Ex parte Garza

13 S.W. 779, 28 Tex. Ct. App. 381, 1890 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 17
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 26, 1890
DocketNo. 2879
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 13 S.W. 779 (Ex parte Garza) 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
Ex parte Garza, 13 S.W. 779, 28 Tex. Ct. App. 381, 1890 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 17 (Tex. Ct. App. 1890).

Opinion

Willson, Judge.

Appellant Emelia Garza applied to the judge of the District Court of the Forty-fifth Judicial District of Texas for a writ of habeas corpus, praying to be discharged from custody in which she is held by Jacob Rips, a policeman of the city of San Antonio, under a warrant issued out of the Recorder’s Court of said city, for the violation of an ordinance “ to suppress and restrain bawdy houses within the limits of the city of San Antonio.” The writ was issued as prayed for, and upon a hearing the writ was dismissed and appellant remanded to the custody of the respondent, from which order the applicant prosecutes an appeal to this court, and assigns the following error:

“His honor, the judge, erred in dismissing the writ of habeas corpus and in remanding the applicant for the writ to the custody of the respondent, in this: There is no valid or legal ordinance which authorized the issue of the warrant under and by virtue of which the applicant was arrested and is held in custody.”

The ordinance in question is entitled “An ordinance to suppress and restrain bawdy houses within the limits of the city of San Antonio.” It was passed and approved December 16, 1889, and was duly published. It provides for licensing bawdy houses within the limits of said city upon the payment of an annual license to the said city of $500; and also provides for the licensing of bawds. It also provides for the inspection of bawds, and prescribes penalties for violations of any of the provisions of the ordinance.

It is admitted that appellant violated the ordinance by keeping a bawdy house without obtaining a license to do so, and that she has been duly charged and arrested, and is now in custody for said violation.

It is further admitted that the license of $500 annually imposed by said ordinance is reasonable, and does not amount to a tax on the occupation.

Appellant attacks the validity of said ordinance, contending (1) that the city was not and is not authorized by its charter to enact it; and (2) [383]*383that said ordinance is contrary to the general laws of the State, and is therefore void.

By Act of August 13, 1870, the city of San Antonio, having a population of more than ten thousand inhabitants, was incorporated by special act of the Legislature under authority of section 5 of article XI of the Constitution.

There are three sections in the said act of incorporation under which it is claimed by the city that it had the power to enact the ordinance in question. They are as follows:

“ Section 72. To license, tax, and regulate billiard tables, pin alleys, ball alleys; to suppress and restrain disorderly houses, tippling shops and groceries, bawdy houses, houses of prostitution or assignation, gambling .and gambling houses, lotteries, and all fraudulent devices and practices, and all kinds of indecencies.

“Section 78. The city council shall have the right to enact all necessary ordinances to restrain and punish vagrants, mendicants, street beggars, and prostitutes; to restrain and control all gambling, and punish the keepers of all games and gambling devices with as great a penalty as the same is punished by the statutes of the State. The Recorder’s Court of the city of San Antonio shall have the concurrent jurisdiction of all such misdemeanors, when committed in the corporate limits of the city of San Antonio. [Amendment of March 4, 1885.]

“Section 98. To prevent and punish the keeping of houses of prostitution within the city or within such limits therein as may be defined by ordinance, and to adopt summary measures for the removal or suppression, or regulation and inspection of all such establishments.”

It is a settled rule that municipal corporations can exercise no powers but those which are conferred upon them by the act by which they are constituted, or such as are necessary to the exercise of their corporate powers, the performance of their corporate duties, and the accomplishment of the purposes of their association. The charter of a municipal corporation is its organic act, and furnishes the measure of its powers. It can exercise no power which the charter does not grant in express words, or which is not necessarily or fairly implied in or incident to the powers expressly granted, or which are not essential to the declared objects and purposes of the corporation. 1 Dill, on Mun. Corp., sec. 89; Cool, on Const. Lim., 4 ed., pp. 231, 235.

Such being the extent and limit of the power of a municipal corporation, did the municipality of the city of San Antonio have the power to enact the ordinance in question? Such power is certainly not conferred in express words in its charter. In the sections of the charter which we have quoted no express power to license houses of prostitution is granted, and there are no other provisions of the charter bearing upon the subject. In Davis v. The State, 1 Texas Court of Appeals, 425, which case has been [384]*384cited, and is relied upon by the city to sustain the validity of said ordinance, the power to license houses of prostitution was granted the city of Waco in express words, and while we adhere to the correctness of that decision, we do not consider it applicable to this case.

It is claimed by the city, however, that although its charter does not. in express words confer the power to license houses of prostitution, it. does by necessary implication confer such power by granting expressly the power to restrain, regulate, and inspect such establishments.

Judge Dillon, in his work on Municipal Corporations, says: “ The presumption is not lightly to be indulged that the Legislature has by implication repealed, as respects a particular municipality, or as respects all municipalities, l&ws of a general nature elsewhere in force throughout the State; yet á charter or special act passed subsequent to the general law, and plainly irreconcilable with it, will, to the extent of the conflict, operate a repeal of the latter by implication. But by a well known rule, founded on solid reasons, such repeals are not favored; and the principle-of implied repeal ought to be applied with extreme caution.” 1 Dill, on Mun. Corp., sec. 88. Again, he says: “The right to license must be plainly conferred or it will not be held to exist.” Id., sec. 361. And again, he says: “ Any fair, reasonable doubt concerning the existence of power is resolved by the courts against the corporation, and the power is. denied.” Id., sec. 89.

In determining the power of a municipal corporation to enact a particular ordinance, the charter by which it is claimed such power is conferred should receive a reasonable construction—that is, a construction Avhich accords Avith the intention of the Legislature—and all reasonable intendments in support of the validity of the ordinance will be indulged. Gregory v. The State, 20 Texas Ct. App., 210.

Was it the intention of the Legislature to confer upon the city of San Antonio the poAver to license houses of prostitution? At the time of granting the charter of incorporation to said city, houses of prostitution were prohibited by a general law of the State. Penal Code, arts. 339-341. If it Avas the intention of the Legislature to repeal this general law Avithin the corporate limits of said city, it is reasonable to presume that such intention would have been plainly and expressly declared, and not left to be implied merely.

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Bluebook (online)
13 S.W. 779, 28 Tex. Ct. App. 381, 1890 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-garza-texapp-1890.