Sеveral teachers of the Wilmer-Hutchins Independent School District filed this class action to restrain the district from deducting from their monthly pay, and from the pay of other teachers, amounts claimed by the district as overpayments for previous years. A temporary injunction was denied, and the teachers perfected this appeal. We granted temporary relief pending the appeal, and we now reverse the trial court’s order and grant the temporary injunction sought.
The facts are undisputed except in оne particular, which we find to be immaterial. After the close of the 1981-82 academic year, the district determined that it had used an erroneous method of computing the sick lеave allowed to its teachers. From its records, the accuracy of which is disputed, the district determined the amount of over-payments and sent notices to the affeсted teachers inviting them to attend a “workshop” at a specified time and place in order to examine the records and present any records of their own. Only two tеachers appeared, one of whom obtained a satisfactory adjustment. The district then announced its intention to make the deduction from the teachers’ payсhecks during the remainder of the 1982-1983 academic year. This suit ensued on behalf of all teachers affected by the deductions. The judge issued a temporary restraining order, which was continued from time to time, but after *698 a hearing he denied the temporary injunction.
Adequacy of Legal Remedy
The district contends that the trial court’s order should be affirmed because the teachers failed to show that they will suffer irreparable harm for which they have no adequate remedy at law. It suggests that the teachers would be adequately protected and the propriety of the deductions and accuracy of the records could be better determined in a suit against the district for the salaries withheld. We conclude that the remedy suggested is not adequate. Since current wages are presumably necessary for subsistence, the process of litigating a claim for debt to final judgment cannot be considered sufficiently prompt for adequate redress. Moreover, prosecution by the teachers of their several claims would result in a multiplicity of suits, a recognized ground of injunctive relief.
H. Rouw Co. v. Texas & N.O.R. Co.,
Exhaustion of Administrative Remedies
The district also contends that the injunction was properly denied because the teachers failed to exhaust their administrative remedies with school authorities at the local or state level. Thus, it argues that failurе of the teachers to appear at the “workshop” to examine the district's records and present their own bars them from the relief sought. We recognize that since matters of school administration have been committed to school authorities, the courts should not decide disputed questions of fact that have not first been decided by the рroper administrative authority.
Daniel v. Dallas Independent School District,
Right to Make Deductions from Current Salaries
Accordingly, we reach the merits of this question of law. The district contends that since it has a duty to recovеr public funds paid out under a mistake of fact, it may resort to self-help by deducting the overpayments from current salaries due. We do not agree. By such action the district is treating current salaries as already paid to the extent of the previous overpay-ments, contrary to the common-law rule that mutual debts do not extinguish each other in the аbsence of agreement or judicial action. 6 S. Williston, Contracts § 887E (3rd ed. 1962);
Hamilton
v.
Wilcox,
This principle has particular application here in view of the strong policy of this State to рrotect current wages from the claims of creditors. Article XVI, section 28, of the Texas Constitution provides that cur
*699
rent wages shall not be subject to garnishment, and article 3836(a)(7) of the Texas Revised Civil Statutes (Vernon Supp.1982-1983) provides that current wages are “exempt from attachment, execution and every type of seizure for the satisfaction оf liabilities.” Although the district may be correct in contending that its actions cannot be technically described as either a garnishment or an attachment, the asserted remedy оf self-help is even more strongly opposed to the policy underlying this limitation of judicial remedies, since it is not subject to similar judicial safeguards. A creditor, such as the district clаims to be, should not be permitted to resort to self-help to impound current wages that are not subject to garnishment. This principle was applied in
Dempsey v. MeKennell,
2 Tex. Civ.App. 284,
Even closer to the point here is
Finberg v. Board of Education,
The district relies on
Aebli v. Board of Education,
The district also relies on the rule permitting a creditor to make whatever application of payments he elects in the absence of a contrary direction by the debtor, citing
First National Bank v. Whirlpool Corp.,
Abuse of Discretion
Appellee urges that denial of the temporary injunction should not be reviewed without a showing of abuse of discretion and asserts that no such abuse is shown. However, the trial court abuses its discretion when it fails or refuses to apply the correct rule of law to conceded or undisputed facts.
Southland Life Ins. Co. v. Egan,
Judgment
The order of the trial court is reversed and judgment is rendered that a temporary injunction be issued, pending final disposition of this suit, restraining the district from withholding from current salaries to its teachers any amounts claimed as over *700 payment of salaries for the academic yеar 1981-82 and prior years. The ancillary temporary injunction granted by this court is continued in force until the issuance of the court’s mandate or the filing of an application fоr writ of error. The trial court is directed to require of appellants a proper bond, as provided by rule 684 of the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure.
Notes
. This holding is without regard to rule 97(b) of the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure, which gives the debtor in such a suit by the creditor the right to file a counterclaim on which the debtor would have the burden of proof.
