Gillespie v. Lightfoot

127 S.W. 799, 103 Tex. 359, 1910 Tex. LEXIS 208
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMay 4, 1910
DocketNo. 2141.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 127 S.W. 799 (Gillespie v. Lightfoot) 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
Gillespie v. Lightfoot, 127 S.W. 799, 103 Tex. 359, 1910 Tex. LEXIS 208 (Tex. 1910).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Williams

delivered the opinion of the court.

The question in this case is as to the duty of the respondent to give the statutory certificate to bonds sought to be issued by what is claimed by relators to be an independent school district, named the Mart High School. It is conceded by respondent to be his duty to. give the certificate if the district named has the lawful power to issue the bonds, and whether or not it has such power is the question now to be decided. The Mart High School had its origin in 1902 in an attempt of citizens and authorities of McLennan, Falls and Limestone Counties to incorporate and establish an independent school district, under that name, out of territory taken from each of these counties, including the town of Mart. It was of the same character as the district of Mertens, held by this court in June, 1908, to be forbidden by the Constitution. Parks v. West, 102 Texas, 11. At an election held in 1909, two amendments to the Constitution were adopted, the one more particularly applying to this controversy being as follows:

“Sec. 3a. Every school district heretofore formed, whether formed under the general law or by special Act, and whether the territory embraced within its boundaries lies wholly within a single county or partly in two or more counties, is hereby declared to be, and from its formation to have been, a valid and lawful district.

“All bonds heretofore issued by any such districts which have been approved by the Attorney-General and registered by the Comptroller are hereby declared to be, and at the time of their issuance to have been, issued in conformity with the Constitution and laws of this State, and any and all such bonds are hereby in all things validated and declared to be valid and binding obligations upon the district or districts issuing the same.

“Each such district is hereby authorized to, and shall, annually levy and collect an ad valorem tax sufficient to pay the interest on all such bonds and to provide a sinking fund sufficient to redeem the same at maturity, not to exceed such a rate as may be provided by law under other provisions of this Constitution. And all trustees heretofore elected in districts made up from more than one county are hereby declared to have been duly elected, and shall be and are hereby named as trustees of their respective districts, with power to levy the taxes herein authorized until their successor shall be duly elected and qualified as is or may be provided by law.”

It is not denied by respondent that this had the effect to make legal and valid, for the purpose of further conducting and controling the public schools therein, as well as for meeting their bonded indebtedness, all county-line districts where no change of status had taken place before its adoption and after the decision referred to. The difficulties which he presents arise out of action taken upon the *361 territory embraced in the Mart High School district during that interval. After the decision the district organization was abandoned. The town of Mart assumed control of its own schools, the territory in Falls and Limestone Counties were distributed by the respective Commissioners’ Courts into common school districts, and that in Mc-Lennan County, outside of the town, was left without connection with any district. The several districts thus brought into existence were fully organized, with trustees elected, taxes levied to support schools, schoolhouses built by private subscription in some of them and contracts made with teachers under which schools are being carried on. This was the status existing when the amendment was adopted. Since that time the city council and school trustees of the town of Mart have passed resolutions renouncing control of the schools and have conceded it to those persons who were acting as trustees for the Mart High School district at the time of the decision in Parks v. West. Those persons have taken all the necessary steps preliminary to the issuance of bonds, and the only objections raised were thus stated to relators by the Attorney-General in refusing the certificate :

“First, because the constitutional amendment adopted by the people in the year 1909 did not validate the old independent district, but validated the districts in existence at the time the said constitutional amendment was adopted.

“Second, the only effect of the adoption of the constitutional amendment was to validate the outstanding bonds of said district and to authorize the trustees to levy a tax to retire same, inasmuch as a portion of the territory of the district had been appropriated and other districts created out of same at the time said constitutional amendment was adopted by the people.

“Third, because Falls County, prior to the adoption of the constitutional amendment, at a time when they had a legal right to do so, created out of the Falls County territory of said independent school district a common school district in said Falls County, and have levied taxes and entered into contracts for the maintenance of a school in said common school district; and to recognize said independent school district and approve said bonds would have the effect of violating the obligations of said contract and would create two school districts occupying the same territory at the same time in violation of law, and would have the effect of authorizing the levying and assessing of taxes in said territory for each of said, districts to the amount of fifty cents on the one hundred dollars valuation, in violation of the Constitution of this State.”

A fourth reason was given originally, but was abandoned by the respondent at the argument of the cause.

The amendment of the Constitution, is an exertion of the sovereign power of the people of the State to give to their expressed will the force of a law supreme over every person and every thing in the State so long as it does not conflict with the Constitution of the Hnited States. The rule so established bears down and supplants all other laws and rules that are inconsistent with it. In determining rights controled by it we, therefore, have only to ascertain, what it means *362 and give it full effect, so long as it encounters no opposition in the higher law of the Federal Constitution.

The school districts referred to in the first clause are declared to be, and from their formation to have been, valid and lawful districts. Whether they were in truth valid or not, under the law as it existed before, they are to be treated now as if they always were and yet are valid. By the express language of the people, the law which made them formerly invalid, according to our decision in Parks v. West, is changed so that they are henceforth to be regarded as continuoxisly lawful from their formation. There is nothing to prevent the people from establishing such a rule, so long as they do not destroy rights protected by the Constitution of the United States. And we think it will be found that the existence and recognition of such rights, if there be any, will not be inconsistent with the existence in this district of the power here asserted by relators. So we put to one side, for the present, any such question, in order to ascertain the meaning of the amendment. The difficulty with its language is that it makes its declaration respecting every district “heretofore formed” in either of the ways specified.

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Bluebook (online)
127 S.W. 799, 103 Tex. 359, 1910 Tex. LEXIS 208, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gillespie-v-lightfoot-tex-1910.