41 S.W.2d 1069 | Tex. App. | 1931
Appellant, on September 25, 1930, instituted this suit in the district court of Wise county and procured a temporary writ of injunction restraining the tax assessor and the tax collector of Wise county from assessing, collecting, or paying over to the proper authorities of the Wizzard Wells consolidated school district, taxes assessed or collected therefor in Wise county.
The consolidated district, in its corporate capacity and name, intervened and made the plaintiff, the assessor, the collector, the school authorities, by name, parties defendant, and alleged, in substance, that in due time, manner, and form, common school district No. 44 of Jack county had been consolidated with the contiguous common school district No. 68 of Wise county. As alleged, the consolidation was by virtue of and in strict accord with section 5a, chapter 84, of the Acts of the First Called Session of the 40th Legislature of Texas (Vernon's Ann.Civ.St. art. 2742b, § 5a); the various steps by the various authorities required by the terms of the act being set forth in clear detail in a lengthy petition. It was particularly alleged that the school authorities named in the act had in due time and form, and upon petitions signed by the requisite number of qualified persons, ordered elections for the purpose that were simultaneously held in the several districts named, and which resulted in favor of the consolidation by unanimous vote, and that the intervening petitioners, who were named, were thereafter duly installed as trustees of the consolidated district, and as such entered into and were performing the functions of such office. The prayer was that plaintiff's temporary writ of injunction be dissolved, and defendants restrained from further intervening.
In a trial before the court without a jury judgment was rendered in accord with the prayer of the interveners' petition, and the plaintiff Gomer C. Jones has prosecuted this appeal.
The relevant portion of the act under which the interveners alleged that the consolidation was effected, reads as follows: "Whenever a majority of the legally qualified property taxpaying voters residing in two or more contiguous Common School Districts lying in two or more Counties desire to consolidate said contiguous Common School Districts for school purpose only, they may do so by a petition signed by twenty or more of the qualified taxpaying voters in each Common School District, presented to the County Board of School Trustees of the County in which the Common School District is situated."
Appellant's sole ground of attack on the validity of the consolidated district is that the petition which was presented to the Wise county board of trustees praying for the election was not signed by the required number of taxpaying voters of the district. No assignments of error were filed in the court below as required by the statute, nor is the transcript accompanied by a statement of facts, and it was conceded by counsel of appellant on the submission of the appeal that unless the proceedings involved were absolutely void on the ground asserted that appellant has no standing in court. We therefore address ourselves to a disposition of that question.
It is to be noted in the beginning that the interveners in express terms alleged that the petitions for the election were duly signed by the requisite number of taxpaying voters in the common school districts in question, and the judgment, in the absence of a *1070 statement of facts, establishes those allegations by necessary implication. But if this be not so, as seems to be insisted, it is to be further noted that appellant in his petition for the injunction fails to show that he is either a patron or taxpaying voter in either of the common school districts involved, and that his attack on the consolidated district is a collateral one. Nor does he complain that the law under which the consolidation was effected is invalid.
In Kuhn v. City of Yoakum (Tex.Com.App.)
In Dyer v. Consolidated School District No. 5 (Tex.Civ.App.)
In the case of Floydada I. S.D. v. Shipley (Tex.Civ.App.)
In El Paso v. Ruckman,
What has already been said conclusively answers, we think, appellant's further contention that the court erred in refusing to admit "offered proof" that less than the required number of qualified voters had signed the petition for the election ordered by the court board of Wise county. But in deference to the insistence of counsel upon the submission of the appeal, we venture to call attention to the fact, before stated, that that issue was distinctly presented in the petition of the interveners and determined in their favor, and in the absence of a statement of facts it cannot, in any event, be said that the court's ruling constitutes such prejudicial error as to require a reversal of the judgment. This is particularly true in view of the fact that appellant's bill of exception fails to set out the evidence, if any, that was offered. The bill merely recites that appellant "offered to prove" that there was an insufficient number of legal signers. There is a clear distinction between "proof" and "evidence." The "proof" is the conclusion drawn from the evidence, and the court may have concluded that the evidence offered, if any, was not competent and receivable, not only on the ground that appellant, a private person, could not so invalidate the corporate capacity of the consolidated district, but also on the ground that the recitation in the order of the county board of school trustees of Wise county, which was set forth in the petition of the interveners, could not be so impeached and was conclusive in the absence of allegations and evidence of fraud or mistake on the part of the board, and there were no such allegations or evidence offered. The recitation in the order of the county board of the Wise county trustees above referred to was that there was the "requisite number of signatures of resident, qualified voters of said district, and being in every respect in conformity with law." The court of Civil Appeals of Galveston in the case of City of Houston v. Little,
In the case of Ex parte Koen,
*1071We conclude that the judgment should be affirmed, and it is so ordered.