DocketNumber: No. 3811.
Judges: Walthall
Filed Date: 3/2/1939
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
The Florey Common School District No. 5, of Andrews County acting by and through its duly qualified and acting Board of Trustees, as plaintiffs (appellants here), brought this suit in the District Court of Andrews County against defendants (appellees in this appeal) praying for a temporary injunction (temporary restraining order) restraining defendants, the County Board of School Trustees, the Andrews Independent School District, Shafter Lake School District No. 2 (the latter sued as defendant, but cross complainant in this appeal), from doing any act towards abolishing and annexing plaintiff Florey School District to any other school district, or reducing said district in size or changing its boundaries, but on the contrary prayed the court to grant an order that the plaintiff Florey Common School District remain as it had been in size and in its management and control as a school district for many years.
The purpose of the suit was to have a permanent injunction enjoining the County School Board from carrying into effect by annexation the combining of the Florey Common School District and the Shafter Lake School District with the Andrews Independent School District under Rev. St. Article 2922a, Vernon's Ann.Civ.St. art. 2922a and article 2922c, R.C.S., an election in every way regular having been had in the district at large, in which the election carried. The appellants allege, in effect, that the action of the County School Trustees was void because the election did not carry in each of the school districts. In fact the election was defeated in the Florey School District and in the Shafter Lake School District, but carried in the district at large. The combined area of the school districts is in excess of one hundred square miles.
The case was heard upon its merits. The court denied plaintiffs the permanent injunction prayed for and plaintiffs appeal.
However, the Supreme Court has held that since such approval was unnecessary under Article 2922c, the approval of the board of each school district affected was not necessary. In Countz v. Mitchell,
"1. The trustees of one of the elementary districts did not consent to the formation of the high school district;
"2. A majority in said elementary districts voted against formation of the high school district."
After stating the above, Judge McClendon, of the Austin Court of Civil Appeals, referred to the case of Countz v. Mitchell, supra, and Miller v. School Trustees, Tex. Civ. App.
We conclude from the above holdings that the consent of the trustees in each of the several school districts is not necessary; nor is it necessary that the election carry in each district, but only in the proposed district at large.
We have carefully considered the several findings of fact made by the trial court and find they are sustained by the evidence.
Propositions not discussed have been duly considered and are overruled.
The case is affirmed.
On Appellants' Motion for Rehearing
In their motion for rehearing appellants insist that this Court is in error in holding that the approval of the board of each school district affected was not necessary to the proposed formation of the independent school district. In so holding this Court followed the case of Countz v. Mitchell,
We do not place the same interpretation on Bell et al. v. Kirkland et al., Tex. Civ. App.
The motion is overruled.