Coleman v. Hallum

232 S.W. 296, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 483
CourtTexas Commission of Appeals
DecidedJune 15, 1921
DocketNo. 242-3434
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 232 S.W. 296 (Coleman v. Hallum) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Commission of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coleman v. Hallum, 232 S.W. 296, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 483 (Tex. Super. Ct. 1921).

Opinion

SPENCER, J.

Plaintiffs sought and obtained an injunction restraining defendants from turning out their hogs and permitting them to run at large in two subdivisions of Henderson county, Tex. They alleged that, as a result of an election held in one of these subdivisions in 1889 and in the other in 1890, the law preventing hogs, goats, and sheep from running at large had been adopted in these subdivisions.

Defendants urged that the elections were void because the orders calling them were not to determine whether hogs goats, and sheep should be prohibited from running at large as prayed in the petition, but were to determine whether hogs, goats, or sheep should be prohibited from running at large.

If, as contended, the orders directed elections to determine whether hogs, goats, or sheep should be prohibited from running at large, it would be impossible to determine whether the voters intended to prohibit one or all classes of animals mentioned from running at large. But the orders construed as an entirety are not susceptible of that construction. Each order states that the petition requests an election to determine whether hogs, goats, and sheep shall be permitted to run at large. Included within each order is a copy of the petition, which contains a prayer for an election to determine whether hogs, goats, and sheep shall be permitted to run at large. Each order concludes:

“And it appearing to the court that said petition is in due form of law, and is signed and presented to this court by more than 20 freeholders of the said subdivisions of said county, it is therefore ordered by the court that said petition be, and is hereby, granted, and [an] election is hereby ordered to be held in said subdivision at * * * to determine whether hogs, goats, or sheep shall be permitted to run at large in said subdivision of [said] county.”

Upon appeal, the Court of Civil Appeals was of opinion that the elections were void, and therefore reversed and rendered the judgment of the district court. 214 S. W. 989.

[1] It is clear that it was the intention of the commissioner’s court to grant the request of the petitions for elections to determine whether hogs, goats, and sheep should be permitted to run at large. In both orders it made the emphatic declaration that such requests were granted. To hold that the concluding sentence of the order is to govern in arriving at the intention of the commissioner’s court is. to disregard the plain intent of that body, as expressed in the orders when construed as a whole.

[2] The petition for an election is fundamental and jurisdictional. It is the basis of the court’s action in ordering the election. The court is not at liberty to disregard the request to order the election prayed for, if the requisites of the statute have been complied with; nor is it at liberty to alter the request for an election by ordering an election different from the one called for by the petition. The construction contended for would ascribe to the commissioner’s court the doing of an unauthorized act—the ordering of an election without a petition as a basis therefor—and also the ordering of an election that would be void because of the uncertainty as to what was to be submitted and voted upon therein. Such absurd results are to be avoided if it can be done consistent with the rules of law governing construction, and without doing violence to the language employed. The familiar canon of construction that the disjunctive participle “or” and the conjunction “and” may be read controvertibly whenever it is necessary to carry out the intention of the Legislature, as plainly expressed in the statute, should be applied in this case to effectuate the intention of the commissioner’s court. Ip accordance with this rule, therefore, the word “and” should be substituted for “or” in the concluding sentence of the orders.

The honorable Court of Civil Appeals cites McElroy v. State, 39 Tex. Cr. R. 529, 47 S. W. 359, by our Court of Criminal Appeals, as authority for holding the election void. The published opinion in that case does not contain the order calling the election, but it is clear from a reading of the opinion that the decision is bottomed upon the proposition that the order in that case was for an election to determine whether hogs, goats, or sheep should be permitted to run at large, and that the question was submitted and voted upon in that form. The facts are therefore essentially different from the facts of this case.

[3] The contention that the election of 1889 is void because the commissioner’s court, in violation of article 7212, R. C. S. 1911, passed the order calling the election at the same term that the petition was filed cannot be sustained. Article 7212 reads:

“Upon the filing of such petition the commissioner’s court, at its next regular term thereafter, shall pass an order directing an election to be held throughout the county, or the particular subdivision thereof, as the case may be, on a day to be designated in the order, not less than 30 days from the date of such order.”

The object of the provision of this article was to require prompt action by the commissioner’s court in calling such elections. The language employed is not a limitation upon the power of the court to call such elections at the term at which the petition therefor is filed; it is but a direction to the commissioner’s court to call the election prayed for at the next succeeding term of the court after the filing of the petition. The [298]*298Legislature was aware, of course, that in many instances petitions would be filed after the adjournment of the terms of the court, and that no action could be taken thereon during vacation. With the view to prevent the commissioner’s court from postponing from term to term the ordering of elections, when properly petitioned to do so, this statute was passed. No intention contrary to this is manifested by the act. It is not susceptible of the construction that the Legislature intended to prevent the ordering of an election at the same term at which the petition was filed.

Our Court of Criminal Appeals in Robertson v. State, 44 Tex. Cr. R. 270, 70 S. W. 542, reached a different conclusion in construing this statute. It held that a petition filed during a regular term of the commissioner’s court could not be acted upon by the court at that term. With all due deference to that court, we do not feel constrained to follow it in its construction of this article.

[4] Defendants urge that the elections were void because there is no evidence showing that the returns of the election were made to the county judge, opened, tabulated, and counted by him as the law requires, and that no proclamation declaring the results had ever been made by the county judge.

There is evidence in the record by the witness Watkins that the county judge issued his proclamation in both elections, declaring the result. The proclamation declaring the result raises the presumption that everything necessary to a legal election had been done. Chapman v. State, 37 Tex. Cr. R. 167, 39 S. W. 113; Ewing v. Duncan, 81 Tex. 230, 16 S. W. 1000.

[5] Defendants contend that, though the law had been legally adopted and is in force in the subdivisions mentioned, plaintiff is not entitled to injunctive relief because he has an adequate remedy at law.

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Bluebook (online)
232 S.W. 296, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 483, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coleman-v-hallum-texcommnapp-1921.