty due to the fact that the decisions of the Courts of Civil Appeals considering the point in question appear to us to be in direct conflict. The statutes governing the point in question are Articles 2678a, 2682, 2690, 2693, 2709, 2749, 2750 and 2750a, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St. Article 2693 provides, in part, that the county superintendent “shall examine all the contracts between the trustees and teachers of his county, and if, in his judgment, such contracts are proper, he shall approve the same; provided, that in considering any contract between a teacher and trustees he shall be authorized to consider the amount of salary promised to the teacher.” In discussing this statute, the San Antonio court, in Thomas v. Taylor, 163 S.W. 129, 131, writ refused, said: “If his examination of such contracts would- amount to nothing but a perfunctory duty, there -would be no reason for the law, and, taking the section in question alone, there can be no hesitation in declaring that the superintendent of public instruction is clothed with full power and discretion to examine and decide as to the *235 propriety of every contract between trustees and teachers, and to approve or reject them as his sound judgment may direct.” The foregoing construction has been followed by the El Paso Court of Civil Appeals in the case of Vanlandingham v. Hill, 47 S.W.2d 641. The same question was again before the San Antonio court in Duncan v. Bowman, 22 S.W.2d 683, writ dismissed.

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Related

Carlile v. Peevy
151 S.W.2d 343 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1941)
Peevy v. Carlisle
139 S.W.2d 779 (Texas Supreme Court, 1940)

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Bluebook (online)
138 S.W.2d 233, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carlile-v-peevy-texapp-1940.