Cobb & Gregory v. Dies

203 S.W. 438, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 474
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 18, 1918
DocketNo. 217.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 203 S.W. 438 (Cobb & Gregory v. Dies) 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
Cobb & Gregory v. Dies, 203 S.W. 438, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 474 (Tex. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

CHILTON, Special Judge.

The appellants, Cobb & Gregory, a firm composed of O. E. Cobb and J. A. Gregory, instituted the suit seeking a mandamus requiring W. W. Dies, county judge, and J. X. Bevil, county clerk, of Hardin county, Tex., to execute and deliver certain warrants of Hardin county. The petitioners alleged, as a basis for this relief, in substance, that, on August 7, 1916, said Hardin county being indebted to the petitioners on account of certain road work done and performed in accordance with a contract between said county and petitioners, the account and claim therefor was presented to the commissioners’ court of said county, then properly assembled in special session, with three commissioners present and attending (but the county judge and one commissioner *439 being absent) and that the account of petitioners was at said session, after being duly considered and audited, allowed, and the issuance of the warrants of the county for the amount, $6,811.02, directed and authorized. It is shown that the contract between petitioners and the county provides for the signing of such warrants by the county judge &d county clerk, and that said contract in connection with the order provides for all other details with reference to the amounts, due dates, rate of interest, etc., of such warrants, and that petitioners have requested and demanded the execution and delivery thereof, but that the said Dies, county judge, and Devil, county clerk, have refused and still refuse to comply therewith. The other members of the commissioners’ court of .Hardin county, J. N. Newman, G. A. Anderson, J. D. Flowers, and J. S. Jackson, are made parties defendant, also the county of Hardin, as a body corporate, and the petition contains a prayer for certain other relief, with allegations pertinent thereto, which will be noticed and considered later on in this opinion. The defendants answered by general demurrer, and numerous special pleas and denials. The justness and correctness of the claim- of petitioners against Hardin county was stoutly denied and contested, and it was shown that at a session of the commissioners’ court,- with all members present, subsequent to the one referred to in the petition, the former order allowing the account was by unanimous vote rescinded and the account allowed for a much less amount, which action it seems, though, was taken without notice to Cobb & Gregory, but it is not necessary to notice these defensive pleadings in detail. The general demurrer to the petition as sustained by the trial judge, and petitioners having refused to amend, the suit was ordered dismissed, from which judgment an appeal has been perfected.

The first and main contention of appellants is that any three members of a county commissioners’ court, one of which three may or may not be the county judge, constitutes a quorum for the transaction of any business except that of levying a tax, and that therefore the order entered on August 7, 1916, allowing the claim against Hardin county and ordering the issuance of' warrants, is a valid and binding order, and must be observed. This calls for a construction of articles 2237 and 2238, of our statutes, relating to the organization of county commissioners’ courts, which read as follows:

“Art. 2237. (1533) (1510) Court Composed of Whom, and, the Presiding Officer Thereof. — The said commissioners, together with the county judge, shall compose the commissioners’ court, and the county judge, when present, shall be the presiding officer of said court.”
“Art.- 2238. (1534) (1511) Three Members Constitute a Quorum, except, cte. — Any three members of the said court, including the county .judge, shall constitute a quorum for the transaction of any business, except that of levying a county tax.” ‘

Counsel for appellants have discussed, with much learning and force, the question as to the proper construction of the articles above, particularly article 2238, and we agree in the main with the views expressed, and would construe the statute as appellants contend it should be, if we regarded it as an open question. When one looks at article 2238, standing alone, there can be no doubt that it is somewhat ambiguous, but when considered in connection with the preceding article we think the meaning and intention reasonably clear. Prior to the enactment of these provisions, the commissioners’ courts in each county of the state had been created by the Constitution to be composed of four commissioners and the county judge (Const. art. 5, § 18), and the county judge was made the presiding officer. No provision was made in the Constitution as to what number of members, less than the whole, might constitute a quorum for the transaction of business, and it would seem, in the absence oí this, the presence of all members would be necessary. To remedy this no doubt, was the matter uppermost in mind when tbe slat-ntory provisions before mentioned were enacted. There is no provision, other than article 2238, expressly saying what number of members of the court may constitute a quorum, and it is clearly contemplated by the preceding article, 2237, that the county judge may not always be present and that the court may transact business and enter valid orders in his absence. The opening clause of article 2238, “Any three members of said court” would clearly include the county judge who is already mentioned as a member of the court, but confusion is injected by the uncertain nature of the clause immediately following, “including the county judge.” We think this should be treated as an explanatory nonrestrictive clause, or a mere loose repetition of what had already been implied. It appears to have been the purpose on the part of the draftsman to again repeat or emphasize the fact that the county judge is a member of the court just as much so as any one of the commissioners, and may bo counted as one of the “any three members” necessary to constitute a quorum. However this may be, we have before us the case of West v. Burke, reported in 60 Tex. 51, wherein the court construes sections 11 and 12 of the act of 1876 (Acts 15th Leg. c. 55) the language of which is now embodied in articles 2237 and 2238, before quoted, with only slight and immaterial change of verbiage, as meaning that three members of a commissioners’ court, one of whom must be tbe county judge, may constitute a quorum, and in the absence of the county judge the presence of all four commissioners is necessary to a quorum. The opinion is short, and relates *440 to only this one point, and we think it well to quote what is there said:

“The Constitution (article 5, § 18) provides that the four commissioners, with the county judge as presiding officer, shall constitute the county commissioners’ court. The act to organize the commissioners’ court (Laws 1876, p. 53, § 12), provides that any three members of the court, including the county judge, shall constitute a quorum. From section 11 of the act we conclude that this court may meet and transact business in the absence of the county judge, and in that event some other member of the court may pz-eside. See, also, R. S. art. 1510. Section 13 provides that the judge or any three of the commissioners may call special terms; but there is no intimation in the law that, in the absence of the judge, any number of the commissioners less than the whole shall constitute a quorum for the transaction of business.

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236 S.W. 1108 (Texas Commission of Appeals, 1922)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
203 S.W. 438, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 474, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cobb-gregory-v-dies-texapp-1918.