Hidalgo & Cameron Counties Water Control & Improvement District No. 9 v. Starley

373 S.W.2d 731
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 8, 1964
DocketA-9840
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 373 S.W.2d 731 (Hidalgo & Cameron Counties Water Control & Improvement District No. 9 v. Starley) 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
Hidalgo & Cameron Counties Water Control & Improvement District No. 9 v. Starley, 373 S.W.2d 731 (Tex. 1964).

Opinion

STEAKLEY, Justice.

This is an original mandamus proceeding. It relates to the case of State of Texas v. Hidalgo County Water Control and Improvement District No. 18 et al., pending in the 93rd Judicial District Court of Texas. The case is cause No. B-20576 by which it will be herein identified.

Relators seek a writ of mandamus compelling Honorable J. H. Starley, The Special Judge Presiding, to proceed to trial. Judge Starley has properly declined to do so because of the question of his qualification under the prohibition of Section 11, Article V, of the Texas Constitution, Vernon’s Ann.St., that “No judge shall sit in any case * * * where either of the parties may be connected with him, either by affinity or consanguinity, within such a degree as may be prescribed by law * The third degree is prescribed by Article 15, Revised Civil Statutes. The record before us consists of the pleadings and briefs of the parties in this proceeding and the basic pleadings of the parties in the pending *732 case. The facts represented by the respective parties are unchallenged.

The pending- case is one of great magnitude. It was filed by the State in 1956 to obtain an adjudication of the water rights to the American share of the waters of the Rio Grande River. The fifth amended original petition of the State names approximately three thousand defendants who claim the right to use water from the Rio Grande for a variety of uses, including the irrigation of over 850,000 acres of land situated in the Counties of Starr, Hidalgo, Cameron and Willacy. Relators represent that the trial of the case will extend over a period of years, and that the costs involved in the litigation, and in the allocation and distribution of the supply of water of the Rio Grande and that stored in Falcon Reservoir, pending final judgment, will reach hundreds of thousands of dollars. Relators further represent that at least twenty-five thousand individual landowners located within the districts which are named as parties in the suit will be vitally affected by the ultimate decision in the case.

It is asserted by the Attorney General on behalf of the respondent, Texas- Water Commission, the principal plaintiff in the pending suit, that the Commission has named as a party defendant every person who claims to own an interest in a water right. The relief sought is the determination of “the validity and priority in point of time of each and every right to appropriate, impound, divert and use waters of the Rio Grande claimed by defendants”; that “those defendants found without valid and subsisting water rights from the Rio Grande” be permanently enjoined “from appropriating, impounding, diverting or using waters of the Rio Grande”; and that “the Court determine the duty of water and the land to which such rights are appurtenant” as to those defendants “found by the Court to have valid and subsisting water rights from the Rio Grande for irrigation use.”

This Court has heretofore considered what has been the recurring problem of the qualification of a judge to sit in the case.. The problem first arose with respect to' Honorable W. R. Blalock who was at the time the regularly elected Judge of the 93rd District Court in which the case is pending. Judge Blalock questioned his own qualification because of his ownership of certain property in the city of Mission and lying within one of the porciones which abut on the Rio Grande River. Judge Blalock expressed the opinion in writing before this Court that he would derive benefits from a determination that the water district from which he purchased water had a prior right to water over other water districts and users who are parties to the case; and, similarly, that he would suffer a detriment if it is determined that the water district was not entitled to priority in the use of water over other water districts in the case. Notwithstanding, this Court, speaking through Chief Justice Hickman, held that Judge Blalock was not under a legal disqualification to try the case. Hidalgo County Water Improvement District No. 2 v. Blalock, 157 Tex. 206, 301 S.W.2d 593. In so doing, this Court recognized the extraordinary problem with which it was then confronted, saying:

“We face a condition unique in the history of our jurisprudence. Relators are entitled to have thei'r rights litigated. It is next to impossible to find a judge residing in another section of the State who could be transferred to Hidalgo County to try this case.”

Subsequently, Judge Blalock was succeeded as the regularly elected Judge of the 93rd District Court by Honorable Magus-Smith. Judge Smith had been an attorney in the case prior to his elevation to the bench, and his disqualification was declared-in Hidalgo County Water Control and Improvement District No. 1 v. Boysen, Tex.Civ.App., 354 S.W.2d 420, er. ref. Honorable Woodrow Laughlin, Judge of the 79th District Court, had been assigned by the-Presiding Judge of the Administrative District to serve as Judge of the 93rd District Court for a certain period. The qualifica *733 tion of Judge Laughlin was also brought under attack in Boysen because certain of his relatives within the prohibited degree owned property in two of the water districts which are parties to the main water suit. Judge Laughlin was held qualified. The opinion of the Court of Civil Appeals, which we approved by an unqualified refusal of the application for writ of error, enlarged upon the controlling importance of the practical doctrine of necessity to which this Court expressly adverted in Blalock. Necessarily implicit in Boysen was the awareness that the landowner relatives of Judge Laughlin, like Judge Blalock, would either receive a benefit or suffer a detriment, dependent upon the outcome of the case. But it was said:

“In applying the rule of disqualification for a relative’s interest we should endeavor to follow the spirit and intent of the Constitutional rule. The rule is based upon ethical principles. Justice should not have even the appearance of extraneous influence. The line has been drawn at that point where one can determine from the facts that the relative’s interest is direct and real instead of indirect and remote. Even this general rule may be limited by necessity. This is so, because the Constitution does not contemplate that judicial machinery shall stop.”

The problem in the present proceeding originated in the fact that the disqualification of Judge Magus Smith necessitated the assignment by the Chief Justice of this Court, pursuant to Article 200a, Section 2a(3), Vernon’s Annotated Civil Statutes, of a Special Judge to preside over the full trial of the case. Judge Starley, a resident of Pecos, Texas, and the duly elected Judge of the 143rd Judicial District, was so designated on June 15, 1962. There is no question concerning his qualification at such time. But on June 1, 1963, Judge Starley married Mariam Baker Anderson, a resident of Cameron County, and thereupon became related by affinity in the second degree to Russell Bingley, a brother of Mrs. Starley’s mother, and to Mrs. Frances Davies, a sister of Mrs. Starley’s father. At the time of the marriage, Mr. Bingley was a director of the Cameron County Water Control and Improvement District No.

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Bluebook (online)
373 S.W.2d 731, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hidalgo-cameron-counties-water-control-improvement-district-no-9-v-tex-1964.