Consolidated Common School Dist. No. 5 v. Wood

112 S.W.2d 231, 1937 Tex. App. LEXIS 1403
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 24, 1937
DocketNo. 1824.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 112 S.W.2d 231 (Consolidated Common School Dist. No. 5 v. Wood) 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
Consolidated Common School Dist. No. 5 v. Wood, 112 S.W.2d 231, 1937 Tex. App. LEXIS 1403 (Tex. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

FUNDERBURK, Justice.

As the result of an election in each of Common School Districts Nos. 14 (Erath Common School District), 15 (Hart Common School District), and 16 (Colony Common School District), of Callahan County, held on April 14, 1928, Consolidated Common School District No. 5 was created, under authority of R.S.1925, art. 2806. Thereafter a school building was erected within the former territory of Common School District No. 16 (Colony Common School District), which was destroyed by fire on July 31, 1936. Said consolidated district, through its board of trustees, soon after the fire advertised for bids for the erection of a new building on or near the site of the former building, and gave notice of the purpose to let a contract on the 15th day of September, 1936, for the construction of such building. On September 9, 1936, the county judge of Callahan *233 county, in response to a petition therefor, ordered an election to be held in said Consolidated Common School District No. 5 on September 30, 1936, to determine whether such district should be dissolved, and the three said original districts restored to their former status. The action was referable, no doubt, to the authority granted in R.S.1925, art. 2815.

This suit was filed on September 11, 1936, by J. E. Wood, J. O. Taylor, and Olin Elliott, against said Consolidated Common School District No. 5, and its board of trustees. Plaintiffs’ original petition was on March 26, 1937, superseded by their first amended original petition, in which latter, among other things, was alleged the filing of this suit, on the 11th day of September, 1936, “and at the time of the filing thereof and at the present time plaintiffs were and are not residents of said original Colony Common School District No. 16, but. were at the institution of this suit and are now residents and taxpayers in the original common school districts of Plart No. 15 and Erath No. 14.” The election to dissolve and which was ordered to be held on September 30, 1936, as aforesaid, was alleged to have resulted in favor of 'dissolution; that same had not been contested and the time to contest same had passed; that said consolidated district “no longer has a corporate existence except for the purpose of winding up its affairs, paying its debts and making proper distribution of its assets to its successors. * * * And that the board of trustees of' said consolidated common school district No. 5 have no other or further power or authority than to wind up the affairs of said defendant district, pay its debts and make proper distribution of its assets.”

“Disregarding these facts,” the pleading goes on to aver, “the board of trustees of said defendant district are still claiming authority to act as a board with full powers, and are threatening to rebuild said school building out of the common funds of the three common school districts of Colony No. 16, Hart No. 15 and Erath Common School. District No. 14, which have been restored as common school districts of Callahan County, Texas, as the result of said election, and that said defendant school board proposes to build said school building in the restored Colony District No. 16 and will do so .unless restrained by this court; and unless said board of trustees are so restrained, these defendants [plaintiffs] together [with] all other residents, taxpayers and patrons of said Hart Common School District No. 15 and Erath Common School District No. 14, will be deprived of their rights as such residents, taxpayers and patrons of said restored common school districts.”

It was also alleged that upon the institution of the suit the court had granted a temporary injunction “commanding the defendant school district, and its board of trustees, to desist and refrain from letting any contract for the erection of a school building, or otherwise creating any indebtedness against said district pending the results -of said election and until the further order of this cohrt, which temporary injunction is now in full force and effect.” Said amended pleading closed with a prayer “that the temporary injunction * * * be made permanent. * * * ”

The defendants, among other things, affirmatively challenged the validity of the election held on September 30, 1936, to determine whether the consolidated districts should be dissolved, on the ground that said election was petitioned for, ordered, held, and the result declared contrary to the provisions of said R.S.1925, art. 2815.-

In a non jury trial judgment was rendered for plaintiffs providing that the temporary injunction should “be perpetuated and made permanent,” thus permanently restraining said Consolidated School District No. 5 and its board of trustees from erecting any school building, or letting any contract for such erection, or from in any manner creating any indebtedness against the district, etc.

Conclusions of fact and of law were filed. Among the facts found were that, as to the order for the dissolution election, the petition, the order of the county judge, and the election itself took no account of the original common school districts of which said consolidated district was composed, but that such petition, order, and election treated said Consolidated Common School District No. 5 as a single political unit for the purpose of said election.

The conclusions of law were as follows: “I conclude, as a matter of law, 'that it was not necessary under the law that there be a separate petition signed by twenty or a majority of the voters from, each of the original districts of which said Consolidated Common School District was composed, but that one petition, signed by twenty, or a majority of the voters of said Consolidated *234 District, as a whole, was sufficient to authorize the county judge to call said election. That only one election in the said Consolidated district as a whole was necessary under the law, and that such an election was held and the same was legal. That as a result of said election the said Consolidated Common School District No. 5 was dissolved, and that the original districts of which same was composed are now restored to their status as common school districts.”

The defendants have appealed, and the parties will be referred to as they were in the court below.

The subject matter of this suit is such as is usually and appropriately presented by an action in the nature of quo warranto. The trustees of Consolidated Common School District No. 5, when halted by the temporary injunction, issued upon the filing of this suit, were proceeding in the exercise of powers undoubtedly then possessed by them. The purpose of the temporary injunction was to delay the exercise of such powers until an election, then ordered, could be subsequently held to determine whether or not the consolidated districts should be dissolved. There was, apparently, no appeal from such action, and the matter is mentioned' in this connection only because the nature and purpose of the temporary injunction as shown by the allegations of plaintiffs’ trial pleading tend to show the true nature of this suit as it finally developed after the election, and upon the filing of plaintiffs’ first amended original petition. The relief finally sought was to have .the temporary injunction made perpetual. It is doubtful, we think, if the averments of plaintiffs’ petition showed the violation of any of their rights, unless pqrhaps political rights.

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112 S.W.2d 231, 1937 Tex. App. LEXIS 1403, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/consolidated-common-school-dist-no-5-v-wood-texapp-1937.