Holman v. Pabst

27 S.W.2d 340, 1930 Tex. App. LEXIS 326
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 27, 1930
DocketNo. 9469.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 27 S.W.2d 340 (Holman v. Pabst) 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. Pabst, 27 S.W.2d 340, 1930 Tex. App. LEXIS 326 (Tex. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinions

Appellants, as the county judge and members of the commissioners' court of Galveston county, appeal from a judgment in mandamus, commanding them in their official capacities "at the next meeting of said Court to order an election as prayed for in said petition (of the appellees, two freeholding tax paying citizens of the county) to be held throughout Galveston County, as soon as the requisite thirty-day notice can be given, for the purpose of determining: (1) Whether hogs, sheep and goats shall be permitted to run at large in said County, as a whole, and (2) whether horses, mules, jacks, jennets and cattle shall be permitted to run at large in said County, as a whole, and to hold said election as ordered herein, taking every step required by law in ordering and holding said election."

Affirming their right as such officials, by reason of their legal duty of handling and disbursing the county's funds, to challenge the validity of House Bill No. 120, enacted at the First Called Session of the 41st Legislature (General and Special Laws, 41st Legislature, First Called Session, p. 185, c. 71), and Senate Bill No. 22 (General Laws, Third Called Session, 41st Legislature, c. 8, p. 240 [Vernon's Ann.Civ.St. § 6954]) the two statutes held by the trial court — without inquiring into the question of whether or not they were valid and subsisting legislative acts — to have on the face thereof peremptorily required the ordering and holding of the election for the second of these designated purposes, they contend that neither act is sufficient for the purpose for the reasons:

"(1) The pre-existing law applicable to Galveston county, R.S. art. 6954, required that the petition of request for such an election to the Commissioners' Court be signed by at least twelve freeholders from each justice precinct in the county, which indispensable prerequisite undisputedly was not in the petitions for the election here so ordered, and the caption of House Bill No. 120 "does not disclose any purpose to amend the existing statutes so as to omit the requirement that *Page 341 petitions to the Commissioners' Courts for such elections must be signed by at least twelve (12) freeholders from each justice precinct in the county ;"

"(2) The instrument found on file in the office of the Secretary of State and purporting to be Senate Bill No. 22, cannot be considered as a duly enacted law, because the same is not authenticated in the manner required by the Constitution for the authentication of bills finally passed by the legislature, in that it does not bear the signature of the Speaker of the House of Representatives."

Additional presentments are to the effect that the trial court in so granting the writ further erred: (1) In refusing to pass upon the legal sufficiency of the cited acts upon the holding "that respondents have no right to question the constitutionality of the law providing for the ordering and holding of said election, but it is the legal duty of said respondents to order and hold an election as requested in said petitions," and (2) in ordering a single election for the submission of both specified propositions in response to the appellees' petition that prayed only for that, when it affirmatively appears, under the facts shown, that the submission of one of such propositions was not authorized by law.

As concerns the first-mentioned purpose — that pertaining to hogs, sheep, and goats — appellants concede that the writ was not authorized under other statutes, R.S. art. 6930 et seq., if their stated objection that appellees only prayed for one election be not good.

The procedural facts being all undisputed, appellees Join issue as to the legal sufficiency of any of these assigned grounds for reversal, insisting (1) that both House Bill No. 120 and Senate Bill No. 22 were such valid amendments of article 6954 of 1929 (Vernon's Ann.Civ.St. § 6954) as eliminated its requirement that the petition in this instance be signed by at least twelve freeholders from each Justice precinct in Galveston county, (2) that appellants — being without personal or property rights at stake — were not in position to excuse their failure to perform the purely ministerial duty enjoined by the statutes invoked against them by responding that such requirements were invalid, and (3) that their own pleadings were clearly sufficient, as not being properly construed as praying for one election for two distinct purposes.

We agree with appellants, save in the view that the writ of mandamus should be denied effect as to both objectives, because appellees prayed for one election at which there should be submitted the two propositions, one of which was affirmatively shown to be unauthorized by law; in the state of the record that construction, we conclude, may not properly be given the petition; it did not request nor pray for one election, rather an election for two separately and specifically-stated purposes, after averring all the facts alleged to entitle them to the relief sought, and no special exceptions were directed against this manner of statement — only a general demurrer; when given the benefit of every reasonable intendment, the pleading is at least susceptible of the interpretation that they meant an election for each of the specified purposes; had appellants desired more particular information as to what was sought, they should have required it by specially demurring.

This holding, in view of appellants' concession on that phase of the case, eliminates further consideration of whether the writ was authorized as to the election to determine whether hogs, sheep, and goats should be permitted to run at large — obviously it was.

That it was not authorized as the means of bringing about an election for the other purpose — that affecting horses, mules, etc. — seems to us equally obvious for all the reasons so quoted with approval; as before indicated, all the other facts that raise this issue between the parties being undisputed, the only claim appellees make for the contrary conclusion — aside from their insisting that appellants could not challenge the validity thereof — is that House Bill No. 120 and Senate Bill No. 22, each in its turn, eliminated this pre-existing requirement of R.S. art. 6954 (general and Special Laws of 41st Legislature, Regular Session, p. 9, c. 5 [Vernon's Ann.Civ.St. § 6954]): "Where there is an application for an election to include an entire county there shall not be less than twelve freeholders from each justice precinct of said county as signers to the petition for such election." In the body thereof both these purported acts had that effect, but the caption of No. 120 fails either to include Galveston county therein, or to otherwise give any notice of an intention to eliminate the twelve freeholders from each precinct requirement, while No. 22 does not bear the signature of the speaker, both therefore being void; the caption of No. 120 is as follows:

"H. B. No. 120. Chapter 71.

"An Act amending Article 6954, Chapter 6, Title 121 of the Revised Civil Statutes of Texas, 1925, as amended in Chapter 245 of the Acts of the Regular Session of the 40th Legislature of Texas, and as amended in Chapter 5 of the Acts of the Regular Session of the 41st Legislature of Texas, with reference to the mode of preventing horses and certain other animals from running at large in the counties named so as to include in said Article the counties of Archer, Briscoe, Brooks, Chambers, Fort Bend, Goliad, Gray, Hutchinson. Jeff Davis, Jim Hogg, Leon, Live Oak, Montgomery, Polk, Marion, Potter, Panola, Runnels, San Jacinto, Shackelford, *Page 342

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Bluebook (online)
27 S.W.2d 340, 1930 Tex. App. LEXIS 326, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holman-v-pabst-texapp-1930.