City of Graham v. Seal

235 S.W. 668, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 1178
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 15, 1921
DocketNo. 9850.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 235 S.W. 668 (City of Graham v. Seal) 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
City of Graham v. Seal, 235 S.W. 668, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 1178 (Tex. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

DUNKLIN, J.

The city of Graham and its mayor and city counsel were perpetually enjoined by the district court of Young county from enforcing a certain ordinance passed by the city requiring all parties operating motor or jitney passenger cars for hire from operating the same within the corporate limits of the city of Graham without first procuring a license from the city for that privilege, and also to procure a state chauffeur’s license from the tax collector of Young county, in which the city of Graham is located. The license fee fixed by the city ordinance was §50 per annum with power in the city council to revoke the same if the holder thereof should he convicted of an offense against the ordinances of the city or laws of the state of Texas. The power to revoke the license was also given the corporation court in the event of a conviction in that court of a violation of the provisions of the ordinance. It was further provided that in the event a license should be revoked no further license should be issued to the same person, unless expressly authorized by the city council. It was further provided by the ordinance that if any person should violate the provisions of the ordinance he would be subjected, upon conviction, to a fine in any sum not to exceed $20. Section 7 of the ordinance reads as follows:

*670 “The holding of any section or clause hereof as invalid shall not be held to invalidate the remaining sections or clauses hereof.”

The suit was instituted by W. P. Seal, Ben Williams, O. H. Ozmer, Reece Ritchie, E. J. Hawkins, J. J. Thompson, Oal Nance, and Rome Smith, who sued in their own behalf, and in behalf of about 20 others similarly situated against the city of G-raham, ijts mayor, all the members of its city council, its city attorney and its corporation judge.

It is alleged in the petition that the city of Graham is a city of over 5,000 population and is duly incorporated; that plaintiffs are engaged in the business of transporting passengers for hire in motor driven vehicles between points in the city of Graham and other points, cities, and towns outside that city. It was further alleged that plaintiffs have never taken out the license required by the ordinance, and that prosecution has been instituted in the corporation court of said city against plaintiffs Seal and Nance for alleged violation.of the ordinance in accepting and receiving passengers in motor vehicles to points outside the city limits of Graham without taking out the required license, and that the city officers are demanding the payment of said license fee of $50 from each of the plaintiffs, which, if not paid, will be followed by prosecutions against those persons for violating said ordinance; that by reason of such prosecutions plaintiffs will be subjected to vexatiops litigations which will result in irreparable injury, against which they have no adequate legal remedy.

It thus appears that by this suit a court, in the exercise of jurisdiction over civil suits, is asked to enjoin prosecutions under a criminal ordinance when no property rights are involved and no extraordinary circumstances are shown which would warrant the interposition of a court of equity to grant that relief.

The principal grounds upon which this suit is based is the contention that the ordinance is void for several stated reasons. One of the reasons alleged is that the amount required to be paid as a license fee is an occupation tax designed for the purpose of raising revenue for the city, no such tax being authorized by law, that the amount of the fee is unreasonable and exorbitant and not in the exercise of legitimate police power, and that it is class legislation and oppressive. Another ground of attack on the ordinance relates to the requirement that a state chauffeur’s license should be procured from the tax collector of Young county, and that one of the plaintiffs already holds such a license, issued in another county of the state, which entitles him to operate a car in any portiop of the state outside the city limits of Graham. Still another ground of attack was that the city has no power to revoke a license which has already been issued.

[1] The general rule is that a criminal prosecution cannot be enjoined in a civil action even where the ordinance or statute under which the prosecution is instituted is void, unless the enforcement of the ordinance or statute' would result in the destruction or deterioration of the value of property; but that if the enforcement of the law would result in injury to property, or if the facts incident to its enforcement are so extraordinary or of such an exceptional nature as that injunctive relief is the only adequate relief that can be afforded the complaining party, then an action for injunction will lie. See City of Austin v. Cemetery Association, 87 Tex. 330, 28 S. W. 528, 47 Am. St. Rep. 114; Greiner-Kelly Drug Co. v. Truett, 97 Tex. 377, 79 S. W. 4; Auto Trans. Co. v. City of Fort Worth, 182 S. W. 685, writ of error denied.

[2, 3] This is a plain and simple action to enjoin the prosecution for a criminal offense, with no showing of injury to property rights as a result of such prosecution, and with no unusual results alleged if the prosecutions are continued which would bring this case within any of the exceptions to the general rule stated, even though it could be said that the ordinance in question is void. If injunctive relief can be granted in this suit, then the same character of action will lie to restrain the enforcement of any void ordinance' of a city or town simply and solely by reason of the fact that it is void. If the ordinance now in question is void, no reason is perceived by us why the complainants have not a plain and adequate legal remedy, either by resorting to a writ of habeas corpus or by urging the invalidity of the ordinance as a defense to the criminal prosecution; and to hold that injunctive relief can be granted to restrain a prosecution for violation of that ordinance would be for this court to invade the province of the Court of Criminal Appeals of our state, in which is vested exclusive appellate jurisdiction of criminal prosecutions in ordinary cases.

[4] But aside from the foregoing conclusions, we cannot say that the ordinance is void in its entirety. We are of the opinion that section 7 of the ordinance, which is copied above, should be held invalid in that it is in substantial conflict with the state highway law regulating the taking out of a chauffeur’s license for the operation of motor vehicles throughout the state elsewhere than .within the corporate limits of cities that have ordinances requiring the procurement of a license to operate such vehicles within the corporate limits of such cities, and for that reason we are of the opinion that the city of Graham would not be authorized to require of any of the plaintiffs that he take out a chauffeur’s license under the state law from the office of the tax collector of Young county rather than *671 in some other county. See title 119, c. 8A, 1918 Supp. Y. S. Tex. Civil and Criminal Statutes. But we believe that it would be within the province of the city to require any applicant who operates a motor vehicle within the city that he also take out a chauffeur’s license under the state law, as well as a license under the city ordinance. Such a requirement would be reasonable as a public safeguard.

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Bluebook (online)
235 S.W. 668, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 1178, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-graham-v-seal-texapp-1921.