Love v. Rockwall Independent School Dist.

238 S.W. 642, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 442
CourtTexas Commission of Appeals
DecidedMarch 15, 1922
DocketNo. 293-3558
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 238 S.W. 642 (Love v. Rockwall Independent School Dist.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Commission of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Love v. Rockwall Independent School Dist., 238 S.W. 642, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 442 (Tex. Super. Ct. 1922).

Opinion

POWELL, J.

In 1909, Rockwall county common school district No. 2 legally issued and sold its bonds in the sum of $25,000, with which amount of money the trustees of said district built and equipped a school building within its borders. Adequate taxes were levied and collected each year thereafter for the payment annually of the interest on said bonds as well as the accumulation of a sinking fund for their retirement at maturity.

In 1913, the Thirty-Third Legislature passed a special act, creating the Rockwall independent school district. See Local and Special Laws Passed at the Regular Session of the Thirty-Third Legislature, p. 451. This act was rather typical of its kind, and provided, among other things, for the taking over by the independent district of the property of the common school district as aforesaid. The latter district was now included within the boundaries of the former. It was further provided that the new district could, upon a vote of its people, issue refunding bonds for the balance then due upon the , common school district bonds aforesaid. Said act permitted the people of the district, of course, to issue bonds for improvements of any kind within the district, so long as the bonds did not exceed the Constitutional limitations.

In August, 1917, an election was had in tho new district for the purpose of determining whether or not it would issue bonds in the sum of $18,500 for the purpose of refunding, paying off, or taking up the remaining common school district bonds aforesaid. The election was had and the bonds authorized. At the same election the people voted a tax sufficient to care for the bonds voted at the same time. Almost immediately after this election, the school board met, canvassed the returns, and declared the result of the election. At the same time it levied the tax which had been voted by the people as aforesaid.

Early in 1918, A. E. Love, a taxpayer owning property in said district, part of which was situated in the old common school district and part in the extended or new district, entered his suit in the district court of Rockwall county, asking an injunction restraining the collection of the tax for the refunding bonds. He prayed for the injunction, relying mainly upon two grounds: (1) That a board of trustees of an independent school district has no authority to levy and collect taxes to pay a bonded indebtedness until the record authorizing the issuance of such bonds has been approved by the Attorney General; (2) that the land located within the new district, outside of and beyond the limits of the old common school district, could not be taxed to pay the debts of the latter, even though so assessed by a majority vote of the people of the enlarged or extended district.

The district court refused the injunction. [643]*643Thereupon Love appealed his ease to the Court of Civil Appeals at Dallas, where the judgment of the district court was affirmed. See 225 S. W. 263. Love applied to the Supreme Court for writ of error, and his application was granted.

At the very threshold of our opinion we desire to direct attention to the following paragraph in the opinion of the 'Court of Civil Appeals, to wit:

“The record shows that at the time the Legislature instituted the present independent school district there existed the common school district No. 2, which last district was added to said independent school district, and at the same time there was added about three miles of adjacent territory, all of which now constitute said independent school district. Before the passage of the act constituting said district as it now exists, common school district No. 2 had, prior thereto, legally ordered the issuance of 325,000 school bonds, which bonds have not been presented to the Attorney General for approval, which we hold does not invalidate the bonds, as such bonds are subject to such approval, and the neglect of said trustees in not presenting them for approval does not avoid the bonds, if the bonds when presented are approved. Therefore the fact of the bonds not having the approval in this instance does not affect the issuance of an injunction.”

[1] The notation made by the Supreme Court in granting the writ of error herein shows that the court had this very statement in mind at the time. We have most carefully read the agreed statement of facts before us, upon which the case was tried, as well as -all other papers in the record generally. There is absolutely no basis in the record for this finding of fact by the Court of Civil Appeals. In fact, the record discloses quite the contrary, and that the Rockwall common school district bonds in question were legally issued and sold. No other contention is anywhere made by any of the' parties. Therefore we assume as a fact that, before the common school district bonds were offered for sale, they had been approved by the Attorney General as by law required. This erroneous statement of fact by the Court of Civil Appeals was evidently a mere inadvertence on its part. So we shall not further consider the validity of the original bonds, but confine our discussion to the necessity of the approval of the refunding bonds by the -Attorney General before a tax for their payment could be levied and collected. In doing so we are considering the only contention raised in the application in this connection.

[2] Can an independent school district levy and collect taxes to care for its bonds before the record of the election has been approved by the Attorney General of Texas? In deciding this point a brief history of our statutes relative thereto will be helpful. In 1900 the Supreme Court of Texas, speaking through Justice Williams, in the ease of Brownson v. Smith, Attorney General, 93 Tex. 614, 57 S. W. 570, held that there was no authority at that time imposing upon the Attorney General the duty of passing upon bonds of independent school districts. The court held that the only statute then in force, imposing upon the- Attorney General the duty of acting upon any bonds, was article 918d, which is now article 619 of Vernon’s Sayles’ Revised 'Civil Statutes of Texas of 1914. That article provides that, when any county, city or town in Texas desires to issue bonds, they shall have the Attorney General pass upon and approve the record before offering them for sale.

In 1905 the Twenty-Ninth Legislature at its regular session passed an act for the general purpose of providing a more efficient system of public education. In that act (page 266 of General Laws of that Legislature) will be found authority, under certain circumstances, for passing upon independent school district bonds by the Attorney General. We quote the material part of section 3 on that page as follows:

“Hereafter when any county bonds or the bonds of any incorporated city or independent school district are offered for sale, the party offering or proposing to sell such bonds shall first submit them to the Attorney General of the state, who shall carefully inspect and examine the same in connection with the law under which they were issued, and shall diligently inquire into the facts and circumstances so far as may be necessary to determine the validity thereof.”

[3] Section 3 of article 7 of the Constitution of our state, as adopted in 1909, reads as follows:

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238 S.W. 642, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 442, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/love-v-rockwall-independent-school-dist-texcommnapp-1922.