City of New Braunfels v. Waldschmidt

207 S.W. 303, 109 Tex. 302, 1918 Tex. LEXIS 90
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 11, 1918
DocketNo. 3081.
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 207 S.W. 303 (City of New Braunfels v. Waldschmidt) 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
City of New Braunfels v. Waldschmidt, 207 S.W. 303, 109 Tex. 302, 1918 Tex. LEXIS 90 (Tex. 1918).

Opinion

Mr. Justice GREENWOOD

delivered the opinion of the court.

By this suit defendants in error attack the validity of an ordinance adopted by the 'city council of the City of New Braunfels, providing that no person should be permitted to attend the public or private schools within that city, without presenting a physician’s certificate to the person’s vaccination within six years, and providing for the punishment, by fine, of anyone upon conviction of sending a child to any school within the city, who had not been vaccinated or upon conviction of admitting a child into such school without a certificate of vaccination.

The ordinance is attacked on three grounds, viz:

First. That the ordinance deprives defendants in error of liberty -and property, without due process or due course of law, and hence violates the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States and section 19 of article 1 of the Constitution of Texas.

Second. That the ordinance abridges or interferes with the rights of defendants in error in matters of religion and hence violates section 6 of article 1 of the Constitution of Texas.

Third. That the ordinance is void because the City of New Braunfels was without lawful authority to enact same.

There is no substantial dispute over the material facts which may be summarized as follows:

(1) The ordinance was adopted on September 18, 1916, and New Braunfels then and since was a municipal corporation of some 4500 inhabitants, possessing all the powers conferred by title 22, of chapter 1, of the Bevised Statutes of Texas of 1911.

(2.) The percentage of Mexicans in the population of New Braun *305 fels is about thirty. New Braunfels is directly connected by rail and highway with San Antonio, twenty-eight miles distant, and with San Marcos, eighteen miles distant. San Antonio has a large Mexican population and "a number of Mexicans pass from San Antonio to New Braunfels each day.

(3) There are cases of smallpox, chiefly among the Mexicans, in San Antonio, practically throughout the year. In the fall of 1916, smallpox was prevalent in epidemic form in New Braunfels, San Marcos and San Antonio. Thirty-two cases of smallpox were reported to the city health officer, within New Braunfels, during this epidemic, and there were six deaths. The epidemic started in the negro and Mexican quarter of the town and then extended to the white people, until about as many of them were afflicted as of the negroes and Mexicans. The highest number of cases in New Braunfels at one time was fifteen or sixteen. Once during the epidemic the cases were reduced to one single case, and the health officer believed he would be able to prevent the further spread of the disease. However, a Mexican case was concealed, and other cases developed until their number again rose to fifteen or more. It is the custom of Mexicans to conceal smallpox among their people, and the lack of sanitation in their surroundings is favorable to its spread. On September 18, 1916, when the ordinance was enacted, the epidemic of smallpox prevailed, and, on account thereof, the public schools were closed from that date until about October 20, 1916. There were several cases of smallpox in San Marcos when the schools were reopened

(4) Smallpox is a very contagious and dangerous disease, rt may be disseminated by those not afflicted as well as by those stricken. Younger people are the most susceptible to the contagion. The medical profession generally recognize vaccination as a preventative of smallpox. There was no case out of the thirty-two in New Braunfels in 1916 who had been vaccinated within or for a reasonable time. One man had it who had been vaccinated forty years previously and hence was no longer protected thereby. Two or three patients were vaccinated, after they had been exposed, but too late to protect them. Physicians and nurses, after proper vaccination, expose themselves to the contagion without contracting smallpox.

- (5) "When the case was tried, on November 16, 1916, there was one case of smallpox in New Braunfels, and the only physician who testified gave it as his opinion that there was danger at that time of the spread of the disease." In support of the opinion, he stated that in winter the Mexican population in New Braunfels increased, when they gathered together in unventilated little huts, and the disease was most likely to originate among them and spread to all the people. "While no public school pupil was stricken during the 1916 epidemic, smallpox appeared in two white families with public school children, who did not then attend school.

(6) On October 20, 1916, defendant in error, Fritz Waldschmidt, *306 sent his daughter Else to the public schools of the City of New Braunfels, which is an independent school district, having its own trustees, and levying a school tax, and these trustees had resolved, on September 5, 1916, not to require all pupils to be vaccinated. Else Waldschmidt was denied admittance to the schools, on October 20, 1916, because of her failure to present a certificate of vaccination as required by the ordinance.

(7) This suit is brought by Else Waldschmidt and her brother, Sido Waldschmidt, both being of scholastic age and in good health, as well as by their father, all residing in New Braunfels, to enjoin the city and its officers from excluding Else and Sido from the public schools. Else and Sido and their father are Christian Scientists and do not believe in vaccination, but conscientiously believe in the Christian Science treatment of smallpox, which is "a denial of the reality of sickness and disease.”

On the foregoing facts the trial court entered judgment refusing the injunction sought by defendants in error.

The Court of Civil Appeals reversed the judgment, made the specific findings, among others, that smallpox did not exist in epidemic form in New Braunfels at the time of the trial, and that there was no reasonable ground for fearing that such an epidemic was threatened, and rendered judgment for defendants in error enjoining plaintiffs in error from excluding the two Waldschmidt children from the public schools. 193 S. W., 1077 to 1082.

The contention that this ordinance is inconsistent with the liberty guaranteed by the Federal and State Constitutions has been too completely repelled by the opinion of the Supreme Court of the United States in Jacobson v. Massachusetts, 197 U. S., 22, to justify further discussion. In upholding an outright compulsory vaccination statute of the State of Massachusetts, the court, through Justice Harlan, said: "The defendant insists that his liberty is invaded when the State subjects him to fine or imprisonment for neglecting or refusing to submit to vaccination; that a compulsory vaccination law is unreasonable, arbitrary and oppressive, and, therefore, hostile to the inherent right of every freeman to care for his own body and health in such way as to him seems best; and that the execution of such a law against one who objects to vaccination, no matter for what reason, is nothing short of an assault upon his person. But the liberty secured by the Constitution of the United States to every person within its. jurisdiction does not import an absolute right in each person to be, at all times and in all circumstances, wholly freed from restraint.

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Bluebook (online)
207 S.W. 303, 109 Tex. 302, 1918 Tex. LEXIS 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-new-braunfels-v-waldschmidt-tex-1918.