Tautenhahn v. State Ex Rel. Nichols

334 S.W.2d 574, 1960 Tex. App. LEXIS 2154
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 31, 1960
Docket3718
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 334 S.W.2d 574 (Tautenhahn v. State Ex Rel. Nichols) 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
Tautenhahn v. State Ex Rel. Nichols, 334 S.W.2d 574, 1960 Tex. App. LEXIS 2154 (Tex. Ct. App. 1960).

Opinion

TIREY, Justice.

The action is one for the removal of each of the respondents from their office as trustees of the Aldine Independent School District of Harris County. The State of Texas, acting by and through Hon. Tom Resweber, County Attorney, of Harris County, brought the action upon the relation of Charles C. Nichols, W. B. Lauderdale, Ernest B. Pate, and Chester W. Sanders, and the petition prayed for the entry of an order directing the issuance of citation and service on Harry F. Am-mons, Carl H. Tautenhahn, and Robert L. Whitmarsh, the action having been brought under Provisions of Title 100 of the Revised Civil Statutes, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St., and particularly Articles 5972 to 5982, inclusive, and the amendments thereto. A separate suit was filed against each respondent and in each petition the relators set out certain acts of each of the respondents as grounds for the removal of each respondent, and specifically alleged that these acts of the respondents resulted in the closing of the Aldine School, and that it remained closed. The causes were consolidated over respondents’ objections, and the case was tried to a jury which returned a verdict finding each of the respondents guilty of two of the charges made against each of them and upon such jury finding the Court removed each respondent from the office and appointed a successor to each.

This record is voluminous and does not yield to a simple statement. The relators went to trial on their original petition. They did not replead after the Court consolidated these cases. We quote the pertinent parts of allegations alleged against respondent Tautenhahn:

“ * * * that defendant, Carl H. Tautenhahn has been guilty of incompetency and official misconduct in the discharge of the official duties of his office as Trustee of the Aldine Independent School District in the following enumerated instances:
“1. By voting the adoption of a $1.59 school budget for the 1958-1959 school year coupled with voting the adoption of a $1.35 tax levy, with knowledge that no surplus of unex-pended funds remained from the operations of the District in preceding years, but to the contrary, a deficit existed at the beginning of the 1958— 1959 school year, all of which allegations can and will be shown from the official minutes of the meetings of the Board of Trustees at the trial hereof.
“2. By refusing to recognize the holdings of Courts of proper jurisdiction No. 516,502 in the 129th Judicial District Court, affirmed in No. 13,437 in the Court of Civil Appeals of the First Supreme Judicial District in Houston, each being entitled Robert L. Whitmarsh, et al. v. Jack B. Buckley, et al., that his associate Board members, Jack B. Buckley and Rick Cass, are duly qualified members of said Board pending the final determination of the present boundaries of the Aldine Independent School District, but, with complete disregard for and disrespect of the established judicial processes for settlement of disputes, this defendant has, by his vote, given notice to the School depository that members *576 Buckley and Cass have been deposed and ousted, and, by his unofficial and illegal action has succeeded in tying up the finances necessary for the operations of the classrooms of the District.
“3. On May 14, 1959, the Court of Civil Appeals in Houston handed down its ruling in Cause No. 13,437, entitled Robert L. Whitmarsh, et al., appellants, v. Jack B. Buckley, et al, appellees [324 S.W.2d 298], on the motion for rehearing in the cause alleged in the preceding paragraph, in effect holding that said Buckley and Cass were de facto officers entitled to serve pending a final determination adverse to them in a quo warranto proceeding. With complete disregard for and disrespect of the established judicial processes for settlement of this problem, this defendant has continued in his notice to the School depository that members Buckley and Cass are not lawful and proper officers of the District with authority to sign drafts drawn against the school deposits held by the school depository, so that for the protection of its interests, the said depository has refused to honor any drafts drawn against the school deposits, which drafts are necessary for the operations of the classrooms of the Districts.
* * * * * *
“The acts enumerated in the foregoing paragraph, resulting in the complete paralysis and shutdown of the classrooms of the School District, forcing the children out of the halls of education onto the streets and thoroughfares with substantial and irreparable damage to their educational careers, as well as seriously dislocating the economy of the community by withdrawing anticipated income from the classroom teachers of the District, do, each of them, constitute incompetency and gross carelessness in the discharge of this defendant’s official duties, and further, each such act alleged constitutes an instance of official misconduct in relation to the duties of his office.”

They prayed for the removal of the trustee instanter, and for an appointment to fill the vacancy, and for general relief.

Plaintiffs’ original petition against respondents, Whitmarsh and Ammons, is substantially as they alleged against Tau-tenhahn.

Article 5978, R.C.S., requires the Court to submit the controversy on a general charge, and he did so. We quote the pertinent parts of this Charge:

“This cause arises out of the charges by the State that each of the Respondents is guilty of ‘Official Misconduct’ and ‘Incompetency,’ as those terms are defined to you below in the following particulars:
“1. In that each of them voted the adoption of a $1.35 tax levy for the 1958— 1959 school year for the School District while serving as a duly qualified Trustee for the District.
“2. In that each of them by his vote on a certain Resolution (Relators’ Exhibit No. 9) delivered to the School Depository, The National Bank of Commerce, caused conflicting signature cards which made the funds unavailable for the payment of obligations of the District.
“3. In that Respondent, Robert L. Whit-marsh, refused to give effect to the opinion of the Court of Civil Appeals for the First Supreme Judicial District of Texas, rendered on May 14, 1959, (Relators’ Exhibit No. 24) by thereafter continuing his notice to the Bank that he did not agree that Richard G. Cass was authorized to sign checks of the District against its funds on deposit, resulting in the continued unavailability of such funds.
“4. In that each of them, by his conduct exhibited sometime between September 19, 1958 and May 15, 1959, failed to accept Richard G. Cass as a Trustee of the *577 District, having a right to serve as a Member of the Board of Trustees.
“To these charges each of the Respondents has answered, denying each and all of the material allegations contained therein.
“Wherever found in this charge you are bound by the following definitions:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
334 S.W.2d 574, 1960 Tex. App. LEXIS 2154, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tautenhahn-v-state-ex-rel-nichols-texapp-1960.