Passel v. Fort Worth Independent School District

429 S.W.2d 917, 1968 Tex. App. LEXIS 2869
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 17, 1968
Docket16889
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 429 S.W.2d 917 (Passel v. Fort Worth Independent School District) 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
Passel v. Fort Worth Independent School District, 429 S.W.2d 917, 1968 Tex. App. LEXIS 2869 (Tex. Ct. App. 1968).

Opinion

OPINION

LANGDON, Justice.

This is a class suit, filed June 6, 1967, by Charles F. Passel and others, for themselves and their minor children, students in the Fort Worth Independent School District and members of high school fraternities and sororities or “charity clubs” and in behalf of all other parents and minor students similarly situated against the Fort Worth Independent School District and its Board of Education to enjoin the defendants from enforcing a rule adopted by the Board of Education on November *919 9, 1966, that required the parents of all students entering the junior and senior high schools in September, 1967, to sign a Supplementary Application for Enrollment Form certifying that the student was not a member and that he or she would not become a member of a high school fraternity, sorority or secret society. 1 The Supplementary Application for Enrollment Form is really nothing more than a restatement of Article 301d of Vernon’s Ann. Texas Penal Code with an addendum added for the parent to certify that the student was not a member of an organization prohibited by the statute and that said student would not participate in the activities of such an organization.

Appellants asked for a declaratory judgment as to the constitutional validity of Article 30 Id, supra, as well as the Supplementary Application for Enrollment Form issued pursuant thereto. Appellants also sought to enjoin appellees from preventing their children from attending public high schools within the school district during the pendency of this suit and that upon final hearing, the temporary injunction be made permanent.

The Appellee School District answered by asserting a plea to the jurisdiction of the trial court on the grounds that appellants had not exhausted their administrative remedies before the Fort Worth Independent School District’s Board of Education and before the Commissioner of Education and the State Board of Education as provided by Articles 2654-7 and 2656 Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St. of Texas.

Appellants originally filed their suit in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Texas in which they sought substantially the same relief as prayed for herein. The Federal District Court denied an injunction and entered an order of abstention “until the courts of the State of Texas shall have been afforded the opportunity to determine the constitutional question here presented, and until the administrative remedies available to the plaintiffs have been utilized.” 2 Appellees further asserted that the trial court was without jurisdiction until the plaintiffs had exhausted their administrative remedies as required by the order of the United States District Court.

*920 Appellees also filed a plea in abatement urging the failure of appellants to exhaust their administrative remedies and a motion to dismiss on the grounds that the School Board’s Supplemental Enrollment Form was reasonable and in conformity with the law of Texas. Alternatively, appellees seek to uphold the constitutionality of Article 301d of the Penal Code as well as the Supplementary Application for Enrollment Form issued by the Board.

Appellees additionally filed a supplemental plea to the jurisdiction of the trial court on the grounds that the Supreme Court of Texas in Crouch v. Craik, 369 S.W.2d 311 and in City of Fort Worth v. Craik, 411 S.W.2d 541, had held that a court of equity was without jurisdiction to pass on the validity of a penal statute or regulation in the absence of showing of irreparable injury to vested property rights.

The trial court issued an opinion letter in which he found that the appellants had not exhausted their administrative remedies; that fact questions were involved; that the Supplemental Enrollment Form as well as Section 301d of the Penal Code were not unconstitutional on their face and entered a formal judgment holding that the court was without jurisdiction and that the appellants’ application for temporary injunction be denied and the case dismissed.

Appellants assert ten (10) points of error upon which their appeal is predicated. Their first four (4) points urge the invalidity of Article 301d of the Penal Code on the grounds that it violates the First and Fourteenth Amendments to the Federal Constitution and Article 1, Sections 3, 19 and 27 and Article 7, Section 1, of the Texas Constitution, Vernon’s Ann.St. Appellants claim their children have been deprived of freedom of association, a right to a free education; the right of parental control over the activities of their children; and they have been denied due process of law.

In points five (5) through eight (8) appellants say there is no fact issue involved and that they are not required to pursue their remedy through administrative boards because the constitutional issue involved is a matter for the courts to decide.

Finally, in points nine (9) and ten (10) appellants say that the trial court had the authority to grant injunctive relief of the penal statute involved because the Supplemental Enrollment Form did not invoke the penal provisions of the Statute and only required a condition to enrollment of the students.

We deal first with the question of exhaustion of administrative remedies. Ap-pellee Independent School District presented evidence in the trial court designed to show that the activities of the “charity clubs” did in fact adversely affect the operation of the Fort Worth Independent School District. In fact, appellants also contended that the statute involved was not applicable to the charity clubs apparently on the ground that the activities of the clubs were wholly unrelated to school functions. It seems to us that the evidence does show that the activities of the clubs, at least with respect to athletics, had a disruptive influence. This was the import of the testimony of two high school football coaches in the public school system.

We doubt that the statute permits of any construction except that it precludes public high school students from membership in any fraternity, sorority or organization such as the charitable clubs involved regardless of whether their activities are conducted on or off the campus. Be that as it may, counsel for appellees and the appellants stipulated that the charity clubs involved fall within the statutory definition of Article 301d. 3 We therefore hold that the question involved is one of law and not of fact and that the appellants were not required to pursue their administra *921 tive remedy through the school authorities under Articles 2654-7 and 2656, V.A.C.S. of Texas. Wilson v. Abilene Independent School Dist., 190 S.W.2d 406, 409 (Eastland, Tex.Civ.App., 1945, writ ref., w. o. m.).

We next consider the trial court’s jurisdiction to pass on the constitutional validity of the penal statute involved. In the recent case of City of Fort Worth v.

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Bluebook (online)
429 S.W.2d 917, 1968 Tex. App. LEXIS 2869, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/passel-v-fort-worth-independent-school-district-texapp-1968.