Aurtin Bros. v. Patton

226 S.W. 702, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 1181
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 30, 1920
DocketNo. 7950.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 226 S.W. 702 (Aurtin Bros. v. Patton) 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
Aurtin Bros. v. Patton, 226 S.W. 702, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 1181 (Tex. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

DANE, J.

This suit was brought by Austin Bros., a corporation, against Houston county, Tex., Nat Patton, as county judge, and against the four county commissioners, the treasurer and tax assessor of said county, as such officers. Judgment was prayed for against said county for the sum found to be due upon 21 county warrants issued by said county, aggregating about $7,000, and the court was asked to issue an injunction restraining the officers composing the commissioners’ court from approving and allowing any claim payable out of the road and bridge fund of said Houston county, and restraining the treasurer from registering or paying any claim payable out of said fund until the plaintiff’s claims are paid. Plaintiff also prayed for a writ of mandamus compelling the commissioners’ court to appropriate, out of the money collected and to be collected from taxes levied for road and bridge purposes, sufficient to pay the plaintiff’s claim, and that, if sufficient money is not available in said fund to satisfy such claim, then that said court be required to levy a tax out of the constitutional 15 cents road ■and bridge tax to pay said claim. The injunction prayed for was granted to continue .during the pendency of the suit.

The defendants, the county of Houston and the officers sued, pleaded the special road law passed by the Thirty-Fourth Legislature, 1915 (Acts 34th Leg. p. 149), for the county of Houston, and for further answer alleged that ever since said road law took effect the roads and bridges of said county had been worked, repaired, and improved under the provisions of same, and that the debts and warrants upon which plaintiff is suing were created and issued under the operation of such special road law and by virtue thereof, and that such warrants purport to be and were in fact drawn and issued against the special road and bridge fund of commissioners’ precincts Nos. 1, 3, and 4, as created under such special road law, and that all contracts of plaintiff by or through which the indebtedness sued on was created were made by plaintiff with full knowledge of the existence of such special law, and that the *703 provisions of said law were acquiesced in by plaintiff at the time said contracts were made.

“(3) That, anterior to the creation of the debts herein sued on, the Houston County road district No. 3 and the Houston County road district No. 1 were duly and legally created, and the limits thereof are shown by Exhibits C and D, which are hereto annexed and made a part of this answer.
“(4) That the materials and supplies which the warrants sued on were intended to cover, if such material and supplies were furnished defendant Houston county by plaintiff and those under whom plaintiff claims, and which defendants deny and demand strict proof of same, were used, if • at all, by commissioners’ precincts Nos. 1, 3, and 4, and not upon the roads or • bridges situated in commissioners’ precinct • No. 2, or upon Houston County road district No. 1 and Houston County road district No. 3.
“(5) That since the enactment of said special road law as amended in 1915 all funds coming into the treasury of Houston county have been appropriated and prorated and apportioned to the respective commissioners’ precincts and to Houston County road district No. 1 and Houston County road district No. 3 in the manner provided by such law, and that all of such funds placed to the credit of commissioners’ precinct Nos. 1, 3, and 4, have been since that time, and are now, being expended by the county treasurer of Houston county in payment of all warrants against such funds, respectively, which warrants have been duly registered, including the warrants herein sued on, and that all such warrants have been and are now being paid in their regular order of registration.
“(6) That the respective road and bridge funds of the several commissioners’ precincts and special road districts in Houston county, as provided by the special law above pleaded, consist at present of not only the proportionate part of such precincts and districts of the constitutional road and bridge tax, but that they also include moneys accruing to them by virtue of the motor vehicle tax and the tax or penalty paid in lieu of work by those persons in Houston county subject to road duty, and that the injunction herein granted in plaintiff’s behalf has tied up those moneys.”

They further alleged that on November 15, 1916, the commissioners’ court ordered the issuance of warrants to Smith Bros, in an amount of $110,000, bearing interest at the rate of 51/2 per cent, per annum, payable semiannually, for the building of roads in Houston county, and at the same time levied a tax for 1917 and subsequent years to pay said warrants, and that such taxes had been and were being collected to pay said warrants, and that such funds were placed in the hands of the county treasurer to pay said warrants. They further alleged as follows :

“That at the several times at which plaintiff alleges the warrants herein sued on were issued and were registered the indebtedness by them evidenced, together with other indebtedness then outstanding against the road and bridge funds of Houston county, as same were constituted and kept, and against the road and bridge fund of Houston county, required a tax greatly in excess of taxes permitted to be levied under the Constitution of the state of Texas, and that at the time such warrants were issued no provision was made for their payment by the levy of a tax, and it was not contemplated that they be paid out of the current revenues for the year in which they were issued, or otherwise, and same are illegal and void, and such warrants were not to be paid out of any fund within the immediate control of Houston county at the time of their issuance, and were to be paid out of county funds in future years.
“That on divers times and occasions plaintiff has recently presented to the county treasurer of Houston county for payment warrants similar in all respects to those herein sued on, drawn against the funds of commissioners’ precincts Nos. 1, 3, and 4, as provided for by the Houston county special road law, and same have been paid out of such funds and plaintiff has accepted the payments thus made.”

They prayed for a dissolution of the temporary injunction theretofore issued and for a cancellation of the warrants sued on.

On the 16th day of October, 1919, Will Oar-son, Dave Leaverton, Chester Kennedy, A. B. Spence, H. H. Daily, E. B. Stokes, J. C. Millar, C. C. Warfield, and G. Q. King, the duly elected and qualified members of the advisory boárds for special road districts 1 and 3 of Houston county, intervened. These interveners pleaded the special road law, as did the defendants, and specially pleaded sections 5 and 8 of said law, which omitting immaterial parts, read as follows:

“See. 5. The supervision and control of all roads and bridges situated in any special road district now or hereafter created shall be placed in ■ the hands of an advisory board, consisting of five resident citizens residing in each of said districts, who shall be selected by the commissioners’ court at the first regular meeting after the passage of this act, and annually thereafter, such advisory board to serve without compensation.

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Related

Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion
Texas Attorney General Reports, 1941
Tyler v. Shelby County
47 F.2d 103 (Fifth Circuit, 1931)
Austin Bros. v. Patton
288 S.W. 182 (Texas Commission of Appeals, 1926)
Austin Bros. v. Patton
245 S.W. 991 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1922)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
226 S.W. 702, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 1181, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aurtin-bros-v-patton-texapp-1920.