Graves & Houtchens v. Diamond Hill Independent School Dist.

243 S.W. 638, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 1164
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 10, 1922
DocketNo. 10071.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 243 S.W. 638 (Graves & Houtchens v. Diamond Hill Independent School Dist.) 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
Graves & Houtchens v. Diamond Hill Independent School Dist., 243 S.W. 638, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 1164 (Tex. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

CONNER, C. J.

Appellants, Graves & Houtchens, sued appellee, the Diamond Hill Independent School District, to recover a balance of $890 alleged to be due upon a contract of employment to secure the defeat of a certain bill then pending before the Legislature of the state of. Texas, which, it was alleged, would, in the event of its passage, deprive the district of its existing liability to raise large amounts of funds by taxation necessary to a successful continuance of the public school in the district. Among other allegations, the plaintiffs averred that:

“On or about December 15, 1918, the defendant, acting by and through its duly authorized board of trustees, entered into a valid and binding contract whereby it employed the plaintiffs herein to render certain legal services for said school district, which legal services consisted of the undertaking on the part of the plaintiffs herein, to accomplish the defeat, if possible, of a certain proposed legislative bill which was then contemplated to be presented before the Thirty-Sixth Legislature of the state of Texas. * * * That in order to defeat said bill plaintiffs wrote numerous letters and addressed them to the members of the Thirty-Sixth Legislature, and to each of them, * * * but, on account of the fact that the senators had gained knowledge, and did thereafter come. into possession of knowledge through the plaintiffs’ efforts and influence, and through the efforts and influence of those under plaintiffs’ direction. and instruction, said senators lost all interest in said bill, and permitted the same to die upon the calendar. * * * These plaintiffs further say that, had it not been for their influence and efforts, * * * said representatives and senators would have voted favorably in each instance upon said bill, and the same would have become a law.”

Tbe defendant answered by a general demurrer, a general denial, and also pleaded, in effect, that tbe alleged contract was ultra vires, against public policy, and void. Tbe defendant furtheu specially pleaded in abatement that tbe defendant corporation was an independent school district, having a scholastic population of less than 500, and that plaintiffs bad not appealed from tbe refusal of tbe board of trustees to allow tbe claim declared upon to the county superintendent and other school authorities.

The court upon tbe trial sustained tbe defendant’s general demurrer, and, plaintiffs declining to amend, tbe suit was dismissed, *639 and from the judgment of dismissal, this appeal has been duly prosecuted.

Aside from the question of whether the petition, as against a general demurrer, was fataly defective because it failed to show that an appeal had been taken to the county superintendent, the state superintendent, to the state board of education, or to any other supervising educational person or body, we think the court’s judgment must be sustained, on the ground that the contract of employment, as alleged, was ultra vires, against public policy, and void. While it is doubtless true that there is power in a board of trustees of an independent school district to employ counsel and pay out of the public funds of the district a reasonable fee in cases where the interests of the district require assertion or defense in the courts of the county, we find no authority, after careful search, either expressed or implied in the statutes of this state, to employ counsel and expend the public funds of the district in the attempt to secure or defeat legislation. But, if any character of employment to secure such end under any sup-posable state of facts may be held to be authorized, the plaintiffs’ petition herein presents no such facts.

Article 196 of our Penal Code thus reads:

“That if any paid or employed agent, representative or attorney of any person, association or corporation, shall, at any place in this state, after the election and during the term of office of any member of the Legislature of this state, privately solicit the vote, or privately endeavor to exercise any influence, or offer anything of value or any other inducements whatever, to any such member of the Legislature, to influence his action concerning any measure then pending, or thereafter to be introduced, in either branch of the Legislature of this state, he shall be deemed guilty of lobbying.”

Subsequent articles of the Code assess adequate penalties for a violation of the article quoted.

The plaintiffs’ petition in this case, as we construe it, substantially brings it within the spirit, at least, of the article. The obvious and avowed purpose of the agreement was to prevent the passage of a bill pending before the Legislature, regardless of the effect that it would have upon the general public. The language of the petition shows that the inducement existed to exert every effort at the command of counsel to use improper influences if necessary to accomplish their avowed object. The language of the petition is “to accomplish the defeat, if possible, of a certain proposed legislative bill.” The fee claimed was not insignificant, and, however honest and sincere the plaintiffs may have been — and their honesty and sincerity is not questioned in this case — the temptation existed to exercise improper influences upon individual legislators, and the policy of law generally is to preclude such a possibility.

“Contracts to procure legislation, either by the passage of statutes or of ordinances, are generally held void on the ground of public policy and the same rules apply to contracts between a municipality and another to procure the enactment of certain legislation supposed to be beneficial to the municipality. Thus, a contract with a municipality to draft a bill, have it introduced in the Legislature, explain it to committees and to receive no compensation in the event it is not passed, is vicious, illegal, and void.” .

In, the case of Richardson v. Scotts Bluff County, Supreme Court of Nebraska, 59 Neb. 400, 81 N. W. 309, 48 L. R. A. 294, 80 Am. St. Rep. 682, the plaintiff, who was an attorney duly licensed to practice law, entered into a contract with the defendant, Scotts Bluff County, to prepare a bill and present it before the Legislature of Nebraska, the effect of which was to reimburse that county in the sum of $7,016.01, which amount was expended by said county in the prosecution of a murder case, and which amount the county could ill afford to spend in such a manner. The plaintiff ■ successfully accomplished the object of her employment. The court, speaking through Chief Justice Harrison, said:

“It is certainly important to just and wise legislation, and therefore to the most essential interests of the public, that the Legislature be perfectly free from any extraneous influence which may either corrupt or deceive the members or any of them. The contract declared upon, and especially as shown by the evidence, was both specific and general in its terms relative to what was .to be done by the plaintiff, and, moreover, it provided for a contingent fee — an indefinite sum, but a liberal one, if the act passed; nothing, if it failed. The contract, if ever made, was vicious and illegal, and there could be no recovery under it, nor as upon an implied contract, nor upon a point of merit.”

In the case of Colusa County v. Welch, 122 Cal. 428, 55 Pac.

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Bluebook (online)
243 S.W. 638, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 1164, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/graves-houtchens-v-diamond-hill-independent-school-dist-texapp-1922.