256 S.W. 701 | Tex. App. | 1923
On original submission of this case, we certified to the Supreme Court, without a written opinion, the principal contentions of the parties, which questions were fully answered by the Commission of Appeals in Mecom v. Ford,
Appellants advance the following propositions, which were not certified by us to the Supreme Court:
"Where a school district has power to sell lands, but the sale was invalid because of some iregularity, the school district, with the knowledge and permission of the commissioners' court, having received the purchase money and used it for school purposes, thereby ratified the sale, and it will not be entitled to recover the land.
"Although a sale of land belonging to a school district is illegally made, the school district will be estopped to thereafter claim the same if it appear that the school district authorized the sale, received the proceeds of the sale, turned it into the school treasury, and used it for school purposes, all of which is done with the knowledge and permission of the county judge and commissioners' court of the county where said school district is located, and especially is this true where 10 or 12 years have passed during which time all parties to the transaction recognized the validity of said sale.
"When it appears that land held for the benefit of a school district ceased to be used for school purposes, and the commissioners' court of the county in which the school district was situated authorized the sale of same, fixing the terms of said sale, although said order so doing was not entered into the minutes of the commissioners' court, and in obedience to said order the trustees of said school district made a sale in accordance with the terms fixed by the commissioners' court, and the county judge of said county executed and delivered a deed to the purchaser, the purchaser paying the price fixed by the commissioners' court and agreed upon with the school trustees, which price was an adequate consideration for the land at said time, and said money so paid was turned into the school treasury and used for school purposes, and all parties to the transaction for many years recognized the validity of said sale, said acts will constitute a ratification of said sale, although irregularly made, and will pass the equitable title to the purchaser under said sale."
The facts involved in these propositions were duly pleaded by appellants. The trial court erred in sustaining appellees' exceptions thereto. Gallup v. Liberty County,
As we understand appellants' assignments of error, the opinion of the Supreme Court answering our questions and the disposition made by us of the above propositions dispose of all errors assigned which will probably arise on another trial. It is our order that the judgment of the trial court be reversed and this cause remanded for a new trial. *702