Gumfory v. Hansford County Commissioners Court

561 S.W.2d 28, 1977 Tex. App. LEXIS 3750
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 30, 1977
Docket8820
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 561 S.W.2d 28 (Gumfory v. Hansford County Commissioners Court) 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
Gumfory v. Hansford County Commissioners Court, 561 S.W.2d 28, 1977 Tex. App. LEXIS 3750 (Tex. Ct. App. 1977).

Opinion

DODSON, Justice.

In this case Ruth Gumfory is appellant and the Hansford County Commissioners Court, County Judge Johnnie Lee and Com *29 missioners Joe Day, Joe T. Venneman, B. W. Renner and George C. Lowe, who compose the court, are the appellees herein.

In the court below Mrs. Gumfory brought her action against the Commissioners Court alleging that the division of the commissioners precincts in Hansford County, Texas, as promulgated by the Commissioners Court on or about August 23, 1976 is unconstitutional under Article 5, Section 18, Texas State Constitution, and under the equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment of the Constitution of the United States. Mrs. Gumfory requested the trial court to declare such division of the Commissioners Court in Hansford County, Texas, unconstitutional and illegal and further requested the court to “draw four new contiguous Commissioner’s Precincts each of which contain approximately an equal number of citizens.”

The case was tried before the court without a jury. The court entered a take-nothing judgment against Mrs. Gumfory and thereby denied any requested relief. From this judgment Mrs. Gumfory appeals to this court. We reverse the judgment of the trial court and render judgment setting aside the 23 August 1976 order of the Commissioners Court.

The county of Hansford is 907 square miles. It has a geometric shape of an approximate square with dimensions of approximately 30 X 30 miles. It contains a total population of 5,979 persons. The population is divided between the city of Spear-man, the city of Gruver and the country area of the county outside these two cities. The city of Gruver has a total population of 1,190 persons; the city of Spearman has a total population of 3,227 persons; and the remaining 1,562 persons reside in the country area of the county.

Under the division of the county of Hans-ford into commissioners precincts as promulgated by the Commissioners Court of such county on or about the 23rd day of August, 1976, the county was divided basically into four equal quarters, being the southeast, the northeast, the northwest and the southwest one-fourth of the county. The city of Spearman, which is located in the southeast one-fourth of the county, was divided into three portions, consisting of the east portion, the middle portion and the west-southwesterly portion. The city of Gruver was divided into two unequal portions consisting of a small northeastern portion and a large remaining portion.

These nine areas and the respective population therein were arranged into four so-called commissioners precincts. The areas designated as precincts one and four were territorially contiguous within each precinct and had a population of 1,520 and 1,476 residents, respectively. The areas designated to comprise precincts two and three were territorially non-contiguous and had a population of 1,508 and 1,475 residents, respectively.

The resulting territorial arrangement and the population apportionment of each precinct were as follows:

Commissioner Precinct No. One: This precinct consisted of the southeast one-' fourth of the county including the west-southwest portion of the city of Spearman, excluding the middle and east portions of Spearman. Precinct one was contiguous in territorial arrangement. It had a total population of 1,520. One thousand one hundred forty-six of this number resided in the city of Spearman, and the remaining 380 persons resided in the country area in the southeast one-fourth of the county.

Commissioner Precinct No. Two: This precinct consisted of the northeast one-fourth of the county and the middle portion area of the city of Spearman. The areas comprising this precinct were non-contiguous. The northeast one-fourth of the county and the middle portion area of the city of Spearman were separated by approximately four and one-half miles. It had a total population of 1,508. One thousand two hundred forty-seven of this number resided in the city of Spearman and the remaining 261 residents resided in the country area in the northeast one-fourth of the county.

Commissioner Precinct No. Three: This precinct consisted of the northwest one- *30 fourth of the county, the northeast portion of the city of Gruver and the east portion area of the city of Spearman. The areas designated with this precinct number were non-eontiguous. The northwest portion of the county and the east portion area of the city of Spearman were separated by approximately nine miles. It had a total population of 1,475. Eight hundred and thirty-four of this number resided in the city of Spearman, 174 resided in the city of Gruver, and the remaining 467 resided in the country area of the northwest one-fourth of the county.

Commissioner Precinct No. Four: This precinct consisted of the southwest one-fourth of the county including the large portion area of the city of Gruver and excluding the northeast portion area of the city of Gruver. The precinct was territorially contiguous. It had a total population of 1,476. One thousand sixteen of this number resided in the city of Gruver, and the remaining 460 resided in the country area comprising the southwest one-fourth of the county.

Initially, Mrs. Gumfory complains. that “[t]he trial court erred in allowing the County Commissioners Court to create commissioners precincts composed of non-contiguous parts in violation of the State Constitution.”

Article 5, Section 18 of the Texas Constitution provides in part as follows:

Each organized county in the State now or hereafter existing, shall be divided from time to time, for the convenience of the people, into precincts, not less than four and not more than eight. Divisions shall be made by the Commissioners Court provided for by this Constitution. In each such precinct there shall be elected one Justice of the Peace and one Constable, each of whom shall hold his office for four years and until his successor shall be elected and qualified; . Each county shall in like manner be divided into four commissioners precincts in each of which there shall be elected by the qualified voters thereof one County Commissioner, who shall hold his office for four years until his successor shall be elected and qualified. (Emphasis added.)

We have not been directed to nor have we found any Texas cases directly or indirectly determining the territorial configuration of “commissioners precincts”.

We conclude that the common meaning of the phrase “commissioners precincts” denotes a territorially contiguous area. This conclusion is supported in part by the definition of the word “precinct” found in Webster’s New International Dictionary 1943 (2nd ed. 1961) as follows:

pre’cinct ... to gird about, encompass ... 1. The enclosure bounded by the walls or other limits of a building or place or by an imaginary line around it; as, the precincts of a church; esp., pi., the region immediately surrounding a place; environs. 2. Specif., the inviolable spaces within the girth, mund, or peace of a house, borough, or the like, in the customary law of the Anglo-Saxons and some other Teutons. 3. A surrounding or enclosing line or surface; a boundary. 4. A district within certain boundaries, esp.

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Bluebook (online)
561 S.W.2d 28, 1977 Tex. App. LEXIS 3750, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gumfory-v-hansford-county-commissioners-court-texapp-1977.