The Laws of Texas, 1923-1925 [Volume 22] Page: 258 of 1,648
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248 SPECIAL LAWS.
[NOTE.-The enrolled bill shows that the foregoing Act passed
the House, yeas 112, nays 0; and passed the Senate, yeas 28, nays 0.]
[The foregoing Act was presented to the Governor of Texas for
his approval on the 9th day of March, A. D. 1923, but was not
signed by him nor returned to the House in which it originated,
with his objections thereto, within the time prescribed by the Constitution,
and thereupon became a law without his signature.]
Effective April 4, 1923.
VALIDATING CONSOLIDATE COCOMMON SCHOOL DISTRICT
NO. 1 OF CASTRO COUNTY AND VALIDATING ISSUE
OF BONDS HERETOFORE VOTED, ETC.
H. B. No. 519.] CHAPTER 70.
An Act validating Consolidated Common School District No. 1 of Castro
'County, Texas, and validating an issue of bonds heretofore voted by
said district; and declaring an emergency.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Texas:
SECTION 1. Consolidated Commron Schlool District No. I of Castro
County, Texas. as defined in an order of the county board of
:school trustees of Castro County, Texas, entered on August 1, 1921,
.and recorded in Book 1, page 6, of the record of school districts of
Castro County, Texas, is in all rspects validated as of said date.
SEC. 2. The certain issue of schoolhouse bonds, aggregating ten
thousand dollars ($10,000.00) voted by said Consolidated Common
School District No. 1 on May 6, 1922, together with the election
in regard thereto held on May 6, 1922, and all proceedings in relation
thereto and all orders of the commissioners' court of Castro
County, Texas, in relation to the issuance of said bonds and all
tax levies ordered by said court in respect thereto, are in all things
validated, and the Attorney General of Texas is authorizd to approve
said bonds upon proper chowing of the necessary orders of
the commissioners' court levying the required taxes to support said
bond issue as in other cases.
SEC. 3. The fact that the irregularities in the creation of said
district have made it impossible for said district to conduct its
finances validly, and consistently with the educational requirements
of said district, creates an emergency and an imperative public necessity
that the constitutional rule requiring bills to be read on
three several days in each House be suspended, and that this Act
shall take effect and be in force from and after its passage, and
said rule is hereby suspended, and it is so enacted.
[NOTE.-The enrolled bill shows that the foregoing Act passed
the Holuse of Representatives, yeas 108, nays 0; and passed the
Senate, yeas 27, nays 0.]
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Gammel, Hans Peter Mareus Neilsen. The Laws of Texas, 1923-1925 [Volume 22], book, 1925; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth15500/m1/258/: accessed April 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .