McCorkel v. District Trustees of Robinson Springs School Dist. No. 76 of Comanche County

121 S.W.2d 1048
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 28, 1938
DocketNo. 1944.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 121 S.W.2d 1048 (McCorkel v. District Trustees of Robinson Springs School Dist. No. 76 of Comanche 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
McCorkel v. District Trustees of Robinson Springs School Dist. No. 76 of Comanche County, 121 S.W.2d 1048 (Tex. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

FUNDERBURK, Justice.

District Trustees of Robinson Springs School District No. 76 of Comanche County, Texas, .and District Trustees of Desdemona Independent School District of East-land County, Texas, each a body corporate, brought this action on September 9, 1938, against B. R. McCorkel, as County Superintendent of Public Instruction of Comanche County, Texas, to enjoin said defendant “from paying any and all funds and moneys accruing to Robinson Springs School District No. 76, of Comanche County, Texas, which accrues from state and county Available Funds, State Aid and all local taxes and which accrues to said district before the expiration of the contract [described in the petition] between the Trustees of Desdemona Independent School District of Eastland County, Texas, and the Trustees of Robinson Springs District No. 76 of Comanche County, Texas, which said contract expires on August 31, 1939, to DeLeon Independent School District of Comanche County, Texas, or any other school district or any person and commanding him to pay said funds over to said Desdemona Independent School District of Eastland County, Texas * * *

The contract to which the plaintiffs were parties, referred to in said pleading, was described therein as having been made under authority of section 17 of Senate Bill No. 185 (ch. 474, Acts 45th Leg., General and Special Laws, p. 1259), on or about September 9, 1937 by which Robinson Springs District agreed to transfer to Desdemona District all the pupils therein and the Desdemona District agreed.to assume all Robinson Springs debts; to furnish free school instruction to them; 'not to call upon the State for any type of aid, or for *1050 any amount of aid in excess of the amount to which these schools would otherwise be entitled under the provisions of the Equalization Law.

According to the allegations the contract began September 1, 1937, and was to expire August 31, 1939. It was approved by the County Superintendents of Comanche and Eastland Counties, and by the State Superintendent of Public Instruction. It was alleged that in pursuance of said contract, Descjemona Independent School District made the necessary arrangement for transportation of the scholastics residing in the Robinson Springs District to the Desdemona school buildings; provided the necessary additional equipment and room; made all necessary arrangements for teaching and taking care of said scholastics and necessarily expended a considerable sum of money otherwise unnecessary. That it had expended a considerable amount of money in payment of debts of Robinson Springs District which by the terms of the contract it had assumed, which was done on the faith of said contract and with the assurance that it would be reimbursed to a large extent for such expenditures and only from funds it would derive from the funds accruing to said Robinson Springs District and transferred to it under and by the terms of said contract, and that it would suffer damages in the sum of $1,000 if said contract was not carried out for the remaining time. It was further alleged upon information that some sort of purported contract had been made, not signed by the Trustees of Robinson Springs District, but signed only by the Trustees of the De-Leon Independent School District, and approved by the County and State Superintendents, by the terms of which the funds belonging to the Robinson Springs District was to be paid over to the DeLeon Independent School District, in violation of the alleged existing contract and to the damage of the plaintiffs for which they had no adequate remedy at law. The allegations concerning the immediate actions of the defendant sought to be restrained in part and commanded in part, were that “said B. R. McCorkel, County Superintendent * * * is about to pay said funds over to some other person or school district in violation of the provisions of said above described legal and binding contract and unless he be restrained from so doing and commanded to pay same. over to said Desdemona School District he will pay same out to some other school district or some other person and said funds will be beyond the reach of these plaintiffs and they will be wholly unable to get same or any part thereof” etc.

The prayer was for the issuance of an injunction both restraining and commanding action in accordance with the allegations and that “upon final hearing hereof these plaintiffs have judgment making said injunction perpetual” etc.

The fiat of the district judge was, in effect, a command to the clerk to issue a Temporary Injunction “in all things as prayed in the within and foregoing petition” etc.

The appeal by the defendant is from the order commanding the issuance of the Temporary Injunction.

The appellant presents three grounds of error, alleged as the basis of three separate Assignments of Error. The first is to the effect that the court erred in granting the temporary injunction, without a hearing, by reason of the fact that appel-lees’ petition shows on its face a lack of necessary and indispensable parties to the suit. The second is that the court erred in granting a temporary injunction, because the same was in no wise prayed for in the petition. The third is that such action was erroneous because the petition did not show that resort was first had to the proper school authorities for a review and determination of their alleged grievances prior to a resort to the courts.

According to our interpretation of the law, applicable to the facts alleged in the plaintiffs’ petition, as hereinafter discussed if the action of the judge in chambers in granting the temporary injunction was subject to no other legal objections than those presented by these three assignments of error we would be inclined to the view that no error is shown. According to the allegations of the petition, DeLeon Independent School District had no interest which could be affected by the suit. According to the definition of “temporary injunction” it is one which remains in force, unless sooner dissolved, until superseded by the £nal judgment in a case. When, therefore, the 'petition prayed for the issuance of an injunction and in the-immediate connection prayed that upon a final hearing such “injunction” be made perpetual it was shown by such context that the “injunction” prayed for in the first place was a' temporary injunction. This is said in full recognition of the rule *1051 that a temporary injunction cannot properly be issued unless there be a specific prayer- therefor. The prayer for an injunction to remain in force until the case can be tried upon its merits and a final judgment rendered, followed by a further prayer that that final judgment be one perpetuating the previous injunction, is, in our opinion, a prayer specifically for the issuance of a temporary injunction. Temple Independent School Dist. v. Proctor, Tex.Civ.App., 97 S.W.2d 1047; Hunt v. Hunt, Tex.Civ.App., 55 S.W.2d 911.

It is further our view- that according to the allegations of plaintiffs’ petition, as their effect is measured by the law as we herein interpret it, the plaintiffs were not required first to resort to the school authorities for a determination of the matters in issue.

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121 S.W.2d 1048, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccorkel-v-district-trustees-of-robinson-springs-school-dist-no-76-of-texapp-1938.