Splawn v. Woodard

287 S.W. 677
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 13, 1926
DocketNo. 7083.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 287 S.W. 677 (Splawn v. Woodard) 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
Splawn v. Woodard, 287 S.W. 677 (Tex. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

McCLENDON, C. J.

Appellees, plaintiffs below, are students or prospective students of the University of Texas, who have made reservation for lodging in B Hall for the 1926-1927 long session. Appellants, defendants below, are the members of the board of regents and president of the University and a contractor whom the University authorities have engaged to make repairs upon the building in question.

The contentions upon which appellees assert their right to the injunction are: (1) That the gift to the University of the fund from which B Hall was in the main originally constructed created a trust, or, in any event, imposed limitations upon the use of the property, requiring that it be perpetually used as a dormitory for University students of limited means, and that the regents were therefore without power to alter the building so as to make it unsuited to such use; and (2) that appellees had binding contracts with University authorities for quarters during the 1926-1927 long session, and were entitled to the injunction in order to preserve their contractual rights.

AVe have reached the conclusion that the trial court’s order must be set aside and the temporary injunction'dissolved upon the following holdings:

(1) The 40 acres upon which the main branch of the University at Austin was first established was set aside for campus purposes and no trust or condition upon its use as such could be imposed without legislative grant.

(2) The board of regents are invested by law with the authority and duty to govern the University, and the matter of determining what buildings are to be placed upon the campus, their arrangement, and changes and alterations to be made therein, is vested in the regents, whose discretion in that regard is subject only to legislative control. The courts have no power to interfere with the decisions of the board in that regard, so long as they do not transcend powers and duties conferred upon them by law.

(3) The terms under which the donation of the fund for erecting Brackenridge Hall was made do not evidence the creation of a trust or the imposition of conditions which would in any way abridge the full power of the re•gents to determine the advisability of changing the uses of the building from those for which it was originally constructed, or limit in any way their discretion in that regard.

(4) If the donation and its acceptance were construed as creating such trust or imposing such conditions, the use of-the building for the purpose originally designed for a period of 36 years must be considered as a fulfillment of the trust and full compliance with the conditions.

(5) The evidence does not show a contract on the part of the appellees.

(6) Such contract, if shown, could not be enforced by injunction.

The facts which control the decision are not controverted. While no attempt was made to show in what way the University or state deraigned its present title to the University campus, it is conceded that the title is in the state or University for campus purposes, and it may well be regarded as a matter of common knowledge that the tract was set aside and designated for that purpose by the commissioners who under enactment of the Texas Republic surveyed the site for the *679 seat oí government. See Act of January 14,' 1839. The Act oí 1881 (Acts 17th Deg. c. 75), establishing the University, provided for location of the main branch and the medical department by popular vote, by which the main branch was located at Austin, and from that time the tract in question has been used for campus purposes. By section 5 of that act the government of the University was vested in a board of regents, whose duties were set forth in sections 15 and following of the act. Among the duties thus imposed were: To establish the departments of the University; to define the general plan of University buildings ; advertise for bids; and proceed as soon as practicable to the erection of the buildings. The only directions or limitations which the act appears to have contained with reference to buildings were that they should be “substantial and handsome, but not loaded with useless and expensive ornamentation,” not to cost over $150,000, and that they should “be so constructed as to admit of additions thereto without marring the harmony of the architecture.”

The first session of the University for students was that of 1883-1884. According to the testimony of Judge Batts:

“At the time of the starting out of the University here the facilities for taking care of the young men and women were very limited. It was also the case that most of the students were rather poor. Among the students were two by the name of Shugart and Melson. Mr. Melson is now district judge in Hopkins county, if I am not mistaken. They instituted a mess, and the results of their efforts were published by the University authorities, indicating, as I now recall it, that they had lived for a month .on something like $8. As a result of their efforts, two or three mess halls were established; one, I remember, was at the place where the Christian Science Church is at this time. This enabled a number of young men of Texas to attend the University who could not otherwise have been there, I am quite sure; of course, that is a conclusion of mine. But the result of it was that the University authorities began a discussion of the matter of other mess halls for the students. One who was especially interested in it was Dr. Leslie Waggener, chairman of the faculty at the time. As the result, Mr. Bracken-ridge proposed to put up a mess hall and dormitory for the students; it was accepted by the University regents, and what has been known since as B Hall was erected.”

The following appears from the minutes of the meetings of the board of regents:

February 11, 1890:

“An urgent need for a mess hall represented to the board, a generous friend present offered to erect one for the benefit of the University, at his own cost, and to donate it to the institution.' Whereupon the following resolution offered by Regent Simkins was unanimously adopted by the board, with much enthusiasm and cordiality towards the magnanimous donor:
“ ‘Whereas, a friend of the University of Texas has generously furnished means to construct one or more mess halls on the campus grounds to cost not exceeding the sum of $10,000, the executive committee is instructed to have suitable plans of said building at once prepared.
“‘(2) The executive committee, when said plans are adopted, shall proceed at once to the erection of said building.
“ ‘(3) That Regent Geo. W. Brackenridge be and he is hereby made a member of the executive committee of the board of regents.’ ”

From the minutes of June 17, 1890:

“It is with great pleasure that the faculty call attention in this report to the generous donation, from a private citizen of the state, of $15,000 for the purpose of erecting on the University campus a club house, by means of which the cost of living, while attending the University, can be brought within the reach of those whose resources are limited.

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287 S.W. 677, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/splawn-v-woodard-texapp-1926.