Fort Worth & Denver City Railway Co. v. Loyd

133 S.W. 899, 63 Tex. Civ. App. 47, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 37
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 19, 1910
StatusPublished

This text of 133 S.W. 899 (Fort Worth & Denver City Railway Co. v. Loyd) 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
Fort Worth & Denver City Railway Co. v. Loyd, 133 S.W. 899, 63 Tex. Civ. App. 47, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 37 (Tex. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

*48 DUNKLIN, Associate Justice.

Coke Loyd sued the Fort Worth & Denver City Railway Company to recover one hundred and fifty dollars as damages to a shipment of cattle transported by the railway company from Decatur to Fort Worth. By the judgment from which the .railway company lias appealed, plaintiff was awarded one hundred and iorty-tliree dollars and fifty cents as damages sustained, and twenty dollars additional as attorney’s fees. Evidently the recovery for attorney’s :fees wms predicated upon an Act of the Thirty-first Legislature (1909), "which appears as chapter 47, page 93, of tire official publication. That Act and the title preceding read:

“An Act to regulate the presentation and collection of claims for personal services, or for labor rendered, or for material furnished, or for overcharges in freight or express, or for any claim for lost or damaged freight, or for stock killed or injured, by any person or corporation against any person or corporation doing business in this State, and providing a reasonable amount of attorney’s fees to be recovered, in •cases where the amount of such claims shall not exceed two hundred ($200) dollars, and declaring an emergency.

'“Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Texas:

“Section 1. That hereafter any pierson in this State, having a valid .bona fide claim against any person or corporation doing business in this iState, for personal services rendered or for labor done, or for material furnished, or for overcharges on freight or express, or for any claim for lost or damaged freight, or for stock killed or injured by such person or corporation, its agents or employees, may present the same to such person or corporation, or to any duly authorized agent thereof, in any county where suit may be instituted for the same; and if, at the expiration of thirty days after the presentation of such claim, the same has not been paid or satisfied, he may immediately institute suit thereon in the proper court, and if he shall finally establish his claim and obtain judgment for the full amount thereof, as presented for payment to such person or corporation, in such court he shall be entitled to recover the amount of such claim and all costs of suit, and in addition thereto a reasonable amount as attorney’s fees, provided he has an attorney employed in the case, not to exceed twenty ($20) dollars, to be determined by the court or jury trying the case; provided, however, that nothing in this Act shall be construed to repeal or in any manner affect any provision of the law now in force giving a remedy to persons having claims •of the character mentioned in this Act, but the same shall be considered .as cumulative of all other remedies given to such a person or persons.

“Sec. 2. The fact that there is no law now in force in this State providing an effectual remedy for persons having such claims as are mentioned in this Act, creates an emergency and an imperative public •necessity requiring- the suspension of the constitutional rule requiring bills to be read on three several days, and this Act shall take effect from •and after its passage, and it is so enacted.”

*49 Appellant has assigned error to the award of attorney’s fees upon the ground that the Act quoted above v/as in violation of article III, section 35, of our State Constitution of 1876, in that the title recites an Act allowing the recovery of attorney’s fees in suits upon claims of the character mentioned in the title when the amount of the claim asserted does not exceed two hundred dollars, while in the body of the Act a recovery of attorney’s fees is permitted in all suits upon the same character of claims without regard to the amount thereof.

Section 35, article III, of the Constitution, reads: “No bill (except general appropriation bills, which may embrace the various subjects and accounts for and on account of which moneys are appropriated) shall contain more than one subject, which shall be expressed in its title. But if any. subject shall be embraced in an Act which shall not be expressed in the title, such Act shall be void only as to so much thereof as shall not be so expressed.”

In Tax Collector v. Finley, 88 Texas, 521, our Supreme Court in discussing the foregoing provision of the Constitution said: “It was doubtless intended by section 35 to prevent certain practices sometimes resorted to in legislative bodies to secure legislation contrary to the will of the majority; one, that of misleading members by incorporating in the body of the Act some subject not named in the title; the other, that of including in the same bill two matters foreign to each other, for the purpose of procuring the support of such legislators as could be induced to vote for one provision merely for the purpose of securing the enactment of the other.”

Clearly, the body of the Act embraces claims not included in the title. If the body of the Act had been so framed that such claims could be rejected from its operation without changing or adding to the language of the Act, then, in accordance with the constitutional provision quoted, the Act would be held valid as applicable to claims not in excess of two hundred dollars and rejected when invoked in suits upon claims amounting to more than two hundred dollars. But the Act refers to all claims of the character therein specified, collectively and in the same language, and to say that it shall apply only to claims not in excess of two hundred dollars would be to change or limit the ordinary meaning of the language employed. Such a construction is not permissible even under the liberal rule obtaining in the construction of statutes when assailed as being in contravention of the Constitution.

In Sutherland on Statutory Construction, in section 87, the following is said: “The title can not be enlarged by construction when too narrow to cover all the provisions in the enacting part, nor can the purview be contracted by construction to fit the title; but the title, if delusively general, may be sufficient though more extensive than the purview.” The foregoing is in accord with the following statement of the law found in 26 Am. & Eng. Enev. of Law, 596, which seems to be sustained by the authorities: “Where the Act contains but a single provision which is broader than the title, the court can not narrow and *50 change the ordinary meaning of the words employed in the Act so as to sustain it as to cases falling within the title.” See W. U. Tel. Co. v. State, 62 Texas, 630; Cooley's Constitutional Limitations (6th ed.), 177, 211, 212; Elliott v. State, 91 Ga., 694, 17 S. E., 1004; Trade Mark Cases, 100 U. S., 82, vol. 25 L. Ed., p. 550; Sutherland on Stat. Const., sections 169, 170, 173, and decisions there cited.

In United States v. Reese, 92 U. S., 214-256, 23 L. Ed., 566, Waite, C. J., said: “We are, therefore, directly called upon to decide whether a penal statute enacted by Congress, with its limited powers, which is in general language broad enough to cover wrongful acts without as well as within the constitutional jurisdiction, can be limited by judicial construction so as to make it operate only on that which Congress may rightfully prohibit and punish. For this purpose we must take these sections of the statute as they are.

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Related

United States v. REESE
92 U.S. 214 (Supreme Court, 1876)
United States v. Steffens
100 U.S. 82 (Supreme Court, 1879)
Tax Collector v. Finley
32 S.W. 524 (Texas Supreme Court, 1895)
Western U. T. Co. v. State
62 Tex. 630 (Texas Supreme Court, 1884)
Elliott v. State
17 S.E. 1004 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1893)

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Bluebook (online)
133 S.W. 899, 63 Tex. Civ. App. 47, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 37, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fort-worth-denver-city-railway-co-v-loyd-texapp-1910.