Slocomb v. Cameron Independent School District

288 S.W. 1064, 116 Tex. 288, 1926 Tex. LEXIS 121
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1926
DocketNo. 4541.
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 288 S.W. 1064 (Slocomb v. Cameron Independent School District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Slocomb v. Cameron Independent School District, 288 S.W. 1064, 116 Tex. 288, 1926 Tex. LEXIS 121 (Tex. 1926).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Judge POWELL

delivered the opinion of the Commission of Appeals, Section B.

This cause is before the Supreme Court upon the following certificate from the Honorable Court of Civil Appeals of the Third District:

“The above styled and numbered cause is pending in this court on appeal from the District Court of Milam County. The question herein certified is material to a decision of the appeal and grows out of the nature and result of the suit and the facts disclosed by the record before us, which, in so far as deemed material to this certificate, follow:

“Appellants are resident citizens of Milam County, residing without the limits of Cameron Independent School District, but within the limits of other school districts in the county, and are parents of one or more children each, within the statutory scholastic age, regularly enrolled in the school districts of their respective residences.

“Appellees are the Cameron Independent School District, and the members of the board of trustees, and the superintendent of schools of that district. While appellants’ petition describes the Cameron Independent School District simply as ‘an independent school district having a population in excess of five hundred,’ appellees allege and all parties virtually concede that the district ‘is incorporated in the manner contemplated in Art. 11, Sec. 10, and Art. 7, Sec. 3, of the State Constitution, and which has assumed control of the public free schools in the city (Cameron) limits as contemplated by said articles,’ and have requested certified questions embodying this description of the district.

“Prior to August 1, 1925, the children in question (being forty in all and in ages ranging from 8 to 17 years) were, for the scholastic year 1925-6 by application of their respective parents and order of the county school superintendent, regularly transferred from the respective districts of their residences, in which they had been regularly enrolled, to appellee district.

“On April 1, 1924, the trustees of the latter adopted a regulation requiring all scholastics transferred from other districts (the parents not residing in the Cameron district) to pay tuition at the rate of $36.00 per annum in the high school and $18.00 per annum in grades below high school; such sum being payable in two equal installments, the first at the beginning of the first term and the second at the beginning of the second; and *295 providing that no such transferred pupil should be permitted to enroll in the Cameron schools without presenting to the superintendent receipt for the tuition. On September 4, 1925, this regulation was amended to the extent of permitting the first installment to be paid at any time during the first term.

“All of the scholastics involved in the suit were enrolled in and had attended the Cameron schools during the first term of the 1925-6 session and had paid no tuition.

“On December 31, 1925, the president of appellee district school board sent to appellant Slocomb the following letter:

“ ‘Permit me to call your attention to the fact that under the School Board’s ruling all tuition for pupils living outside the Cameron District will be due not later than January 21, the beginning of the second term of the school year. It has been the custom of the board to collect tuition in two installments, one at the opening of school in September and the other at the beginning of the second term.

“ ‘For the accommodation of patrons the ruling was changed this year so as to permit patrons to pay the first installment at any time during the first term, but requiring that all tuition must be paid in full not later than January 21, 1926.

“ ‘The tuition rates as fixed by the Board are as follows:

“ ‘For High School students $50.00 per year.

“ ‘For students in grades below the high school $32.00.

“ ‘Where students are transferred credit is allowed on these amounts for the transfer money, which for the current year is $14.00 per capita.

“ ‘Your children have been transferred and the amount of tuition due not later than Jan. 21st, 1926, is as follows:

“ ‘Don Slocomb................................................$ 50.00

Casey “ 32.00

Guy Slocomb................................................ 32.00

Total amount due........................................$114.00

Credit for transfer money.......................... 42.00

Balance due..............................................$ 72.00

“ ‘Under the Board’s ruling pupils cannot be permitted to register for the second term until tuition has been paid in full.

“ ‘By order of the Board of Trustees of the Cameron City Schools.’

“Similar Tetters were sent to other appellants.

“On January 21, 1926, appellants brought this suit against appellees in the District Court of Milam County, in which, after *296 alleging the foregoing facts, and in addition that some of appellants were unable to pay the tuition demanded, they prayed for temporary injunction (1) restraining appellees from (a) demanding, collecting or attempting to collect the tuition in question, and (b) in any manner disbarring appellants’ children from attending the Cameron schools, and (2) commanding and requiring appellees to allow appellants’ children to continue to attend the Cameron schools during the 1925-6 session, under the same terms and with the same rights and privileges accorded other children attending such schools. They also prayed that this relief, upon final hearing, be made permanent. Appellants’ petition was presented to the District Judge on the day of its filing, and the prayer for temporary injunction was on the same day ‘overruled and denied’. The appeal, which is from this order, was filed in this court January 22, 1926, and on the same day this court granted to appellants a temporary restraining order and mandatory injunction, preserving the status quo pending the appeal. The cause was advanced and submitted in this court on February 3, 1926, at which time appellees filed a motion to certify to the Supreme Court.

“Because of the public importance of the controversy thus raised and the evident necessity of having a judicial determination thereof as soon as practicable, we deem it advisable to certify for your decision the following question:

“As a condition precedent to the right to attend the public schools of a city constituting an independent school district, incorporated in the manner contemplated by Article XI, Section 10, and Article VII, Section 3, of the State Constitution, which city has assumed control of the public free schools within its limits as contemplated by said Articles, to which district scholastics have been regularly transferred under the provisions of R. S. 1911, Art. 2760, has such independent school district authority under the Constitution and laws of this State to charge tuition to such transferred scholastics ?”

In answering the question certified, we limit our reply to the specific question propounded. In other words, the Cameron district is willing to accept these transfers provided they pay the tuition charged.

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Bluebook (online)
288 S.W. 1064, 116 Tex. 288, 1926 Tex. LEXIS 121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/slocomb-v-cameron-independent-school-district-tex-1926.