Huntress v. State Ex Rel. Todd

88 S.W.2d 636
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 20, 1935
DocketNo. 9855.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 88 S.W.2d 636 (Huntress v. State Ex Rel. Todd) 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
Huntress v. State Ex Rel. Todd, 88 S.W.2d 636 (Tex. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

BOBBITT, Justice.

The respondent herein, George W. Huntress, Jr., prosecutes this appeal from an order and decree of the Seventy-Third district court of Bexar county, entered on the 1st day of May, 1935, adjudging him guilty of official misconduct and incompetency in public office, removing him from the office of county clerk of Bexar county, and declaring the office vacant. Such order and decree also continued in effect, pending the appeal of the case, an order of the trial court as entered in this cause on the 11th day of May, 1935, temporarily suspending the respondent from office and appointing B. F. Ladon, to discharge the duties of the office of county clerk of said county, for the time being and pending the final disposition of the case.

The proceedings herein against respondent were instituted by the state of Texas, acting through her criminal district attorney of Bexar county, John R. Shook, upon the relation of Dr. James M. Todd and five other citizens of Bexar county, under and pursuant to the provisions of title 100 of the Revised Civil Statutes of Texas (article 5961 et seq.), relating to the removal of officers from public office.

■ The parties, for convenience, will be designated as plaintiff and defendant, as in the trial court.

On February 4, 1935, the plaintiff, upon the relation of six citizens of Bexar county, Tex., filed with the court an application for permission to file a petition for the removal of defendant from the office of county clerk. On the same day the judge of said court granted permission to file such petition. Thereupon the original petition, duly signed and sworn to by the relators, was filed and docketed. On the *638 same day application was made by plaintiff for an order directing- the issuance o-f citation to the defendant; such application was granted, and the hearing of said petition was set for February 11, 1935. Citation was duly issued and served upon defendant. On such 11th day of February, the defendant having appeared and filed his answer, the court entered an order suspending the defendant from the office of county clerk, pending a trial of the case, and appointed B. F. Ladon as the person, for the time being, to discharge the duties of the office.

On the 22d day of April, 1935, having secured leave of the court so to do, plaintiff filed its “First Amended Original Petition” ; defendant having appeared and answered in the case. On such date the defendant objected to proceeding to trial upon said amended petition on the ground, or contention, that he was not in court; that the court had no jurisdiction over him as to the new matters in said petition. The defendant then expressly informed the court, however, that he was not taken by surprise; that he was not asking for a continuance; that he was ready to and he did then file an answer to such amended petition. Thereupon the court informed counsel for the defendant that if the defendant was not ready on any of the matters set up in the amended petition, the court would entertain a. motion for a continuance. The defendant then refused to present such motion and the case proceeded .to trial.

The amended petition of plaintiff contained twenty-seven alleged “causes” for the removal of the defendant; each thereof being separately presented in the petition, and each being captioned: “Cause No. -.” The said causes alleged official misconduct, incompetency, and gross carelessness on the part of the defendant, and all were alleged to have occurred subsequent to November 6, 1934, the date upon 'which defendant was last “elected” to his office. Some of such causes alleged transactions or conduct which continued from November 6, through and after January 1, 1935, and others alleged transactions and conduct after January 1st. The defendant presented numerous demurrers and exceptions to said amended petition. The effect of the action of the court upon these demurrers was to hold that the defendant could be removed from office only for acts committed by him subsequent to January 1, 1935, the date upon which he “qualified” for his office subsequent to his last election thereto. The rulings of the court also had the effect of holding that certain alleged causes contained in said amended petition did not constitute grounds for removal from office. After such rulings by the court, there remained in the petition eighteen of the original twenty-seven alleged causes. The plaintiff proceeded to trial upon said amended petition by striking therefrom those causes eliminated by the ruling of the-court, and after interlining certain other causes and striking therefrom the portions eliminated by such rulings. The petition contained the eighteen alleged causes remaining after such rulings, numbered as they had been when the amended petition was originally filed.

We will hereinafter state the substance of each of the alleged causes for removal in connection with the issues submitted to and found by the jury.

In-addition to the demurrers and exceptions above mentioned, the answer of the defendant, upon which the case was tried, consisted only o-f a general denial, and a special answer, which special, answer alleged :

First. That the office of county clerk of Bexar county requires a great amount of detail work and employs over fifty people; that no one person can keep familiar with the details of the office, and keep within his mind an understanding o-r knowledge of the duties performed by such a large number of people; that such employees perform acts separate and apart from each other; and that no person can be familiar with the records of that office in detail.

Second. That the .state of Texas and the counties therein containing more than 190,000 population, and which includes Bexar county, have realized the enormous work incident to the duties and responsibilities of the county clerk’s office, and have caused to be passed laws relieving the county-clerk of controlling as to- the work of receiving, recording, and accounting for finances of the office and the control over the finances of the office, as shown by articles 1674, 1675, and article 1656a (Acts 1933, c. 98, § 1), under title 34, subd. 2, and other articles of the Revised Civil Statutes.

It was sho-wn upon the trial that under the provisions of article 1656a (as the same existed prior to its amendment effective May 1, 1935 [Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St. art. *639 1656a]), giving the county auditor power (in his discretion) to adopt and enforce such regulations, not inconsistent with the Constitution and law, as he might deem essential to the speedy and proper collection and checking of, and accounting for, the revenues and fees belonging to the county, such auditor had in fact required that all funds collected be deposited in the county depository bank in the name of the county clerk in his official capacity; but that the county auditor had never in fact exercised the discretionary power given him by such article 1656a, and had not required that all of the fees and moneys therein referred to should be turned over to the county treasurer by the officer as collected and thereafter drawn out by checks upon the county treasurer, etc.

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88 S.W.2d 636, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/huntress-v-state-ex-rel-todd-texapp-1935.