Flatan v. State ex rel. Edwards

56 Tex. 93, 1882 Tex. LEXIS 2
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 13, 1882
DocketCase No. 1377
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 56 Tex. 93 (Flatan v. State ex rel. Edwards) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Flatan v. State ex rel. Edwards, 56 Tex. 93, 1882 Tex. LEXIS 2 (Tex. 1882).

Opinions

Stayton, Associate Justice.

This is an action in the nature of a writ of quo warranto, instituted upon the relation of W. H. Edwards, to test the right of Louis S. Platan to the office of sheriff of Camp county.

A demurrer was sustained to the petition and the same dismissed, from which judgment an appeal was prosecuted to this court, and at the last term thereof held at Austin, the judgment was reversed and the cause remanded.

Since the case went back to the district court of Camp county, another trial was' had, in which the court sustained a demurrer to all of the respondent’s answer except the general denial, and a judgment was rendered in the cause in favor of the state and relator, from which the present appeal is prosecuted.

It is assigned as error that the court erred in sustaining the demurrer of the state.

The petition in the case alleged that, at the general election held on the 2d .of November, 1880, the relator was elected sheriff of Camp county; that he secured his certificate of election, and thereafter presented to the county commissioners’ court for said county his general official bond as sheriff, together with the bonds required of him as the collector of state and county taxes, which were in proper form and amount, and with good and sufficient sureties thereon.

The petition alleged that the county commissioners’ court for Camp county, on the 18th day of December [97]*97following his election, for insufficient reasons and for improper motives, rejected all of his bonds except the one executed by him' as collector of county taxes; that on the same day said court appointed the respondent sheriff of said county, and that he usurped and intruded into the office and illegally exercised the duties thereof.

It is not necessary here now to state the facts upon which the relator alleged that the county commissioners’ court improperly rejected his bonds, in considering whether the court erred" in sustaining the demurrer to respondent’s answer.

The respondent in substance alleged that it was true that the relator was elected sheriff of Camp county on the 2d of November, 1880; that a certificate of election issued to him on the 18th day of November; that on the 20th day of the same month the county commissioners’ court met for the purpose of approving bonds of the officers of the county elect; that the bonds of relator were not then presented for approval; that the court then adjourned until the 3d day of December, at which time the court again met to approve official bonds, of which the relator had knowledge, at which time the relator failed to present his bonds for approval. That the court again adjourned until the 11th of December to give the relator full time to perfect and present his several bonds, of which he had notice, and that it on that day met, at which time the relator presented for approval his three bonds required by law to be made, for approval, when it was found and decided by the court that the bonds presented by relator as collector of state and county taxes were for sums less than required by law; whereupon, without taking further action, at the request of the relator, the court adjourned until the 18th of December, to give the relator time to present proper bonds; at which time the court again met and the relator presented his three bonds for approval, all of which, except the bond [98]*98as collector of county taxes, said court decided to be insufficient, for the reason that the sureties thereon were not sufficient, which fact was made known to the relator, and he then refused to giye other sureties or other bonds.

He further alleged that the sureties upon the bonds of the relator were insufficient.

He further alleged that on the same day that the relator refused to give other sureties or other bonds, the county commissioners’ court declared tie office of sheriff of the county vacant, and appointed him thereto; that he had duly qualified under his appointment, and had been commissioned as sheriff of Camp county by the governor of the state; that he was not I a usurper or intruder, but was legally the sheriff of Camp county by reason of the facts stated in his answer. The manner of qualification of the respondent was fully and minutely set out in his answer. .

For the purposes of this appeal, their sufficiency being called in question by a demurrer, the allegations of respondent’s answer must be taken to be true.

We are of the opinion that the court erred in sustaining the demurrer to respondent’s answer.

The term of office provided by the constitution is short, and such persons as seek office, and by the vote of the people are elected thereto, should not be dilatory in qualifying after they have been notified by certificate of election that the people have honored them by their confidence expressed through the ballot. The statute provides that a person elected to the office of sheriff shall give bond and take the oath of office within twenty days after notice of his election; and he that seeks an extension of the time provided by statute should show some extraordinary reason therefor.

The time prescribed by statute within which a person elected to an office shall qualify has been held to be directory in some of the other states, and so was held to be in [99]*99this case upon former appeal. These rulings were no doubt made to cover such cases as might arise in which a person could not, for some good reason beyond his own control, qualify within the prescribed time, in order that the right of the person to qualify might not be destroyed without wrong upon his part, and that the wish of the people might not be lightly defeated; but it is not believed that the rule can be extended to cases in which there is neglect upon the part of an elected person.

In this case the certificate of election issued to the relator on the 18th day of November, and from the 20th day of that month, after several adjournments made as alleged in the answer to enable him to perfect and present his bonds, on the 18th day of the December following he presented bonds which were adjudged by the court insufficient. These facts might be held to constitute neglect, and if so, as more than twenty days had elapsed after he received his certificate of election, it might well be held that the extension of time should not have been given. The plain words of the statute should have their full effect in reference to the time within which an elected person should qualify, in all cases in which there is neglect or refusal to qualify.

The allegations of the answer, however, go further, and aver that the relator not only neglected to give proper bonds, but that after he was notified by the court that two of his bonds were insufficient, he refused to give other security thereon, or to execute other bonds in place of those declared to be insufficient.

By this we are to understand that the relator, when informed that the sureties upon two of his bonds were insufficient, said to the court that he would give none other.

If the relator set up his judgment as to the sufficiency of his bonds against the judgment of the county commissioners’ court, which by statute is made the judge [100]*100thereof, the most that he can now ask is, that the question of fact upon which he and the court differed should have been fairly examined and determined by the county commissioners’ court. That could not be done by the demurrer in this case. ¡

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
56 Tex. 93, 1882 Tex. LEXIS 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flatan-v-state-ex-rel-edwards-tex-1882.