State Ex Rel. Francis v. Waller
State Ex Rel. Francis v. Waller
Opinion of the Court
This is a suit instituted by the state of Texas upon the relation of 30 citizens of Guadalupe county against Carl Waller, W. F. Ward, R. P. Harris, W. R. Smith, J. C. Dauchy, C. E. Tolhurst, and Bruce Harris, alleged to be “resident citizens of Caldwell county, Texas, and pretending to act as the lawful trustees of what is called ‘Fentress Independent County Line School District,’ embracing common school district No. 10 in Guadalupe county,” praying that appel-lees be required “to answer by what warrant of legal right they and each of them claim to have, use, and enjoy the rights and privileges as school trustees over territory embracing the territory taken from common school district No. 10, in Guadalupe, and by what right they have ousted the re-lators, W. A. Francis, A. P. Gregg, and Robert Rector, from' their office as school trustees of common school district' No. 10 of Guadalupe county, and are assuming jurisdiction to levy and collect taxes against the property in said territory, and that the judgment of the court upon a hearing be that *323 said respondents, and each of them, be ousted from exercising or- asserting any corporate right, franchise, liberty, privilege, or jurisdiction over that portion of territory taken from common school district No. 10, located in Guadalupe county, or any part thereof, herein described by metes and bounds, and designated as common school district No. 10 of Guadalupe county, and that the relators, W. A. Eraneis, A. ÍP. Gregg, and Robert Rector, be restored to their office as trustees for said common school district No. 10 of Gaudalupe county, .and for costs of suit, and for general, relief.” The court, after hearing the evidence offered by the parties, sustained the plea of privilege, and ordered the clerk to transmit all the papers in the cause to the district court of Caldwell county for docketing and trial as required by law.
Presumably, ,after the plea of privilege had been filed, appellants filed a paper that, is called “Relators’ Amendment to Original Petition,” in which it is stated that the suit was filed against the “Fentress Independent County Line School District, as well as against the usurping trustees thereof, as named in said original complaint,” and appellants prayed that the charter and franchises of the school district be forfeited. The school district had never been summoned as a corporation; in fact, there was no prayer to have it cited to appear.
It is perhaps the better rule that the residence of incorporators or stockholders can have no influence in regard to the local residence of the ordinary corporation, as the legal identity of the corporation is separate and distinct from that of the members; but in the act creating school districts the trustees are declared to be a body politic and corporate in law, known under the title and name of district trustees of a district, with a certain number of a certain county, in the state of Texas, and as such may contract and be contracted with, sue and be sued, plead or be implea'ded, etc.
There is no merit in the contention that the ■trustees had been guilty of a tort in Guadalupe county in exercising control over property in the school district. The statement of the proposition bears its own refutation. And the suggestion that the suit is to recover schoolhouses and other property is an afterthought that is not supported by any pleading or prayer. The original object was to dispossess appellees of their office, to which was added, in a paper called an “amendment to original petition,” but which is not under any rule of pleading an amendment, a prayer for forfeiture of the charter and franchises of the school district.
The sole proposition propounded by the pleadings is: Can the trustees of a county line school district be sued in any other than the county of control where the trustees live and the district has its situs? That situs in this case is fixed, not only by article 2815a, bu't also by article 2815b, which provides that “common county school districts, as provided for in section 50a (article 2815a), shall have all the rights, powers, and privileges of common school districts within the counties of this state, and for all school purposes shall be managed and controlled by the county named in the order creating such district.” We have presumed that the school district was placed under control of Caldwell county, because it is not denied that such control was given to Caldwell county, and it is admitted that it is a body politic, operating in Guadalupe and Caldwell counties.
The decision in the case of Drainage Commissioners v. Giffin, 134 Ill. 330, 25 N. E. 996, which is relied on by appellants to sustain their proposition, that the trustees could be sued in either county of which the district was a part, held that the commissioners waived their right to be sued in a certain county by a failure to plead their privilege, and the further holding that the suit could be maintained in either county was unnecessary, and is not sound, at least under our statute. It does no.t appear from that case that the commissioners, and not the district, were incorporated.
Article 2308, cited by appellants, has no reference to suits in any but justices’ courts, and of course cannot be invoked in this suit. It has no reference, either, to any but private corporations, associations, and joint-stock companies.
The case of Roaring Springs School Dist. v. McAbee, 187 S. W. 431, cited by appellants, does not sustain their contention, but, on the other hand, holds that the district should be sued “in the county of its existence and operation,” and, further, that there was no exception to article 1830, Rev. Statutes, under which the district could be sued in a county other than the one described.
Exceptions 10 and 24 to article 1830 are cited by appellants as furnishing authority for institution of the suit in Guadalupe county; but first refers to suits for personal property, and the latter to private corporations, and do no have any applicability to this case. If the latter did apply, it could not help appellants, because the school district had no agency or representative or' its principal office in Guadalupe county, and neither the cause of action nor a part of it arose in Guadalupe county. The principal office of the corporation was in Caldwell county, and its agents and representatives were in that county. No Texas authority has been presented by appellants justifying a suit in Guadalupe county.
The judgment is affirmed.
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Reference
- Full Case Name
- STATE Ex Rel. FRANCIS Et Al. v. WALLER Et Al.
- Cited By
- 10 cases
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- Published