Childress County v. Sachse

310 S.W.2d 414, 1958 Tex. App. LEXIS 1788
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 3, 1958
Docket6744
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 310 S.W.2d 414 (Childress County v. Sachse) 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
Childress County v. Sachse, 310 S.W.2d 414, 1958 Tex. App. LEXIS 1788 (Tex. Ct. App. 1958).

Opinion

PITTS, Chief Justice.

Appellee, L. A. Sachse, and appellant, Childress County, Texas, each sought respectively, by verified motions duly filed, a summary judgment favorable to the pleaders, respectively, under the provisions of Rule 166-A, Texas Rules of Civil Procedure, and in support thereof each alleged “there is no genuine issue to any material facts to be adjudicated.” The record contains pleadings, affidavits, certain admissions of fact, stipulations of the parties and the oral testimony only of ap-pellee, L. A. Sachse.

Based upon the record, we find that ap-pellee, L. A. Sachse, on March 5, 1957, filed suit against appellant, Childress County, for the recovery of his salary and necessary expenses as a County Commissioner of Precinct 3 of Childress County, Texas, for the remainder of his elective term for a period extending from April 1, 1955, to January 1, 1957, and made the county judge, four county commissioners, county clerk and county treasurer nominal party defendants thereto only in their respective official capacities for the purpose only of enforcing the collection of his salary and expenses if such be awarded to him by judgment. Appellant joined issues with appellee and further pleaded defenses of res judicata collateral attack and an estoppel in effect, and also joined appellee in presenting the record, in full to the trial court for the determination of the legal questions involved. On June 21, 1957, the trial court heard the parties, considered their respective motions for summary judgment, all other pleadings, affidavits, stipulations, admissions of fact and additional evidence, after which it sustained appellee’s motion for summary judgment and awarded him judgment against Child-ress County only for his salary for the period of time sued for at the rate of $183.33 per month making a total of $3,849.93 and directed the payment thereof but denied recovery of any expense account, from which judgment all of the party defendants duly gave notice of appeal but submitted a brief in the case only on behalf of “Appellant, Childress Coun-tj.” The said appellant contends that the trial court erred in its failure to render summary judgment for it because of the doctrine of res judicata, and in effect because of the doctrine of estoppel; because appellee’s suit was a collateral attack made upon the proceedings of the Childress County Commissioners’ Court; because appellee’s office as County Commissioner of Precinct 3 of Childress County became vacant when the Commissioners’ Court of said county established new precinct boundary lines; and because there *417 existed genuine issues of fact to be determined.

The last contention made will be first considered. In our opinion appellant’s contention to the effect that error was committed because there existed genuine issues of fact to be determined must be overruled because in our opinion there existed no genuine material fact issues to be determined and because such contention in any event is contrary to and inconsistent with appellant’s admissions pleaded in its verified motion for a summary judgment. Appellant should not now be heard to deny or seek to refute an affirmative admission there made in its pleadings.

The record reveals that the material facts were not controverted and were in effect, as taken mostly from appellant’s brief, as follows: that on January 1, 1955, there existed four established commissioners’ precincts in Childress County, Texas; that appellee, L. A. Sachse, had been duly elected to the office of Commissioner of Precinct 3 of said county at the General Election held in November, 1954, had duly qualified and had taken office on January 1, 1955, and was serving in such capacity when on March 4, 1955, the Commissioners’ Court of the said county entered an order by a majority vote abolishing the existing four commissioners’ precincts and establishing four new commissioners’ precincts with new boundary lines to become effective thereafter on April 1, 1955; that appellee and one other County Commissioner, Louis Richards, abstained from voting to change the boundary lines of the commissioners’ precincts but two County Commissioners, O. T. Rothwell and John Turk Fowler, and the County Judge, Leonard King, voted for such re-establishment of new commissioners’ precinct lines; that on April 1, 1955, County Judge Leonard King made and entered an order to the effect that “There now exists a vacancy in the office of County Commissioner of Precinct 3 of Childress County, Texas” and proceeded to appoint one Robert G. Kiker County Commissioner of Precinct 3 of Childress County to succeed appellee, L. A. Sachse, and to serve until the next General Election (the said county judge likewise declared vacancies in each of the other commissioners’ precincts but he reappointed the other three previous county commissioners respectively to succeed themselves) ; that on the next day, April 2, 1955, appellee herein, L. A. Sachse, as plaintiff, filed suit in Cause No. 4159 in the District Court of Childress County, Texas, against County Judge Leonard King and County Commissioners O. T. Rothwell, John Turk Fowler, Louis Richards and Robert Kiker, each individually and in his official capacity, seeking to set aside and hold for naught the order of the three members of the Commissioners’ Court passed on March 14, 1955, purporting to re-district Childress County into new and different commissioners’ precincts and seeking to have it declared that the commissioners’ precinct lines be adjudicated to be the same as they were previously established and as they existed on January 1, 1955; that the said named party defendants joined issues in that action with L. A. Sachse as party plaintiff; that such action was thereafter heard by the trial court on August 23, 1955, and the relief therein sought by plaintiff, L. A. Sachse, was in all things denied by a final judgment duly entered; that thereafter on December 15, 1956, appellee herein, L. A. Sachse, presented a claim to the Commissioners’ Court for his salary and expenses as County Commissioner of Precinct 3 of Childress County from April 1, 1955 to January 1, 1957, which claim was in all things denied and refused by the Commissioners’ Court of Childress County; that on March 5, 1957, L. A. Sachse as party plaintiff and as appellee herein filed this action, No. 4357, in the trial court against Childress County seeking judgment for the collection of his said salary and expenses as previously herein recited; that appellee had resided within the boundaries of Precinct 3 of Childress *418 County continuously since 1936 and so resided there on March 14, 1955; that the newly established' boundary lines left ap-pellee out of the new Commissioners’ Precinct 3, but a few days after the order of March 14, 1955 was passed creating new commissioners’ precinct boundary lines and a few days prior to April 1, 1955, on which latter date the county judge declared the office appellee was then holding to be vacant, appellee moved into the new Precinct No. 3, but after his office had been declared vacant and Robert Kiker had been appointed to succeed him, he moved back to his old home in Precinct 3 and continued to reside there and at all times in Childress County where he remained ready and willing to continue his services as County Commissioner.

It was agreed by stipulation of the parties that appellee, L. A.

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Bluebook (online)
310 S.W.2d 414, 1958 Tex. App. LEXIS 1788, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/childress-county-v-sachse-texapp-1958.