San Antonio Independent School Dist. v. State Board of Education

108 S.W.2d 445
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 19, 1937
DocketNo. 10294.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 108 S.W.2d 445 (San Antonio Independent School Dist. v. State Board of Education) 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
San Antonio Independent School Dist. v. State Board of Education, 108 S.W.2d 445 (Tex. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

SMITH, Chief Justice.

This' suit was brought by the San Antonio Independent School District, and its .superintendent, J. C. Cochran, and one of its teachers, L. K. Barry, for a temporary injunction against the State Board of Education and its members. The parties will be herein designated as plaintiffs and ■defendants, as in the court below.

The nature of the suit is sufficiently disclosed in .the following allegations taken from the first amended original petition ■of the plaintiffs below:

“That the reasonable cost of maintaining and supporting the public schools of ■the State of Texas, for not less than six (6) months in each year, is in excess of Twenty-Two Dollars, ($22.00), per capi-ta for all children in the State of Texas •within the scholastic age.”
“ * * * that the available State school fund, for the ensuing scholastic year, will he sufficient in amount to pay the apportionment of $22.00 per capita for each scholastic.”
“That in accordance with the Constitution of Texas, the Acts of the Legislature, and more especially in accordance with Article 2665 of the Revised Civil Statutes ■of Texas, the defendant, State Board of Education, — on the 6th' day of July, A. D. 1937, did make an apportionment for the ensuing scholastic year of the State Available School Fund among the several ■counties of the State, and- the several cities and towns and school districts constituting separate school organizations, according to the scholastic population of ■each, and that said Board of Education .at said meeting, ' based upon the estimate theretofore furnished to said Board by the Comptroller, did fix said apportionment at $22.00 per capita for each scholastic, and did make an apportionment for the ensuing scholastic year in favor of the plaintiff, San Antonio Independent School District, of $22.00 per capi-ta for each scholastic in said District, and, thereupon the Secretary of said Board did. duly certify to the Treasurer of each separate school organization, the total amount of available State school funds so apportioned ; that the scholastic population of the San Antonio Independent School District, according .to the most recent census, is fifty-three thousand, nine hundred twenty-four (53,924), and that by virtue of the facts alleged, the San Antonio Independent School District is entitled to receive by way of apportionment from the State Available School Fund, for the ensuing scholastic year, a sum equal to 53,924 times 22, or the aggregate of $1,186,328.00, and that said sum is not sufficient and is wholly inadequate to maintain and support the public schools of the San Antonio Independent School District for a period of six (6) months; nevertheless, the State Board of Education has found by its order entered at its meeting on July 6, 1937, that the facts and the condition of the State Available School Fund would permit an apportionment of $22.00 per capita for each scholastic.”
“Plaintiffs say that the rights of the San Antonio Independent School District, and of the other school districts in the State of Texas, in the $22.00 apportionment made by the State Board of Education on July 6, 1937, have become vested, and the Budget Officer of the San Antonio Independent School District, and all other school districts in the State of Texas, are authorized and required by the Uniform Budget Law to take into consideration said apportionment of $22.0.0 per capita in the preparation of the Budget of their respective districts, for the ensuing- scholastic year, and that under the Constitution and Statutes of Texas it is now beyond the power of the State Board of Education to rescind, modify or change said apportionment of $22.00 per capita made by said Board on July 6, 1937, and that the proposed action of said five (5) members of said Board to reduce said apportionment, as hereinbefore alleged, is contrary to the Constitutional and Statutory rights of plaintiffs, and is arbitrary and capricious and is an attempt to take from the San Antonio Independent School District, and other school districts of Texas, monies *447 duly apportioned to them from the available State school fund, in accordance with the mandatory provisions of the Constitution of the State of Texas and the Acts of the Legislature, and, if said five (5) members of said State Board of Education adopt and make it appear that the State Board of Education has adopted a resolution, motion or order rescinding said apportionment of July 6, 1937, and reducing said apportionment from $22.00 per capi-ta to some amount between $19.00 per capi-ta and $21.00 per capita, such action will cause endless confusion and uncertainty in the operation of the public school system of Texas, and will result in irreparable injury to the plaintiffs, and others similarly situated, and will result in a multiplicity'of suits, as the Comptroller will refuse to draw his warrants in favor of the Treasurer of the San Antonio Independent School District, and other school districts in the State of Texas, for an amount in excess of the reduced apportionment, if one is made by the State Board of Education, and plaintiffs say in good conscience and equity that said defendants should be enjoined from rescinding, modifying or changing, or attempting to rescind, modify or change said order of the State Board of Education, passed at its meeting on July 6, 1937, fixing and making the apportionment for the ensuing year at $22.-00 per capita for each scholastic.”

In its prayer, among other things plaintiffs prayed that: “ * ⅜ * pending the trial of this cause upon its merits, plaintiffs pray that a temporary injunction be issued enjoining the defendants, and each of them, from rescinding, modifying or changing — said order of the State Board of Education, fixing said per capita apportionment at $22.00.”

To that petition the trial judge sustained defendants’ plea to the jurisdiction, to the effect: “That although this suit is brought against the State Board of Education and the individual members of said Board in their official capacities as such, that in legal effect, and in truth and in fact, this suit is a suit against the State of Texas which cannot be maintained because there is no authority of law which would authorize the plaintiffs or either of them to bring such a suit and no permission has been given by the Legislature of the State of Texas which would authorize the plaintiffs in this case to bring and maintain such a suit.”

From the resulting order of dismissal, the plaintiffs have appealed.

Our State Constitution provides that sufficient revenues shall be raised to maintain and support the public schools of the state for a period of not less than six months in each year (article 7, § 3), and that no part of the available school fund shall be diverted to any other purpose, but all of it shall be apportioned and distributed to the several counties of the state (by the State Board of Education, article 2665, R.S.1925), according to their scholastic population (Const, art. 7, § 5; article 2823, R.S.1925).

It is further provided in the Constitution that the Legislature shall provide for a State Board of Education, which shall perform such duties as may be prescribed by law (article 7, § 8).

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Bluebook (online)
108 S.W.2d 445, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/san-antonio-independent-school-dist-v-state-board-of-education-texapp-1937.