State Ex Rel. Lowe v. Cadenhead

129 S.W.2d 743, 1939 Tex. App. LEXIS 732
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 19, 1939
DocketNo. 1989.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 129 S.W.2d 743 (State Ex Rel. Lowe v. Cadenhead) 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
State Ex Rel. Lowe v. Cadenhead, 129 S.W.2d 743, 1939 Tex. App. LEXIS 732 (Tex. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

FUNDERBURK, Justice.

Weinert Rural High School District No. 50, located wholly in Haskell County, and comprising over one hundred square miles of territory, exists as the result of an attempted grouping of a number of common school districts with, or annexation of same to, Weinert Independent Consolidated School District, effected by means of an election ordered by the Board of County School Trustees of Haskell County on September 2, 1938, and held October 8, 1938, resulting in favor of the proposition to authorize the grouping or annexation of said districts. Dr. James F. Cadenhead and six others were appointed by the County Board of School Trustees as trustees of said Rural High School District.

This action — a quo warranto suit — was brought in the name of the State, by the Attorney General of Texas, on the relation of E. E. Lowe and others, against the said James F. Cadenhead and the other trustees of said Weinert Rural High School No. SO, seeking to adjudicate the alleged invalidity of said Rural High School District, and consequent want of authority of said individuals to act as its trustees. The facts were agreed to, in writing, and submitted to the trial court (without a jury) for judgment thereon. The judgment in part recites that “it was agreed in open court by counsel for relators and respondents that the sole and only question to be determined by the court was whether or not the act of the First Called Session of the 44th Legislature, 1935, Chapter 418, now Art. 2806a, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St., which act became effective on October 17th, 1935, repealed Art. 2922c, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St., under which the Weinert Rural High School No. 50 in Haskell County, Texas, was created. It was agreed and submitted in open court that if said Article 2806a when taken in connection with Art. 2922aa, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St., did not repeal Article 2922c, * * * then the Weinert Rural High School District No. 50, in Haskell County, Texas, was legally organized and the relators had no cause of action against the respondents.”

The court having given judgment against the relators in favor of the respondents, the former have appealed, thereby presenting to this court for decision the sole question before the court below as stated in the judgment.

Revised Statutes 1925, Art. 2806, relates to consolidations of school districts. Revised Statutes 1925, Art. 2922a (Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St. art. 2922a), and Art. 2922c, with others of the same Act (R.S.1925, Title 49, Chapter 19A) relate to a grouping or annexation of school districts. The subject matter of the former and latter is entirely *745 different. Article 2806, as amended in 1931, 42d Leg., p. 182, ch. 106, § 1, Vernon’s Ann. Civ.St. Art. 2806, authorized consolidations of school districts under different circumstances or combinations of fact, as follows: (1) Contiguous common school districts with each other; (2) contiguous independent school districts with each other; (3) common school districts with contiguous independent school districts. In the latter case, (3), and applicable to it alone, was the provision that “the district so created shall be known by the name of the independent school district included therein, and the management of the new district shall be under the existing board of trustees of the independent school district, and all the rights and privileges gránted to independent districts by the laws of this State shall be given to the consolidated independent district created under the provisions of this law.”

Similarly, school districts were authorized under said Arts. 2922a and 2922c, to be grouped, or annexations of one or more to another made, to form a Rurál High School District, according to different circumstances or combinations of fact, as follows: (a) By grouping contiguous common school districts having less than 400 scholastic population ; (b) by grouping independent school districts having less than 250 scholastic population; (c) by annexing one or more common school districts to a common school district having 400 or more scholastic population; (d) by annexing one or more independent school districts having less than 250 scholastic population to a common school district having 400, or more, scholastic population; (e) by annexing one or more common school districts to an independent school district having 250 or more scholastic .population, and (f) by annexing one or more independent school districts having less than 250 scholastic 'population to an independent school district having 250 or more scholastic population.

Applicable to only one of said circumstances, (e) is the provision of R.S. 1925, Art. 2922b that “all independent school districts enlarged by the annexation thereto of one or more common school districts as provided for in Article 2922a shall retain its status and name as an independent school district, and shall continue to operate as an independent school district under the provisions of the existing laws and the laws hereafter enacted governing other independent school districts, except as otherwise provided for herein.” (Italics ours). When read in connection with Art. 2806 on the one hand, relating to consolidations, and Arts. 2922a and 2922c on the other, relating to groupings or annexations of districts to form Rural High School Districts, it appears that Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St. Art. 2806a, § 1, while clearly a validation statute, applicable to elections and other proceedings under both arts. 2806, and also Arts. 2922a and 2922c, does not purport to validate all acts or proceedings authorized by. said statutes. As it relates to, and validates, proceedings under Art. 2806, it, by its express terms, is confined to "consolidations or attempts at consolidation of a common school district or districts with a contiguous independent school district(Italics ours). As it relates to, and validates, proceedings under Arts. 2922a and/or 2922c, it is expressly confined to “annexations of one or more common school district with an independent school district * * *.” (Italics ours). With the scope of said Art. 2806a as a validating act thus limited, it appears that the language therein “Such independent school districts so created or established shall be known by the name of the independent district included therein”, whether referable to consolidations under Art. 2806 or groupings or annexations under Art. 2922a or- Art. 2922c, was, in substance and effect, but a re-affirmation of the law as it already existed. The same is equally true of the further, clause: “and the management of the said new district shall be under the existing board of trustees of such included independent school district and shall have all the rights and privileges conferred upon independent school districts under General Law, as well as those conferred upon such included independent district by any Special Law, if said district is acting under a Special Act.”

We are of the opinion that a mere re-affirmation of the already existing provisions of statutes, in an act validating proceedings under color of such statutes, cannot be held to repeal any statute by implication.

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Bluebook (online)
129 S.W.2d 743, 1939 Tex. App. LEXIS 732, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-lowe-v-cadenhead-texapp-1939.