74 S.W.2d 179 | Tex. App. | 1934
Appellant, George V. Bear, instituted this suit in the Ninety-Third district court of Hidalgo county, against appellees, Donna Independent School District, its board of school trustees, and Harris G. Carter, seeking a temporary injunction restraining appellees and each of them from asserting the invalidity of appellant's contract as superintendent of the Donna Independent School District, or from denying his right to exercise all the powers, privileges, and duties of such office, or from in any manner interfering therewith, or from dispossessing him of said office and the equipment now in his possession, and that they be restrained and enjoined from refusing to execute and issue appellant vouchers for his services, and that upon final hearing said injunction be made perpetual.
Appellees answered by filing a plea in abatement seeking to have appellant's cause of action dismissed for want of jurisdiction in the district court, appellant having failed to apply to the higher school authorities for relief before invoking the jurisdiction of the courts. The trial court sustained the plea in abatement, and George V. Bear has prosecuted this appeal.
Appellant alleged in his petition, among other things, that the Donna Independent School District was created by virtue of a special act of the Thirty-Sixth Legislature (Sp. Acts 1919, c.
This appeal presents the correctness of the trial court's action in sustaining the plea in abatement to appellant's petition. It is unquestionably the general rule that in matters involving the administration of public school matters persons considering themselves aggrieved thereby are required to appeal to the higher school authorities before resorting to the courts. Article 2656 and article 2686, R.S. 1925, as amended Acts 1927, 40th Leg., p. 128, ch.
However, appellant contends that where a school board acts without authority of law and contrary to express statutes, and in such manner that its act is void, then the courts of the land may be appealed to directly without first exhausting the remedy of appeal to the school authorities.
This is unquestionably correct, and was so held in State Line Consolidated School District v. Farwell Independent School District (Tex.Com.App.)
The question to be decided is: Has appellant by the allegations of his petition shown this case to come within the above exception?
Article 2749, R.S. 1925, provides, among other things, that the board of school trustees shall have the power to employ and dismiss teachers, but in case of dismissal teachers shall have the right to appeal to the county and state superintendents. Thus it is seen that the school trustees of the Donna District did have the legal right to employ and dismiss teachers, and, having exercised this power, the above article makes it the duty of any teacher who may feel aggrieved at such action to prosecute an appeal to the proper school authorities.
It is argued by appellant that, in view of the fact that he was in effect discharged without notice or hearing, he would not be required to appeal to higher school authorities, but should be permitted to seek redress from such unlawful act on the part of the school board in the courts. We cannot agree with this contention. The controversy in this case finally resolves itself into a dispute between appellant and appellee Carter as to which one has the legal right to the position of superintendent of schools of the Donna District. Such controversy should be first submitted to the proper school authorities before resort can be had to the courts. Moreland v. Wynne (Tex.Civ.App.)
Appellant cites Miller v. Smiley (Tex.Civ.App.)
The fact that the school board may have discharged Bear without notice or hearing would not deprive the higher school authorities of their right to pass upon this controversy. If he was properly dismissed, he would have no grievance whatever, and if improperly dismissed, because he did not have notice and hearing, or for other reasons, the law requires that he first seek relief at the hands of the higher school authorities before resorting to the courts.
The failure of appellant's petition to allege that he had resorted to the proper school authorities before appealing to the courts was sufficient to defeat the jurisdiction of the courts, and the trial judge properly sustained the plea in abatement to appellant's petition, and the judgment of the trial court dismissing appellant's cause of action will be in all things affirmed.