County of Presidio v. City National Bank of Paducah

44 S.W. 1069, 20 Tex. Civ. App. 511, 1898 Tex. App. LEXIS 394
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 16, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 44 S.W. 1069 (County of Presidio v. City National Bank of Paducah) 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
County of Presidio v. City National Bank of Paducah, 44 S.W. 1069, 20 Tex. Civ. App. 511, 1898 Tex. App. LEXIS 394 (Tex. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

FLY, Associate Justice.

The City National Bank of Paducah, Ky., sued the county of Presidio to recover of it the sum of $5760 alleged to be due as interest on certain bonds issued by the county to build a courthouse. A trial resulted in a judgment for the plaintiff, who is appellee in this court.

There is no statement of facts, and it follows that the findings of facts of the trial judge must be adopted as the conclusion of fact of this court.

The first, second, and ninth assignments present as error the action of the court in overruling the general demurrer and special exceptions which attacked the petition on the ground that it failed to allege that any sinking fund or interest was provided for as required by article 11, section 7, of the State Constitution. In a recent case involving the same question, the Supreme Court has held that the constitutional requirement is fully met by* the legislative provision for a sinking fund and the *512 interest on county bonds, and that failure upon the part of the commissioners court to make such provision did not render .the bonds invalid. It follows that it was not necessary to allege in the petition that a law of Texas providing for the sinking fund and interest had been passed by the Legislature. Mitchell County v. National Bank, 91 Texas, 370.

The fifteenth assignment of error raises the question of the illegality of the bonds, because they were issued for the purpose of building a courthouse at Marfa at a time when the county had a courthouse at Port Davis, the legal county seat, and from which the county seat had never been legally removed. It may be assumed that the evidence showed that the county seat was legally located at Port Davis and that the removal from that place to Marfa was illegal, because the proposition for removal was not sanctioned by two-thirds of the voters of Presidio County. The removal to Marfa took place in 1885, and since that time the District Court has regularly met and performed the functions committed to it by the State, the probate court has performed its business, the Commissioners Court has regularly met there and levied taxes and attended to the other business of the county, the deeds and mortgages have been recorded, and in fact all the business of the county has been performed there. Causes have been tried in the District Court at Marfa and appealed to the Supreme Court, some in which the question of the legality of the removal was directly involved, and the Supreme Court has entertained jurisdiction. Caruthers v. Hornett, 67 Texas, 128; Caruthers v. State, 67 Texas, 132: In 1887 the Legislature of Texas formed out of territory belonging to Presidio County additional counties, among the number being the county of Jeff Davis, in which was situated Port Davis. Acts 1887, pp. 26, 27. Again, in 1889 the Legislature, in an amendment to the acts creating Brewster, Buchel, Poley, and Jeff Davis counties, stated in the emergency clause that “in the creation of the counties of Brewster and Jeff Davis, and fixing their boundaries, they were placed within less than twelve miles of Marfa, the county seat of Presidio County,” which is an indirect recognition of the fact that Marfa was the legal county seat. In view of all these facts, we are of the opinion that appellant should not be heard to question the validity of bonds out of whose proceeds the courthouse it has been using for the last ten years was built.

The removal to Marfa was nót in violation of any constitutional provision, because the Constitution, article 9, section 2, places no limitation upon removals of county seats, except that no county seat within five miles of the geographical center of a county shall be removed except by a vote of two-thirds of the voters. The Legislature is clothed with full power to pass laws covering the question. It was therefore a legislative provision that was violated by the removal to Marfa, and the violation was not only acquiesced in by the people of the county but by the courts of the State, and was ratified by the Legislature. Had there been a speedy challenge by the State or anyone interested a different ease would have been presented, perhaps; but it is too late now to assail the *513 very existence of a county that has been so long recognized for all purposes appertaining to county government. As said in Ashley v. Board of Supervisors, 60 Federal Reporter, 55, “the public interests have been adjusted to the actual condition of things, and private interests have become settled upon the foundations which local authority has laid, with consent of the State, whose business it was to interfere and prevent the mischief, if any such were feared. It is a matter peculiarly within the province and duty of the State to watch over and prevent the development of political growths which are likely to be prejudicial to the public interests. When it does not interfere, private individuals are justified in assuming that there is nothing obnoxious in the organization, and that they may treat with it in the character it has assumed.” Shall it be held that persons ignorant of any illegality in the selection of a county seat, who in the ordinary course of trade in the open market pay value in good faith for the bonds of a county that is recognized as a subdivision of the State, whose county seat is recognized by different branches of the State government, and the inhabitants, shall have his right disregarded, his debts repudiated, and his property destroyed, because there has been some violation of law -in the selection of such county site of which he has no knowledge, and about which he was not in any manner put upon inquiry ? Such a doctrine would be subversive of principles of good faith, and public policy demands that the power of a county to refuse payment of its debts on such grounds should not be tolerated. It would be dangerous and wrong to permit a county, for the purpose of evading payment of money used in erecting a building that forms a shelter for its officers, to attack the validity of its own existence. But it is insisted that the cases of Caruthers v. Hornett and Caruthers v. State, above cited, do sustain such doctrine; but no such deduction can be legitimately drawn from those eases. The decisions were rendered in 1886, shortly after the removal occurred. In the first case Caruthers, the county treasurer of Presidio County, had sued Hornett, the county judge, and two commissioners, and asked an injunction to restrain them from removing him from office, and also prayed that they be required to remove the county seat back to Fort Davis. The District Court, sitting at Marfa, held that he had no cause of action, and the Supreme Court affirmed the judgment. After settling every point that was raised in the case or necessary or proper to a decision of the case, it is said: “It does not follow from this, however, when a right involving pecuniary interest, not originating in the election, is asserted, that no inquiry can be made as to the legality of an election when -it is set up to defeat such a right. In such case, when there is no controversy as to the vote cast, and the effect of that vote is to be determined as a matter of law, there can be no objection to considering it, whatever may be the form of action, and to giving to the vote east in favor of or against a given measure its proper and legitimate legal effect.” This language was not called for in the decision of the case and was *514 purely obiter.

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44 S.W. 1069, 20 Tex. Civ. App. 511, 1898 Tex. App. LEXIS 394, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/county-of-presidio-v-city-national-bank-of-paducah-texapp-1898.