Freeport Independent School District v. Common School District No. 31

277 S.W. 97, 115 Tex. 133, 1925 Tex. LEXIS 141
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 18, 1925
DocketNo. 4305.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 277 S.W. 97 (Freeport Independent School District v. Common School District No. 31) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Freeport Independent School District v. Common School District No. 31, 277 S.W. 97, 115 Tex. 133, 1925 Tex. LEXIS 141 (Tex. 1925).

Opinions

Mr. Presiding Judge POWELL

delivered the opinion of the Commission of Appeals, Section A.

This cause is before the Supreme Court upon the following certificate from the Honorable Court of Civil Appeals of the First District:

“The 35th Legislature by a special act (Act 35 Leg. page 22) incorporated the Freeport Independent School District, in Brazoria County, Texas, with an area of 33 square miles, said area being described by metes and bounds. By the 5th section of said Act it is provided as follows:

“ ‘Said Freeport Independent School District shall have and exercise, and is hereby vested with all the rights, powers, and privileges and duties of a town or village incorporated under the general laws of the state for free school purposes only, and the board of trustees of said Freeport Independent School District shall have and exercise, and are hereby vested with all the rights, [138]*138powers, privileges and duties conferred and imposed by the general laws of this state, now in force or hereafter enacted, upon the trustees of independent school districts, including the right and power to levy taxes and issue bonds of said district, to the extent, for the purposes and subject to the provisions, limitations, and conditions under which said powers may now be exercised, or may hereafter be exercised under the general laws of this state by the trustees of independent school districts incorporated and organized under the general laws of this state, and all the general laws of this state applicable to towns and villages incorporated for free school purposes only are hereby declared to be in full force and effect with respect to said Freeport Independent School District, except that said district is not and shall not be limited in size or extent as under the general laws’ (Italics ours.)

“In the month of May, 1923, after the incorporation of said Freeport District by the Legislature, the lawful authorities of said district proceeded in manner and form, as is provided by the general law for extending the boundaries of independent school districts, (Art. 2865 Vernon’s Sayles’ Civil Statutes 1914) to annex to said Freeport District about 60 square miles of territory, a portion of which was within the boundaries of Common School District No. 31, as these boundaries were established by the County School trustees of Brazoria County.

“After said territory had been annexed to said Freeport District, F. P. Lake, Henry Skucius, and Mrs. Bertha Walker, as district trustees of Common School District bib. 31, of Brazoria County, Texas, and A. B. Follett, A. L. Woolam and T. F. Siebel, designated as citizens and patrons and qualified voters and taxpayers, residing in said Common School District, brought this suit against the Freeport Independent School District, and W. A. Randle, S. I. Stratton, J. H. Ross, Ben D. Kannon, C. L. Bushnell and J. E. Reed, as trustees of said Freeport District and against W. A. Randle, as president, and J. E. Reed, as secretary of the board of trustees of said Freeport District, to enjoin the Freeport District, its trustees and officers from ordering an election within said district, as extended, for the purpose of voting upon the issue as to whether or not bonds of said district should be issued, and from canvassing returns or declaring the result of any election that had been theretofore ordered or held for such purpose. They also prayed for judgment declaring void all acts of the trustees and officers of said Freeport District, whereby the boundaries of said Freeport District were extended so as to include the annexed territory, and that they have judgment fixing [139]*139and establishing the boundaries of said Common School District, as the same was established by the school trustees of Brazoria County.

“It was not alleged nor shown that any of the plaintiffs owned any property in the territory annexed to the Freeport District, nor that they claimed any rights not common to the taxpaying citizens, generally, who resided in said Common School District No. 31.

“Upon the trial the court rendered judgment decreeing that all the proceedings by which the territory involved was annexed to the Freeport District, in so far as they affect the boundaries and area of Common School District No. 31, be canceled, set aside and held of no force and effect.

“From the judgment so rendered the defendants have appealed.

“It was and is the contention of the appellants:

“First: That by the special act of the 35th Legislature, above mentioned, the trustees of the Freeport District were authorized to extend the boundaries of said district and add additional territory thereto without the limitation imposed by Article 2865 R. S. of Texas;

/‘Second: That in any event such extension as was made, was made under color of law and became a de facto extension and the annexed territory became a de facto annexation as a part of the Freeport District and, therefore, appellees cannot in a private action, such as the one brought by them, question the regularity of the acts of the trustees in making such annexation, and

“Third: That whether such de facto annexation was regularly and lawfully made can only be questioned by the State of Texas in a direct proceeding, or by someone under its authority, having a special interest affected by reason of such annexation.

“On the other hand it was and is the contention of appellees that the trustees of the Freeport District, as well as the trustees of all independent school districts, are authorized to extend the boundaries of such districts and annex additional territory only when the territory embraced in their boundaries is less than twenty-five square miles, and that as the boundaries of the Free-port District, as established and fixed by the Legislature embrace thirty-three square miles of territory, its trustees were without authority to extend its boundaries and take in any additional territory, and therefore, the attempt of said trustees to do so, was and is void and is subject to attack by appellees as they have done.

“We adopted the views entertained by appellants, and held [140]*140that the special act incorporating the Freeport District authorized the trustees of said district to enlarge the same. We also held that, whether the extension of the boundaries of said district was made regularly, or irregularly and unlawfully, appellees could not question its regularity in the private action brought by them and so holding, we reversed the judgment of the trial court and rendered judgment for appellants.

“Appellees have filed their motion for rehearing and the cause is now pending in this court upon that motion.

“We are now in some doubt as to the correctness of our construction of the special act, which incorporated the Freeport District and also as to the correctness of our holding that appellees could not, even if it be conceded that the extension was unlawfully made, attack the same in their private action. We, therefore, deem it advisable to submit to your Honors the following questions:

“First: Were the trustees of the Freeport District authorized by the special act, creating said district, to extend the boundaries thereof beyond those established by the special act?

“Second: If it be conceded that the trustees were not authorized by said special act to make the extension, mentioned above, can appellees maintain their private suit, as brought ?”

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Bluebook (online)
277 S.W. 97, 115 Tex. 133, 1925 Tex. LEXIS 141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/freeport-independent-school-district-v-common-school-district-no-31-tex-1925.