Dawn Common School Dist. No. 2 v. County School Board of School Trustees of Deaf Smith County

205 S.W.2d 826, 1947 Tex. App. LEXIS 1232
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 6, 1947
DocketNo. 5804
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 205 S.W.2d 826 (Dawn Common School Dist. No. 2 v. County School Board of School Trustees of Deaf Smith County) 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
Dawn Common School Dist. No. 2 v. County School Board of School Trustees of Deaf Smith County, 205 S.W.2d 826, 1947 Tex. App. LEXIS 1232 (Tex. Ct. App. 1947).

Opinion

LUMPKIN, Justice.

Seeking to declare void an election authorizing the creation of the Hereford Rural High School District and to enjoin the County School Board of School Trustees of Deaf Smith County, Texas, from consolidating and creating the Hereford Rural High School District, the appellants, Dawn Common School District No. 2, acting through H. V. McCabe, W. R. Galley, and F. T. Fain, the board of trustees, who are parties to this suit both as individuals as well as in their official capacities, filed this suit against the appellee, County School Board of School Trustees of Deaf Smith County.

[827]*827This case was submitted to the court without the intervention of a jury and resulted in a judgment denying the appellants the relief they sought. The appellants duly excepted to the trial court’s judgment and have perfected their appeal to this court.

From the record it appears that on January 4, 1937, the County School Board of School Trustees for Deaf Smith County, acting in accordance with Article 2922c, Vernon’s Annotated Civil Statutes, called an election for the purpose of determining whether or not a rural high school district should be created. This district was to be formed from the existing Hereford Independent School District and Common School Districts Nos. 2, 4, 5, 7, and 8, and was to be known as the Hereford Rural High School District. All the common school districts involved are contiguous to the Hereford Independent School District. The combined area of the five common school districts and the Independent School District is more than 100 square miles. All of these districts, both independent and common, are in Deaf Smith County. The Hereford Independent School District is a rural independent school district comprising 72 sections of land, and its high school facilities are located in the City of Hereford, the county seat of Deaf Smith County. The five common school districts are rural.

As a result of the election, held February 8, 1947, a total of 668 votes were cast favoring the creation of the rural high school district, and 354 votes were cast against the measure. The Hereford Independent School District cast 586 votes for the formation of the high school district to 64 votes against. Each of the common .school districts cast a majority of its votes against creating the Flereford Rural High School District. The Dawn Common School District No. 2 cast a vote of 74 to 16 against the proposal, and the total vote of the five common school districts was 290 to 82 against creating the district.

The evidence reveals that Common School District No. 4 maintained no schools of any kind, and all of its thirty-four scholastics, both elementary and high school, attended the schools maintained by the Hereford Independent School District; that twenty-eight scholastics of Common School District No. 5 were attending the Hereford Schools, although this district did maintain elementary schools; that Common School District No. 7 supported a solitary one-teacher elementary school, sending sixty-eight of its scholastics into Hereford; that Common School District No. 8 supported no schools, and its fifty-six scholastics were transported by bus to the schools located in Hereford.

The appellant, Dawn Independent School District No. 2, supported elementary schools, though of course no high school. Its high school scholastics were carried by bus to the West Texas State College Demonstration School at Canyon, Randall County. Randall County lies immediately to the east of Deaf Smith County; and whereas Dawn is twelve miles from the Hereford High School, it is twenty miles from the demonstration school at Canyon.

In six points of error the appellants attack the court’s judgment on the following three grounds: first, under the circumstances of this case, the appellee was not empowered by Article 2922c, Vernon’s Annotated Civil Statutes, to call an election for the purpose of creating a rural high school district; second, in its actions, method, and manner of attempting to create the Hereford Rural High School District, the appellee abused its discretion and perpetrated a legal fraud on the five common school districts; third, Article 2922c is unconstitutional in that it is discriminatory, provides for taxation without representation, and is an example of class legislation.

In our opinion the trial court correctly held that acting under the authority granted it by the Legislature in Article 2922c, the appellee was acting within the scope of its powers in calling an election to determine whether such a rural high school district should be established; and after the election of February 8, 1947, in which a majority of the qualified voters in the proposed district voted for the creation of the rural high school, the county school board was continuing to act within its authority when it ordered the Hereford Rural High School formed.

The appellant evidently is under the impression that the County School Board of [828]*828School Trustees had no authority other than to annex the various common school districts to the Hereford Independent School District under Article 2922a; that to do otherwise was to abolish the Hereford Independent School District in violation of Article 2922b. The appellants assert that the County School Board of School Trustees did not have the authority to call an election on the issue of creating- a rural high school district where the independent school district involved has a scholastic population in excess of 2S0 or the common school districts to be annexed have a scholastic population of less than 400; that under such circumstances an election is not required, and the proper procedure is to obtain the consent of the boards of trustees of the various districts.

The appellants are incorrect in this assertion. To bring an election of this nature within the purview of Article 2922c, only two facts are essential: the proposed rural high school district shall contain an area of more than 100 square miles; the number of elementary districts involved must not be more than seven. Nothing is said in the statute as to the scholastic population of either the common or the independent school districts. By its own language the statute 'is limited to the number of elementary districts and the number of square miles contained in the proposed rural high school district.

A similar situation was passed on by this court in the case of County Board of School Trustees of Hale County et al. v. Mayfield Common School District No. 22 et al., Tex.Civ.App., 140 S.W.2d 956, dismissed judgment correct. In that case the Hale Center Independent School District had a scholastic population of over 250; in this case it is admitted that the number of scholas-tics enrolled in the Hereford Independent School District was in excess of 250; in that case the number of common school districts was four in number, each with less than 400 scholastics; the same situation is to be found in the five rural districts concerned in this case. Obviously in both cases the number of districts involved is less than seven. In both cases the districts are contiguous, and the aggregate area of the districts in each case is in excess of 100 square miles. This court held that the County School Board of School Trustees of Hale County had the authority under Article 2922c to call an election to determine the question of forming a rural high school district.

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Related

State Ex Rel. Childress v. County School Trustees
239 S.W.2d 777 (Texas Supreme Court, 1951)
Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion
Texas Attorney General Reports, 1948

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205 S.W.2d 826, 1947 Tex. App. LEXIS 1232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dawn-common-school-dist-no-2-v-county-school-board-of-school-trustees-of-texapp-1947.