Holman v. Cowden Sutherland

158 S.W. 571
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 29, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 158 S.W. 571 (Holman v. Cowden Sutherland) 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
Holman v. Cowden Sutherland, 158 S.W. 571 (Tex. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

REESE, J.

This is an appeal from an order of the district judge granting a temporary writ of injunction. An election had been held in a certain subdivision of Mata-gorda county, under the provisions of the statute, to determine whether or not horses, mules, jacks, jennets, and cattle should be allowed to run at large in said territory, and at such election, regularly held, a majority of the voters had voted in favor of the prohibition of said running at large. The election was regularly held and returns properly made. Appellees thereupon filed their suit in the district court against appellant, the county judge of said county, to enjoin the said county judge from issuing his proclamation necessary to put such law in operation, on the ground, as alleged in the petition, that Matagorda was not included among the counties in which said stock law could be put in operation. Appellees allege such facts as to entitle them to sue out such injunction if the ground therefor, as aforesaid, is true. The petition was presented to the honorable district judge in vacation, and he, without notice, granted the temporary writ as prayed for. From this order this appeal is prosecuted.

The sole question presented by the appeal is whether under the law as it now exists Matagorda county is included among the counties to which the said stock law applies. Appellant does make some objection to the right of appellees to seek such injunction, but as the allegations of the petition show that they have under lease a large body of land in said territory, and large numbers of cattle pastured thereon, and that for various reasons set out their interests will be seriously affected, and they will suffer very serious loss and damage, for which they will have no other adequate and sufficient remedy if said law is put in operation in said territory, the objections of appellant to the injunction on this ground are without merit.

Coming now to the real question involved, an examination of the statutes discloses the following facts: The original stock law statute is chapter 128, General Laws of the Twenty-Sixth Legislature. This act was amended by chapter 24 of Acts of the Twenty-Seventh Legislature, chapter 71, General Laws of the Twenty-Eighth Legislature, chapters 23 and 94, General Laws of the Twenty-Ninth Legislature, and chapters 11 and 57, General Laws of the Thirtieth Legislature. These several amendments or most of them, were for the purpose of including or excluding certain counties from the operation of the act. Matagorda county, up to and including this last act, had not been so included. The Thirty-First Legislature passed an act (chapter 69, p. 121, Acts 1909) entitled “An act.to amend” the said act of the Twenty-Sixth Legislature as amended as aforesaid, so as to include a number of counties, among which was Matagorda county. The Thirty-Second Legislature passed an act (chapter 94, p. 172, Acts 1911) entitled “An act to amend sections 1 and 2 of chapter 128, General Laws of the Twenty-Sixth Legislature” as amended, setting out all of the amendments heretofore referred to, including that by the Thirty-First Legislature aforesaid, which was the first amendment to include Matagorda county, and reciting, as the subject of the act, “so as to exclude Wharton and Fort Bend counties, and to include” several counties not necessary to mention. The enacting clause is as follows: “Be it enacted by the Legislature of the state of Texas, section 1. That section 1 of chapter 57 of the Acts of the 30th Legislature be, and the same is hereby amended so as to read as follows.” Then follows section 1, enumerating by name the counties to be included in the act. Matagorda county is not named in the list. Here is where the trouble begins. If the provision of this act not including, and therefore excluding, Mata-gorda county, which was included by the preceding act of the Thirty-First Legislature, is valid, then there was no authority for the election referred to, and the injunction was properly granted, otherwise not.

The act of the Thirty-First Legislature, including Matagorda county, is carried forward in the Revision of the Statutes of 1911. Article 7235, R. S. 1911. But the general *573 repealing clause of that Revision (section 4, Final title) does not apply to this act of the Thirty-Second Legislature. Section 17, Final Title. Section 35, article 3, of the 'Constitution, provides that no hill (except general appropriation bills) shall contain more than one subject, which shall be expressed in its title, but further, that if any subject shall be embraced in an act that is not expressed in the title, such act shall be void only as to so much thereof as shall not be so expressed. What is the “subject” of the act of the Thirty-Second Legislature as expressed in the title? Not merely to amend the act of the Thirty-First Legislature referred to, but to amend it so as to exclude Fort Bend and Warton counties. and to include Brewster and certain other counties. In Day Land & Cattle Company v. State, 68 Tex. 527, 4 S. W. 865, the court says that the word “subject,” is “that which is dominated or controlled by the * * * law.” It was held that decisions under the former Constitution, which use the word, “object” instead of “subject,” are conclusive in determining whether there has been a violation of the provision of this Constitution. Under those decisions the word “object” was held to mean “end” or “purpose.” There has never been any difference of opinion as to the purpose of this provision of the Constitution. As was said in Breen v. T. & P. R. R. Co., 44 Tex. 306: “It was * * * intended to remedy another practice ‘by which, through dextrous management, clauses were inserted in bills of which the titles gave no intimation,’ and thereby pass bills through the Legislature while many members were unaware of their real scope.” In Doeppenschmidt v. I. & G. N. R. R. Co., 100 Tex. 536, 101 S. W. 1081, the Supreme Court says, referring to this provision of the Constitution: “The purpose of the constitutional provision is merely to reasonably apprise the legislator of 'the contents of the bill, to the end that surprise and fraud in legislation may be prevented.” Applying these general principles to the act in question, it seems clear to us that a case could hardly be conceived where the title to the act would be more likely to deceive legislators as to the effect of the enactment. Who would possibly suppose, upon reading the title “⅜ * ⅜ so as to exclude Fort Bend and Wharton counties,” that the purpose and effect of the act was also to exclude Matagorda county? How can it be said, under any permissible liberality of construction, that the title gave any inkling of the purpose to exclude Matagorda county from the terms of the act? The body of the act contains the names of a number of counties arranged without order. Only the most careful reading of the entire act would disclose the fact that the name of Matagorda county was dropped. The caption would have been less likely to deceive or mislead if it had simply stated that its subject was to amend the former laws, and stopped at that. We are constrained to hold that so much of the act of the Thirty-Second Legislature as excludes Matagorda county from the operation of the stock law referred to is inoperative and void, for the reasons indicated, and that therefore Matagorda county remains where the act of the Thirty-First Legislature places it.

Although the title of the act states as one of the purposes “to repeal all other laws in conflict therewith,” there is no repealing clause.

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Bluebook (online)
158 S.W. 571, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holman-v-cowden-sutherland-texapp-1913.