Gibson v. Couch

153 S.W.2d 288, 1941 Tex. App. LEXIS 664
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 30, 1941
DocketNo. 2146
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 153 S.W.2d 288 (Gibson v. Couch) 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
Gibson v. Couch, 153 S.W.2d 288, 1941 Tex. App. LEXIS 664 (Tex. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

LESLIE, Chief Justice.

Relators’ application to the district court for mandamus was denied and they appeal. The application was made by R. O. Gibson, and others, trustees of Sagerton Independent School District, a body corporate ; Lee Cornelius et al., patrons and taxpayers of Bunker Hill Common School District No. 39; T. L. Rowan and others, patrons and taxpayers of Center Point Common School District No. 27; John Clark, patron and taxpayer of Tanner Paint Common School District No. 34; Floyd Pilley and others, patrons and taxpayers of Vernon Common School District No. 4; R. Ramm and others, patrons and taxpayers of Flattop Common School District No. 32, Relators, complaining of John A. Couch, J. E. Mansell, Winford Pilley, R. L. Medford, E. Griffith and Matt Graham, composing the County Board of School Trustees of Haskell County, alleging in substance (1) that about March 30, 1940, in conformity with law there was held in each of said Common School Districts and in Sagerton Independent School District an election that had theretofore been ordered by said County Board of School Trustees for the purpose of determining whether or not the Common School Districts named should be grouped with the Sagerton Independent School District which would thereafter be called Sagerton Rural High School District No. 51; (2) that said districts were contiguous and the area in said district greater than 100 square miles; (3) that an election was held pursuant to said order and the result thereof showed a majority of the qualified electors in said proposed rural high school district voted in favor 'of the grouping of said districts; (4) that after the returns were made, the County School Board declared the result of the election which showed that a majority of the qualified voters in each of the five common school districts opposed the grouping and that a majority of the voters in the Sagerton Independent School District favored the grouping.

The majority vote in the Sagerton Independent School District favoring the grouping was greater than the combined majorities in the Common School Districts disapproving the grouping. It results that a majority in the proposed district favors the grouping.

[289]*289When the County Board acted upon the requests of said districts to be permitted to vote upon the proposition of forming the Sagerton Rural High School District No. 51, the County Board of Trustees entered an order in part as follows:

“Now, we the County Board of Trustees of Haskell County, Texas, do hereby order an election to be held on the 30th day of March, 1940, [designating the school houses of the respective districts as polling places] * * * to determine whether a majority of the legally qualified voters of each of said districts desires to group the said districts thereby forming the Sagerton Rural High School District No. 51, it being the opinion of the Board that it would not be to the best interest of all the districts concerned to group the same thereby forming Sagerton Rural High School District No. 51 of Haskell County, unless a majority of the qualified voters in each of said districts desired the grouping.’ (All italics ours.)

Relators here seek to compel by mandamus the County Board of Trustees to enter an order recognizing the proposed Sager-ton Rural High School District No. 51, as legally established upon the face of the returns which, as stated, showed a majority in the proposed district for grouping. The respondents (County Board) insist that in their initial order requiring a majority vote in each of the districts to set up the proposed district they were acting within the authority of law, exercising a discretion confided in them by statute and that since some of the districts (five) refuse to approve the grouping, the board rightfully refused to establish the proposed district.

It is undisputed that the Common School Districts involved each had less than 400 scholastic population, and the Sagerton Independent School District had less than 250 scholastic population, and the area of the proposed rural high school exceeded 100 square miles. The Sagerton Independent School District embraced in said election order lay partly in Stonewall and Haskell Counties.

When the County Board met and canvassed the returns and found the results indicated above, it entered the further order “The Board further finds that a majority of the qualified voters in each of said districts did not desire the grouping as set forth in the order of the board on the 7th day of March, 1940, but that a majority of the qualified voters in each of five of said districts were opposed to the grouping. * * *

“It is, therefore, ordered by the County Board of Trustees of Haskell County that Common School Districts [naming them] and Sagerton Independent School District be not grouped to form the Sagerton Rural High School District No. 51 of Haskell County.”

As we interpret the record there is no controversy here but that the County Board of Haskell and Stonewall Counties had the authority to order an election in the six districts involved and predicate the grouping of the same upon a majority vote in the proposed district as a whole. The controversy presented by this appeal arises by reason of the fact that the County Board of Haskell County predicated its election order on a majority vote for the grouping in each of the six districts and when five of them voted against grouping, the County Board refused to order the grouping.

In its election order, the County Board of Haskell County predicated any possible grouping of the districts upon a favorable majority vote in each of the same. When five of the districts disapproved by a majority the proposition to group the six districts the County Board refused to do so. In this and the other actions taken by the Board looking to the grouping of the districts we are of the opinion that the Board exercised a discretion vested in it by statutes as construed by the opinions of our appellate courts. Board of School Trustees of Lubbock County v. Woodrow Ind. Sch. Dist., et al., Tex.Civ.App., 90 S.W.2d 333, 334; Chap. 19A, Vernon’s Texas Civil Statutes, 1925, Arts. 2922a, 2922c.

In the Lubbock case the County Board designated certain districts to be grouped and ordered an election “to determine whether or not it is favored by a majority vote in each and all of such districts that they be grouped together into a rural high school district, and any district failing to approve such grouping by a majority vote within the district will be eliminated from such group.”

♦In that case, the Union Common School District voted against the grouping. The County Board of Lubbock County canvassed the returns, declared the results and refused to group the districts into the proposed district. Concerning the Board’s [290]

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Bluebook (online)
153 S.W.2d 288, 1941 Tex. App. LEXIS 664, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gibson-v-couch-texapp-1941.