Stokes v. Paschall

243 S.W. 611, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 1156
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 15, 1922
DocketNo. 10074.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 243 S.W. 611 (Stokes v. Paschall) 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
Stokes v. Paschall, 243 S.W. 611, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 1156 (Tex. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

CONNER, C. J.

J. J. Stokes and a number of other taxpaying citizens and residents of Wise county, Tex., instituted this suit to enjoin what is termed a sale of $150,000 of road bonds of road district No. 2 in said county. Except as hereinafter noted, it is undisputed that road district No. 2, situated in the northwest corner of Wise county, was regularly established and laid out, and that thereafter and therein an election was regularly ordered and conducted, at which the commissioners’ court of Wise county was, by the vote of the district, authorized to *612 issue and sell $150,000 of bonds for tlie district, with the proceeds of which macadamized roads might be constructed. All of the petitioners, save possibly two — T. H . Lumsden and J. H. Redwine — are resident citizens and qualified voters and owners of the lands in the district named, and this suit was instituted to restrain the sale or proposed sale of the bonds in the manner set out. The plaintiffs alleged that the commissioners’ court and members thereof, naming them, had proposed to sell said bonds to Breg, Garrett & Co., a partnership doing business in Dallas, Tex., for 91.65 cents on the dollar, or for $139,575, which was $13,SOO less than par; that the commissioners’ court is mating a pretense of selling said bonds at par and allowing $13,-800 to be deducted by the purchaser to cover pretended costs of printing the bonds, legal opinion of the purchaser’s attorneys, and other expenses pretended to be incident to the issuance of the bonds; that the expense of printing the bonds could not be over $150 or $200, and all the other amount was included as a mere pretense to evade the statute and laws requiring that such bonds be sold for not less than par; that, in any event, 'the said $13,800 includes discounts, and is not allowed in any manner authorized by law, in that it is proposed to be allowed by the court without determining what items it consisted of, or the reasonableness thereof; that said commissioners’ court has proposed to make a pretended agency arrangement in such manner as to make a pretense of allowing a pretended agent or broker a commission of approximately $13,800, and allow such pretended agent to juggle the $13,800 with a. purchaser in such manner as to make an appearance of selling said bonds at par when in fact no such sale was being made, and when the amount proposed to be received for the entire $150,000 of bonds was only $139,575, including accrued interest; that the said proposal or arrangement with Breg, Garrett & Co., while in form a pretended employment of said firm to sell said bonds, was understood to be a sale of the said bonds to said firm, and will be perverted into and consummated as such sale of the bonds to them for $13,800 less than par unless said members of the commissioners’ court are restrained by injunction, and the plaintiffs, as taxpayers of said road district, will be required to pay said bonds in full, including the $13,800, for which they get no benefit, and will thus be subjected to taxes for a purpose not authorized by law.

The defendants, the county judge and members of the commissioners’ court of Wise county, filed their answer, alleging in detail the preparation, signing, and presentment of the petition for said road district No. 2 to be defined and established and for the bond election; that such election was ordered and was held, and the result thereof; and also the various orders made by the court relative to the result and the issuance of the bonds; that said court thereupon advertised for bids for said bonds, and, after giving the matter wide publicity, it was found that they were unable to find a purchaser for said bonds at par, and found it absolutely necessary to employ an agent or broker and obligate themselves or the said road district to pay such agent or broker a commission out of the proceeds of the sale of said bonds in order to effect a sale at par; that they thereupon got in communication with certain specified brokers, who appeared and bid for the privilege of selling the bonds at par; “that all of said individuals and firms demanded of said court that they or their respective firms be paid a commission on the sale of said bonds for the finding of a purchaser who would pay for said bonds par and accrued interest there-on”; that said Breg, Garrett & Co. were the best bidders on the said proposition of finding a purchaser at par and accrued interest, their demand being an allowance of $13,-800, and same was accepted by the commissioners’ court, said court agreeing that it would pay the $13,800 out of the general fund of the county, intending thereafter to reimburse the county out of the proceeds of the sale of the bonds. The defendants’ answer also contained a general and special denial and the following further special plea:

“Defendants further say that the issuance and sale of said bonds were expressly authorized by article 3, § 52, of the Constitution of the state of Texas, and that article 632 of the Revised Statutes of Texas, as amended by Acts of the Legislature of 1917, p. 463, is in conflict therewith, especially in so far as the Legislature attempts to fix the price for which said bonds shall sell; that said Legislature was without authority to provide that said bonds should not be sold for less than par value, that being a matter within the discretion of the commissioners’ court, and said statute is to such extent illegal and void.”

The cause was tried on December 30, 1921, before the court on its merits, without a jury, and the court rendered judgment denying to plaintiffs any and all relief, refusing either to enjoin the sale absolutely or to enjoin the disposition of the bonds under the proposals shown to have been made with Breg, Garrett & Co. Plaintiffs have duly appealed from the judgment so rendered.

It is first contended that at all events relief should have been granted to the appellants T. H. Lumsden and J. H. Redwine, in that the .evidence shows that they were residents of and legal voters in the Alvord voting precinct, and not properly included within the established boundaries of road district No. 2. There was evidence which authorized the conclusion that, at the time of the filing of the petition for the formation *613 of the road district No. 2, field notes of its boundaries were prepared and attached to the petition; as shown by the boundaries thus designated, these two appellants -are situated within road district No. 2, and within the Chico voting-precinct. Their contention is based upon evidence tending to show that prior to the formation of the road district No. 2 the commissioners’ court so changed the west boundary line of the Alvord voting precinct as to include these appellants. We have carefully considered the evidence relating to this contention, but find it unsatisfactory. It cannot, we think, be determined with certainty from the evidence either that the change by the commissioners’ court purporting to include these appellants in the Alvord district was regularly made, or, if so, whether'these particular appellants actually reside within the limits changed from the Chico to the Alvord precinct. We therefore feel unable to reverse the judgment on this ground, but, inasmuch as we have concluded that the judgment must be reversed upon grounds hereinafter stated, we leave the issue open for further determination.

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Bluebook (online)
243 S.W. 611, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 1156, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stokes-v-paschall-texapp-1922.