Chambers, County Judge v. Gilbert

42 S.W. 630, 17 Tex. Civ. App. 106, 1897 Tex. App. LEXIS 325
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 2, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 42 S.W. 630 (Chambers, County Judge v. Gilbert) 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
Chambers, County Judge v. Gilbert, 42 S.W. 630, 17 Tex. Civ. App. 106, 1897 Tex. App. LEXIS 325 (Tex. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinion

FINLEY, Associate Justice.

Appellee, owning horses diseased with glanders or farcy, presented to appellant, on January 27, 1896, his affidavit of that fact. Appellant appointed three citizens to examine such animals and report their condition and value, if diseased. Being first sworn, they examined .said horses and found five of them affected with glanders, or farcy, and. in such condition worth $150, and so reported to appellant. Whereupon he ordered the sheriff to destroy said five horses, and the sheriff did so. All the foregoing acts were in substantial compliance with title 102, chapter 2, of the Revised Statutes of 1895. Appellee then requested of appellant his order to the county clerk for a warrant on the county treasurer in the sum of $150, in payment for said animals. Appellant refused to comply; and appellee filed his suit, setting forth the foregoing facts, and praying for mandamus against appellant to compel him to issue such order. Appellant set up as defense to the suit the unconstitutionality of the said statute. The proof showed the animals to be worth $150, the sum assessed. There was judgment for appellee, and appellant appealed and filed his assignments of error.

Opinion.—Appellant attacks the statute under which the condemnation proceeding of plaintiff’s animals was had, as being unconstitutional.

The statutory provisions attacked are as follows:

“Article 4931. If at any time it shall come to the knowledge of any county judge of any county in this State, by affidavit of any credible citizen of his county, stating that affiant has reason to believe and does believe that glanders or farcy exists among any horses, mules, jacks, or jennets in said county, naming owner or owners of such animal or animals *108 so infected, if known, if unknown so stating, it shall be the.duty of such county judge, upon the filing of said affidavit, to immediately appoint three disinterested and intelligent citizens of .said county, whose duty it shall be to carefully and minutely examine said animal or animals so reported to be diseased with glanders or i;arcy; said three citizens before entering upon the duties required of them by this chapter shall take an oath, before some officer legally qualified to administer oaths, that they will discharge their duties as prescribed by this chapter in a fair and impartial manner.
“Article 4932. If, after carefully and minutely examining the animal or animals so reported to be affected with glanders or farcy, said three citizens shall be of the opinion that the animal or animals so examined by them are diseased with glanders or farcy, they shall condemn the same, and it shall be their duty to appraise such animal.or. animals at their just and full value at the time of such examination and condemnation, and shall forthwith report their action in writing to the county judge, giving in said report the number of animals condemned, if any, the owner or owners of'same if known, and if unknown so stating it, with the appraised value of same. But if the said citizens have any reasonable doubt as to the diseased animals being affected with glanders or farcy, before condemning as above provided for, they shall require the owner or owners to have said diseased animals separated from contact with all other animals subject to contagion, for a reasonable time, and when they are fully satisfied that the disease is glanders or farcy, then they shall proceed to condemn and destroy said animals as provided for in this article.
“Article 4933. The county judge, upon the receipt of the report named in the preceding article, shall issue his order to the sheriff or any constable of his county, commanding him to seize said diseased animal or animals and take same to some secluded place and kill them and bury or burn the carcass. '
“Article 4934. After the said diseased animal or animals are killed, as provided in the preceding article, it shall be the duty of the county clerk, upon the written order of the county judge, to issue a warrant or warrants of the countjq payable out of the general revenue, in favor of the owner or owners of said animal or animals so killed, for the amount of the value, as diseased, if the animal had any value, as appraised by said citizens who examined and condemned same. The sheriff or. constable killing, burning, or burying said animal or animals shall be paid .by the county such sum as the Commissioners Court thereof may determine their services worth.”

It is first urged that the-procedure authorized by statute is not “due course of the law of the land,” as required by section 19, article 1, of the Constitution of this State, and is not “due process of law” within the meaning of the fourteenth amendment to the Constitution of the United States.

Section 19, article 1, of our Constitution provides: “Ho citizen of this State shall be deprived of life, liberty, property, privileges, or immu *109 nities, or in any manner disfranchised, except by due course of the law of the land.”

Section 1 of the fourteenth amendment to the Constitution of the United States prohibits the States from depriving “any person of life, liberty, or property without due process of law.”

It is not denied, and could not be successfully, that the State, in the exercise of its police power, may provide for the condemnation and destruction of animals afflicted with dangerous, infectious or contagious diseases, but the contention is that the procedure provided by statute does not possess sufficient judicial characteristics to conform to constitutional requirements. These constitutional provisions are intended to protect the individual citizen from the arbitrary exercise of governmental powers, unrestrained by the principles of right and justice. Bank of Columbia v. Okely, 4 Wheat., 235, 244.

There is an inherent power in the government to take private property for public use; the power is not conferred by constitutions, but usually constitutions place restraints upon the exercise of such power. Cool. Const. Lim., 6 ed., 435. Our Constitution'restrains the exercise of this power by requiring adequate compensation to be made to the owner when his property is thus taken, damaged, or destroyed for public use, without his consent. Section 17, article 1.

Mr. Cooley, in discussing the meaning of “due process of law” as used in constitutions, says we are to test the validity of the acts of government interfering with the title or enjoyment of a person’s property by those principles of civil liberty and constitutional protection which have become established in our system of laws, and not generally by the rules that pertain to the form of procedure merely. * * * In judicial proceedings the law of the land requires a hearing before condemnation, and judgment before dispossession; but when property is appropriated by the government to public uses, or the legislature interferes to give direction to its title through remedial statutes, different considerations from those which regard the controversies between man and man must prevail, different proceedings are required, and we have only to see whether the interference can be justified by the established rules applicable to the special ease.

The act here in question does not provide for the taking of private property for public use, contemplated by section 17, article 1, of our Constitution (State v.

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Bluebook (online)
42 S.W. 630, 17 Tex. Civ. App. 106, 1897 Tex. App. LEXIS 325, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chambers-county-judge-v-gilbert-texapp-1897.