Ex Parte Kimbrell

83 S.W. 382, 47 Tex. Crim. 333, 1904 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 310
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 23, 1904
DocketNo. 3014.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 83 S.W. 382 (Ex Parte Kimbrell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal 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 Kimbrell, 83 S.W. 382, 47 Tex. Crim. 333, 1904 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 310 (Tex. 1904).

Opinion

*334 DAVIDSON, Presiding Judge.

Relator was arrested, charged with violating the local option stock law. The facts show that a local option stock law election was held for the entire county of Kaufman. The certificate of the clerk shows that there were as many as eighteen petitions presented from the different portions of the county. .Some of these called for an election “to determine whether such stock, as cattle, horses, mules, etc., shall continue to run at large or whether should be restrained.” Three of them petition the court to order an election “to decide whether the general stock law shall become effective in Kaufman County.” Four of them request the election to be held to determine “whether such stock, as horses, cattle, jennets, etc., shall continue to run at large,” etc. It is left uncertain, whether the law was complied with, which required that the names of twelve freeholders from each justice precinct should be signed to the petition; but the judgment recites that this portion of the law was complied with, and there is no contest over that phase of it. So we take it for granted that the judgment of the court is correct in this respect, and such presumption will be indulged.

The petition is attacked, as being insufficient in designating the class or classes of stock sought to be voted out. As will be seen from the above statement of the case, three of the petitions fail to specify any “class” but call for an election under .the general law, without specifying whether it was to prevent horses, cattle, mules, jacks and jennets from running at large, or whether it was for the prevention of the running at large of hogs, sheep and goats. Section 3 of the act of the 26th Legislature provides, as follows: “Such petition shall set forth clearly the class or classes of animals enumerated in the preceding article which the petitioners desire shall not run at large in such county or subdivision as the case may be,” etc. The section or article referred to authorizes the voting by the freeholders of the county or subdivision to determine whether horses, mules, jacks, jennets or cattle shall be prohibited from running at large in the county or subdivision. The election was ordered for all of the named animals specified above. In none of them was the word “jacks” mentioned; in some of them “jennets” were not mentioned; in some of them “cattle” were not mentioned. The order of the court covered all the classes. In order to comply with this law, section 3, above quoted, the petition must set forth clearly, the “class or classes,” and no legal election can be held until this section has been complied with. It will be observed that under this law, no election can be ordered by the commissioners court of its own motion; it must be upon petition, such as is mentioned in the statute. In this respect this local option law is variant from the local option law in regard to intoxicating liquors, for under that law, the commissioners court is authorized to order it of their own volition. In the early life of the local option law in regard to intoxicating liquor, a petition was requisite as a predicate for ordering the election. Under that law, a local option election could not have been held to prohibit the sale of intoxicants without a petition. *335 Later on, that law was amended, so as to authorize the commissioners court to order it in their discretion. But this is not so under the stock-law. So, we hold that this election under discussion is invalid, because the order is not in accordance with the petitions, and because the petitions are so variant and contradictory, that they do not comply with the law in regard to specifying the class or classes.

There is another question suggested. The election was held under the act of the 28th Legislature, known as the “Terrell Election Law”; that is, the notice of the election was published three weeks, in a newspaper. There was no posting of "notices. Under this stock law, in regard to horses, mules, jacks, jennets and cattle, section 5 provides: “Immediately after the passage of an order for an election by the commissioners court, the county judge shall issue an order for such election, and cause public notice thereof to be given for at least thirty days before the day of election, by publication of the order therefor in some newspaper published in the county, if there be one; if no newspaper be published in the county, then by posting copies of such orders at the courthouse door, and at some public place in each justice precinct, if the election be ordered for the whole county, or at three public places in the subdivision if the election be ordered for a subdivision.” This was a county election. The notice was published three weeks, not thirty days as required by law. The Terrell Election Law, section 42, provides: “The county judge, or if he fails to, then the commissioners shall cause notice of a general election and of a special election to be published in a newspaper of the county, if there' be one; if not, by posting notice of election at each precinct, twenty days before the election,” etc. The notice was published in accordance with section 42 of the Terrell Election Law. The question is, which law shall govern in regard to notices; whether the notice set out in the law with reference to local option elections for stock, or the provisions of the general election law, known as the “Terrell Election Law.” We are of the opinion that the notice shall be given in accordance with the act of the 26th Legislature in regard to holding local option elections to prevent stock running at large. While this stock law may be said in one sense to be a general law, that can be adopted by any or all of the counties or subdivisions of a county mentioned in the act, yet its application is local and special. There is no way of avoiding the conclusion, that the provisions of the stock law governs, unless it be that the Terrell Election Law repeals the special law in regard to notice. It is too well settled for discussion, that repeals by implication are not favored, and contradictions between two laws must be irreconcilable, before one will be held to repeal the other, under the doctrine of repeal by implication. This is the rule where the laws are of the same character of legislation, such as are general in their nature. But when we approach the question of a clash or conflict between general and special laws, the rule is still more rigid. The question of a conflict between the general election law and the laws in regard to posting or giving notice in local option law to prohibit the sale of intoxicants, came before the Court of Civil Appeals *336 for revision and discussion in Voss v. Terrell, 34 S. W. Rep., 170. Judge Stephens, delivering the opinion of the majority, held the general law did not repeal the special law, and that in ordering these elections, the provisions of the special or local option law would be followed; that there was really and in fact no conflict. The question was before this court in Shields v. State, 38 Texas Crim. Rep., 252, where this language was used: “It is contended by appellant that the notice of the election must be posted in each voting precinct in the county, and he refers us to the acts of the 22nd Legislature, page 13, regulating special elections. This act has no reference to local option elections. We have a special provision in regard to local option elections, which is, that the five notices must be issued and posted in the territory to be affected. See arts. 3387 Rev. Civ. Stats. 1895.

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Bluebook (online)
83 S.W. 382, 47 Tex. Crim. 333, 1904 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 310, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-kimbrell-texcrimapp-1904.