Adams v. Kelley

44 S.W. 529, 17 Tex. Civ. App. 479, 1897 Tex. App. LEXIS 406
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 31, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 44 S.W. 529 (Adams v. Kelley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adams v. Kelley, 44 S.W. 529, 17 Tex. Civ. App. 479, 1897 Tex. App. LEXIS 406 (Tex. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinions

STEPHENS, Associate Justice.

Upon the petition of appellees, in behalf of themselves and 227 other resident citizens of the city of Cleburne, a writ of mandamus to compel the Commissioners Court of Johnson County to order a local option election for said city was awarded by the District Court. Erom that judgment this appeal is taken.

The petition admits that the local option law had been adopted and put in force for the entire county of Johnson in the year 1895, and that a second election for the entire county, held in March, 1897, again resulted in favor of the law. The legal force of. this election, however, is denied, upon the ground that the result, though' duly declared by the Commissioners Court and entered of record, has not been published.

The petition then pleads an act passed at the general session of the last Legislature (Acts Twenty-fifth Legislature, p. 235) amending article 3384 of the Revised Statutes, relating to local option. This amendment, among other provisions, makes it the duty of the commissioners court of each county to order an election, “to be held by the qualified voters of said county, or of any commissioner’s or justice’s precinct, -or school district, or any two or more of any such political subdivisions of a county, as may be designated by the commissioners’ court of said county, to determine whether or not the sale of intoxicating liquors shall be prohibited in such county, or commissioner’s or justice’s precinct, or school district, or any two or more of any such political subdivisions of such county, or in any town-or city,” whenever petitioned so to do by the requisite number of voters, as therein prescribed, “provided, that where a school district, city, or town may be composed in part of two or more subdivisions of the county, named hereinbefore, the right to order and hold an election in such school district, city, or town shall not be denied.”

*482 The petition further shows, after alleging that the city of Cleburne is composed in part of two or more subdivisions of the county, named hereinbefore, the right to order and hold an election in such school district, city, or town shall not be denied.”

The petition further shows, after alleging that the city of Cleburne is composed in part of more than two subdivisions, such as the amendment describes, of Johnson County, that the requisite number of qualified petitioners had duly petitioned for a local option election for the city of Cleburne, which the Commissioners Court, on August 24, 1897, refused to order.

The allegations of fact so made are admitted to be true.

The questions involved in the appeal, then, are: first, whether, on account of the failure of the Commissioners Court of Joihnson County to have the result of the second county local option election published, appellees were entitled to. a writ of mandamus to compel said Commissioners Court to order a local option election for the city of Cleburne; second, whether, if this did not give the right, it was conferred by the alleged amendment of article 3384.

Upon the first question appellants cite a decision of the Court of Criminal Appeals, Ex Parte Burge, 24 Southwestern Reporter, 289, which seems to dispose of it in their favor. It was there held that the failure of the commissioners court, in connection with the declaration of the result of a local option election, to further enter an order in terms absolutely" prohibiting the sale of intoxicating liquors within the prescribed limits, as required bylaw, did not invalidate the election itself, but, on the contrary, that mandamus to compel the performance of a duty so neglected might be resorted to. The reasons given by Judge Simltins for this ruling apply with equal, if not greater, force where, as in this case, there is a mere failure to publish the result.of such election. This decision was cited "with approval by us in Harvey v. State, 33 Southwestern Reporter, 886, though in that case the result of the election was not in favor of, but against, the continuance of the local option law.

If, then, the Commissioners Court of Johnson County might, when this suit was instituted, have been compelled.to have the result of the election for the entire county published, the contention would hardly seem plausible that mandamus would lie to compel the performance of a conflicting duty, that of ordering an election for the city of Cleburne, which the due publication of the result of the county election would, as the law stood prior to the amendment, certainly have excluded. The two duties, being in conflict, could not coexist.

We are thus brought to consider the second, and, as we understand, the'main question at issue, in the discussion of which additional reasons may be given for overruling the contention involved in the first question.

The Constitution adopted in 3876 (article 16, section 20) made it the duty of the Legislature, at its first session, “to enact a law whereby the. qualified voters of any county, justice precinct,.town, or city, by a ma *483 jority vote, from time to time, may determine whether the sale -of intoxicating liquors shall be prohibited within the prescribed limits.” This was so amended in 1891 as to extend its provisions -to “such divisions of a county as may be designated by the commissioners court of such county.”

In obedience to this constitutional requirement, the Legislature at its first session (Acts of 1876, p. 26) enacted a law which made it the duty of the commissioners court of each county, when petitioned so to do as therein provided, “to order -an election to be held by the qualified voters of said county, justice precinct, town, or city, as the case may be, to determine whether the sale of intoxicating liquors * * * shall be prohibited in such county, justice precinct, town, or city, or not.” It also made it the duty of the commissioners court to ascertain and declare the result of such election, and if for prohibition, to enter an order prohibiting the sale of intoxicating liquors within the prescribed bounds, “until such time as the qualified voters therein may, at a legal election held for the purpose, by a majority vote, decide 'otherwise,” etc. The language last quoted seems to have been retained in all subsequent amendments of this law.

The act forbade a second election within the same prescribed limits in less than twelve months, which period was afterwards (in 1887) extended to two years; but provided that a failure to carry prohibition in a county should not prevent such election being immediately thereafter held in a justice precinct, town, or city, and that a failure to carry prohibition in a town or city should not prevent an election immediately thereafter in the same justice precinct (afterward amended to read “entire justice precinct or county”), and that the holding of .an -election in 'any justice precinct should not bar an election immediately thereafter for the entire county.

To avoid any possible misconstruction, it was finally, in 1887, enacted (Acts of 1887, p.

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Bluebook (online)
44 S.W. 529, 17 Tex. Civ. App. 479, 1897 Tex. App. LEXIS 406, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-v-kelley-texapp-1897.