Adams v. McGill

146 S.W.2d 332
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 12, 1940
DocketNo. 4084.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 146 S.W.2d 332 (Adams v. McGill) 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. McGill, 146 S.W.2d 332 (Tex. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

PRICE, Chief Justice.

This is an appeal from the judgment of the District Court of El Paso County, Texas, Forty-First District. Leon D. Adams, as a taxpaying citizen of El Paso County, sought an injunction against the Commissioners’ Court of El Paso County, *333 including the County Judge, the County Auditor, County Clerk, County Treasurer, Tax Assessor and Collector of El Paso ■County, and J. E. Morgan &. Sons, a co-partnership, seeking to enjoin the issuance of certain time warrants. The State of Texas, through the Attorney General, intervened in the case and joined in the prayer for the injunction sought. The trial was to the court; the judgment denied the injunction sought. On motion of plaintiff and intervener the trial court filed findings of fact and conclusions of law. This appeal was duly perfected from such judgment by the 'State of Texas and the said Leon D. Adams, suing in his capacity as aforesaid.

The statement of the nature and result of the suit made in the brief of appellees is short and we think sufficient, and we literally adopt same.

El Paso County entered into a contract with J. E. Morgan & Sons for making certain improvements on the El Paso County Livestock and Agricultural Exhibition Building, after proper notice to bidders, the bid of Morgan being the lowest and best bid. The contract called for payment for the work by issuance of interest-bearing time warrants, payable over a period of three years, payment to be made as the work progressed, upon approval of the estimates by the architect and allowance by the Commissioners’ Court. All formal requisites for the issuance of time warrants were complied with, and $500 worth of work having been performed by Morgan under the contract, the Commissioners’ Court, after approval of the estimates by ‘Percy McGhee, architect, allowed the claim and ordered the issuance of a time warrant as provided by the contract, in the sum of $500. Appellant, a taxpaying citizen of El Paso County, instituted this action to - restrain the issuance of the time warrants and further work being done under the contract. There is only one question involved in the case, and that is the authority of the county to pay for the improvements by the issuance of time warrants payable over a period of years. The trial ■court held that the County possessed such power and denied the injunction.

This brief supplementary statement might be made:

If the power exists to issue these time warrants, the mode and manner of their issuance complies in all respects with the law governing same. The contemplated time warrants were six in number, five in the amount of $500 each, and the sixth in the s.um of $336; same were payable, $1,000 on September 15, 1941, $1,000 on September 15, 1942, and $836 on September 15, 1943.

Appellant Adams makes one assignment of error: “The County of El Paso being without authority in law to issue time warrants for the payment of the cost of construction of a public improvement of the character of the one here involved, the Honorable Trial Court should have granted in all things the relief prayed for by the plaintiff below.”

The State of Texas in its brief advances this proposition: “A county is not authorized under the laws of this State -to issue time warrants to construct and improve a livestock and agricultural exposition building.”

Appellees rely on Article 2372d, Vernon’s Annotated Civil Statutes, which reads, in part, as follows:

“Section 1. All counties in the State acting by .and through their 'respective Commissioners’ Courts may provide for annual exhibits of horticultural and agricultural products, livestock and mineral products, and such other products as are of interest to’ the community. In connection therewith, such counties may also establish and maintain museums, including the erection of the necessary buildings and other improvements, in their own counties or in any other county or city in the United States, where fairs or expositions are being held.
“Sec. 2. The Commissioners’ Courts of the respective counties or the Commissioners’ Courts of several counties may cooperate with each other and participate with local interests in providing for the erection of such buildings and other improvements as may be necessary to accomplish the purpose mentioned in Section 1, of this Act and for the assembling, erecting, and maintaining of such horticultural' and agricultural, livestock and mineral exhibits, and the expenses incident thereto.”

Appellees’ counter proposition is as follows : “When the Legislature has empowered a county to make public improvements without specifying the means of payment therefor, the county may contract for such improvements and issue interest-bearing time warrants payable over a *334 period of years to evidence-the indebtedness created.”

The concrete question presented by this appeal is: Has El Paso County the power to contract and pay for the construction of the building in question with time warrants ?

Article 2372d, it is conceded, gives the County the power to construct the improvements in question. It is the means used in the exercise of this discretionary power that is called into question. That the County has the right to devote county revenues for this purpose follows' by necessary implication from the grant of the power to construct same. The County is not given the express power to pledge the future revenue of the county in the exercise óf this power. If such power there is, it must arise by implication - from the express delegation of the power to construct the improvement. In the cases of the erection of courthouses, jails, and the construction of public roads, it has been often held that the county has the implied power to issue time warrants to pay therefor. San Patricio County v. McClane, 58 Tex. 243; Davis v. Burney, 58 Tex. 364; Stratton v. Commissioners’ Court, Tex.Civ.App., 137 S.W. 1170; Lasater v. Lopez, 110 Tex, 179, 217 S.W. 373.

Section 2 of Article 11 of the Constitution, Vernon’s Ann.St., in substance, provides that by general law provision be made for the construction of jails, courthouses, roads and bridges. However, the power to issue time warrants or bonds in payment for such improvements had not specifically been conferred by the general laws passed by the Legislature under the mandate of the Constitution regulating the construction of the improvements mentioned in Section 2, Article 11, of the Constitution, when some of the above cited cases were decided. Others we're decided after the passage of the 'law authorizing bonds and hold the implied power survived the specific provision as to bonds.

In the cases cited above the power to pay for such improvements with time warrants seems to have been inferred from the power and duty to make same. On the other hand, it is well established that from the duty and power to make these improvements the power to issue negotiable bonds to pay for same out of the proceeds thereof is not to be implied. San Patricio County v. McClane, 44 Tex. 392; Robertson v. Breedlove, 61 Tex. 316.

In order to issue valid bonds to pay for such improvements the Legislature must specifically provide therefor. The mode outlined by the Legislature for the issue of bonds must be strictly followed. This proposition established by the case of Robertson v.

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