Muse v. McKinney Independent School Dist.
This text of 35 S.W.2d 780 (Muse v. McKinney Independent School Dist.) 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.
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Virginia Shelley Muse and James Harrison Muse, children within the compulsory school age (article 2892, R.S. 1925) and not entitled to claim exemption from attending school on any of the statutory grounds (article 2893, R.S. 1925), attended the one-teacher school in common school district No. 100, Collin county (where they resided) until they had passed the grades taught in said school. Before August 1, 1929, they were duly transferred from said district to the McKinney independent school district, and on September 2, 1929, were duly accepted, classified, and enrolled in a junior high school in said independent district, which high school they attended without question of their right to do so until November 4, 1929, when they were notified they must pay tuition or cease to attend the school. November 8, 1929, notwithstanding they were still within the compulsory school age, said children were sent home from said high school because of their refusal to pay such tuition. This suit by appellant Mort W. Muse, father of said Virginia Shelley Muse and James Harrison Muse, on his own behalf and as next friend of his said children, was commenced on said November 8, 1929. It was for an "injunction (quoting) restraining the defendants (to wit, the McKinney Independent School District, a corporation, Jack R. Ryan, Superintendent of the McKinney City Schools and the Board of Trustees, naming them, of the McKinney Independent School District) from sending said children Virginia Shelley Muse and James Harrison Muse from said school and from collecting said tuition charges, and commanding said defendants to permit said children to attend school pending the determination of this suit." The trial was to the court without a jury, and resulted in a judgment rendered March 4, 1930, in terms denying the relief appellant prayed for, but continuing in force a "temporary restraining order (quoting) heretofore issued in this cause" upon appellant's entering into "a good and sufficient bond in the sum of $250.00."
We think it sufficiently appears from the statement above that the case has become a moot one, and that the appeal therefore should be dismissed. 3 Tex.Jur. 68, 69, 966. By the terms of the statute (article 2903, R.S. 1925), applicable to all public schools (Gulf, C. S. F. Ry. Co. v. School Dist. [Tex. Civ. App.]
The appeal will be dismissed.
On Motion of Appellants for a Rehearing.
The sole basis of the relief sought being, as we think after further consideration of the allegations in appellants' petition, a claimed right of the children to attend the high school in the McKinney independent school district free of any charge whatever after being transferred there, and it appearing that the children are still within the age entitling them to the benefit of the state's free schools, we have concluded it was error to hold that the case became a moot one after August 31, 1930, when the scholastic year beginning September 1, 1929, ended. Therefore the judgment of this court dismissing the appeal, rendered here November 6, 1930, will be set aside.
However, we do not think it appeared the children were entitled to attend said high school free of charge, and therefore think, further, that the court below did not err when he refused to grant appellants the permanent injunction they prayed for. As we view it, the case is not materially different in its facts from Slocomb v. Cameron Independent School District,
The motion is granted so far as it is to set aside the judgment dismissing the appeal, but refused so far as it is to reverse the judgment of the court below. Instead, that judgment will be affirmed. *Page 782
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35 S.W.2d 780, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/muse-v-mckinney-independent-school-dist-texapp-1931.