Armstrong v. Traylor and Elmore

30 S.W. 440, 87 Tex. 598, 1895 Tex. LEXIS 395
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 21, 1895
DocketNo. 275.
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 30 S.W. 440 (Armstrong v. Traylor and Elmore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Armstrong v. Traylor and Elmore, 30 S.W. 440, 87 Tex. 598, 1895 Tex. LEXIS 395 (Tex. 1895).

Opinion

BROWH, Associate Justice.

The following statement and questions are submitted to this court by the Court of Civil Appeals for the First District:

“The suit was brought by appellant, William Armstrong, in a Justice Court of San Jacinto County, against the appellees, J. H. Traylor and Emma Elmore, to recover of them a certain hog, or its value, $25, alleged to be wrongfully withheld from his possession by the defendants. Defendants answered, admitting the possession of plaintiff’s hog, but that they were rightfully in possession thereof, because it had been impounded and sold by virtue of the law to prevent certain animals from running at large, as provided in chapter 4, title 93, of the Revised Statutes then in force, in the subdivision of San Jacinto County in which defendant Elmore lived. They set up at length the proceedings required by the statute for the adoption of the law, the impounding of the hog by defendant Elmore, the assessment of damages by three disinterested freeholders, and the sale of the hog and its purchase by defendant Traylor; and showed that the law had been in all respects complied with. Plaintiff demurred to the answer. The District Court overruled the demurrer and rendered judgment in favor of the defendants on proof of the facts alleged.

“1. Is the statute in conflict with the Bill of Rights in that it authorizes the seizure, condemnation, and sale of plaintiff’s property without due process of law?

“2. Is the remedy provided by the statute for the assessment and collection of the damages done by the animal, due process of law?

“3. Had the Legislature the power to submit the adoption of the law to a division of territory designated by persons signing the application for the election, and not by the Legislature itself, as to the county or fixed subdivision thereof?

*601 “4. Does section 23, article 16, of the Constitution apply to laws to prevent domestic animals from running at large so as to authorize the submission to the vote of the freeholders only? Or does not such legislation come within the scope of section 22 of article 16 of the Constitution authorizing the passage of fence laws applicable to any subdivision of the State? If it comes within the latter section, has the Legislature the power to limit the right to vote upon the question of adoption of the law by freeholders only?

5. Did the District Court err in overruling plaintiff’s demurrer to the answer?”

Article 1, section 19 of the Constitution of this State is in this language: “Do citizen of this State shall be deprived of life, liberty, property, privileges, or immunities, or in any manner disfranchised, except by the due course of the law of the land.”

The articles of the Devised Statutes which are claimed to be in conflict with the above provision of the Constitution are in substance as follows:

Article 4604 permits the owner, lessee, or person in possession of any inclosed premises or lands to take up any stock forbidden by the law to run at large when it has been adopted for that county or subdivision of the county, if such stock shall enter upon the inclosed lands, or roam about the residence, lots, or cultivated lands of such person without his consent, and to impound and hold such stock until his fees and damages are paid by the owner thereof.

Article 4605 requires, that upon the taking up of such stock notice shall at once be given to the owner, and he shall have the right to regain possession upon payment of fees and damages.

By article 646, the fees to which the person taking the stock into Custody shall be entitled from the owner of the stock are prescribed; and it is also provided therein, that the damages done by the stock to the person taking the same up may be assessed by any three disinterested freeholders of the county, whose judgment shall be final.

By article 4607, the person impounding the stock is authorized to sell the same at public auction for cash, upon giving notice as required for constable’s sales of personal property, and may apply the proceeds to the payment of the damages assessed and the fees to which he is entitled by law, paying the remainder, if any, to the owner.

Do these provisions of the law meet the constitutional requirement, that the proceeding by which the owner is divested of his property must be by “due course of the law of the land?”

Mr. Cooley, in his work on Constitutional Limitations, page 432, says: “By the law of the land, is most clearly intended the general law; a law which hears before it condemns; which proceeds upon inquiry, and renders judgment only after trial. The meanirig is, that every citizen shall hold his liberty, life, property, and immunities un *602 der the protection of the general rules which govern society. Everything which may pass under the form of an enactment is not, therefore, to be considered the law of the laud.” The Legislature has the power to enact laws to protect the public from the inconveniences of having stock running at large upon the highways, and under our Constitution may provide such laws with a view to protecting the private interests of the citizen from the same evils, but such power must be exercised in subordination to and in accordance with the Constitution.

Whether or not a law secures the protection afforded by the Constitution, depends upon the subject upon which it operates and the character of the rights that it affects. The law in question does not have in view the protection of the public against the inconvenience of having the. free use of the highway impeded by the running of the stock therein, but protects the private citizen in the enjoyment of his private property, and provides for compensating him for injury to such private property. The questions involved are, has there been an infraction of the rights of the' citizen, not the public, and what injury has he sustained? These are strictly private rights arising between individuals, in which the public has no more concern than in any other private wrong. Eo public officer has authority to impound the stock for the public protection; no public pound is required; the fees do not go to a public officer in support of the enforcement of the law. The private citizen whose rights have been invaded can alone act in the premises; the fees are given to him to remunerate him for acting in his own interest, and he takes the property into his own custody, without bond or any security to the owner. Eo penalty is given for a wrong to the public, but compensation for the private, injury done to the property of the man who is authorized to seize the stock, and for expenses incurred by him in so doing without the consent of its owner.

Tinder the provisions of thesé articles, the interested party is authorized to determine the question of a trespass having been committed by the stock; it is not provided that this question shall be inquired into by any other person or officer; its seizure is its condemnation, leaving nothing to be ascertained except the amount of damages. The same person must select the freeholders to assess the damages which he is to receive; the law makes him the sole actor in the matter.

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Bluebook (online)
30 S.W. 440, 87 Tex. 598, 1895 Tex. LEXIS 395, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/armstrong-v-traylor-and-elmore-tex-1895.