The Laws of Texas, 1925 [Volume 23] Page: 18 of 822
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6 SPECIAL LAWS.
VALIDATING COMMON SCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 27 IN
GAINES COUNTY.
S. B. No. 50.] CHAPTER 5.
An Act validating Common School District No. 27 of Gaines County, and
validating an issue of bonds heretofore voted by said district; defining
the powers of the county board of school trustees of Gaines County
in respect to said district; and declaring an emergency.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Texas:
SECTION 1. Common School District No. 27 of Gaines County
as defined by an order of the board of school trustees of Gaines
County, of date May 2, 1924, and recorded on page 24 of book
designated "Record of School Districts" is in all respects validated
as of said date.
SEC. 2. The certain issue of schoolhouse bonds aggregating
$3200.00, voted by said Common School District No. 27 on June
21, 1924, together with the election in regard thereto held on
June 21, 1924, and all proceedings relative thereto and all orders
of the commissioners' court of Gaines County, Texas, relative 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 authorized to approve said bonds upon
proper showing of the necessary orders of the commissioners'
court levying the required taxes to support said bond issue as
in other cases.
SEC. 3. The county board of school trustees of Gaines County
shall have the same powers with respect to the boundaries of
this district, as if the same had been validly created under the
General Laws of this State.
SEC. 4. The fact that the above bonds were voted some time
ago, but that said district has been unable to avail itself thereof,
by reason of irregularities in the organization of said district,
and that it is now in urgent need of facilities which said bonds
are designed to provide, creates an emergency and an imperative
public necessity, justifying 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 Senate, 29 yeas, 0 nays; passed the House, 109 yeas, 0 nays.]
Approved February 4, 1925.
Effective February 4, 1925.
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Gammel, Hans Peter Mareus Neilsen. The Laws of Texas, 1925 [Volume 23], book, 1925; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth15499/m1/18/: accessed May 3, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .