Ladd v. Yett

273 S.W. 1006, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 552
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 13, 1925
DocketNo. 6941.
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 273 S.W. 1006 (Ladd v. Yett) 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
Ladd v. Yett, 273 S.W. 1006, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 552 (Tex. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

BLAIR, J.

This appeal is from a contested election proceeding under title 49, chapter 8, of the Revised Statutes, and arose in the following manner: On August 8, 1924, there whs held in the city of Austin, Tex., a special election to determine whether or not 22 amendments to the existing charter of said city should be adopted; some of which repealed parts of the existing charter, while others amended it. The city council declared all the amendments carried. Appellants, N. A. Ladd and L. Rast, resident citizens of the'" city of Austin, served the mayor and each of tjie commission composing the city council with their notice and statement of grounds of contest, and later filed the statement of grounds of contest so served in the district court as the basis for this proceeding. The statement 9f the grounds .of the contest as amended attacks the legality of the 22 amendments voted upon, the legality of the election, and the correctness of the -results of the election as declared. We -will not attempt to detail the facts pleaded, but adopt appellants’ statement of the issues raised thereby:

“(1) That the city council was without authority to submit such amendments, because they had not been framed by a charter commission as expressly provided by statute. Vernon’s Sayles’ Statutes,' arts. 1096a. 1096b.
“(2) That the city council is without power under the statute except through a charter commission to submit propositions of repeal. Its power to submit propositions is limited to submitting ‘amendments,’ and this does not include repealing propositions.
“(3) That the city council was without power to submit, as was done, propositions containing more than one subject, so combined that the voter had no privilege _of voting for some subjects and against other subjects, contrary. to the statute declaring each proposition shall contain but one subject.
“(4) That the proposed amendments are invalid and illegal because they do not make reference to the public act of the Legislature (being the Act of 1909 of the Thirty-first Legislature), which it is the purpose of these propositions to amend.
“(5) That propositions 8, 9, 11, 12, 13, and 17 are invalid and illegal, because they propose to amend parts of the public acts of the LegisÜature of Texas by striking out and changing language of certain-sections without re-enacting such sections contrary to article 3, § 36, of the Constitution.
“(6) That there wére a total of 4,956 qualified voters voting at said election of which 17 were not counted, and each and all of said propositions failed to be approved by a majority of such qualified voters, each receiving less than 2,479 votes and less than 2,470 votes.
“(7) That the lawful returns showed that each -proposition had failed to receive as many affirmative votes as negative votes, and. the result was illegally' and wrongfully declared. The contention of appellants here is that under the evidence they were entitled to have the result of the election declared iron] the lawful returns, and that these showed that all of the propositions had failed, at least that proposition 2 had failed, and that its failure rendered ineffective all the amendments.”

The reply of the contestees, W. D. Yett, Mayor, and O. N. Avery, Harry Nolen, Harry Haynes, and George Searight, who compose the city council of the city of Austin, was a general demurrer, which the court overruled, and a general denial. Harry Nolen, one of the contestees, filed a plea to the jurisdiction of the court; whereupon contestants moved to dismiss their suit against him as a contested which motion was sustained by the court. Nolen was later granted leave to file his plea of intervention, making himself a p'arty contestee, which plea consisted of a general demurrer and several special exceptions, all of which were overruled, and a general denial.

The trial judge, before whom the cause .was tried without a jury, filed, among others, the following findings of fact and conclusions of law:

“(1) I find as a fact that at the special election held in the city of Austin on the 9th day of August, A. D. 1924, wherein there was submitted to a vote of the people by the city council of the city of Austin 22 proposed amendments to the city charter of the city of. Austin, there were cast for and against each of said amendments or propositions the number of votes set opposite the propositions respectively, as shown in the following table: (Tabula-, tion omitted here, but each am'endment is shown to have received more affirmative than negative votes).
“(2) I find that said election was regularly held according to law.
“(3) I find therefore that each of the 22 propositions or amendments submitted to a vote of the people at said election received in its favor a majority of the votes cast at said election, in that each proposition received more votes in its favor than were cast against it.”
“(6) I conclude, as a matter of law, that the election so held was a valid election, and that each of the proposed amendments to the city charter of the city of Austin was duly adopted, and that the_ said city charter of the city of Austin, as it existed prior thereto, has been, duly and legally amended as provided in each of said 22 amendments.”

With the submission of the case we also took under submission a motion by contestants to strike out the brief of intervener, Harry Nolen, filed herein, urging also in this connection their propositions Nos. 1 and 2 that the court erred in granting him leave to intervene over their objection. The motion is without merit, and is overruled. Appellants showed no injury whatever occasioned by the *1008 intervention of Nolen. In. fact, they practically admit that no injury occurred by reason of his intervention, since every question decided could have been, and was, disposed of upon pleadings of contestants and contestees. They argue, however, that, if the trial court in this instance can permit Nolen to intervene,- there is no marked stopping place for such interventions, and many others might be permitted to intervene. This argument is not tenable when applied to the particular inter-vener. He was a member of the city council that declared the results of the election being contested. Article 3078, Revised Statutes, provides that defendant to an election contest, among others, -shall be “the officer who declared the official result of said election, or one of them.” So under this statute Nolen was at least a proper party to the suit filed, which appellants recognized, for they served him with notice and a statement of the grounds of contest, and made him a party to the proceedings filed in the district court. Being a proper party to the suit, he filed, as he had a right to do, a plea to the jurisdiction of the court; whereupon contestants moved to dismiss him from the suit, which motion was granted, and he was accordingly dismissed. It thus appears that the only reason for dismissing Nolen from the suit was the fact that he contested appellants’ cause of-action, which, we submit, is not a valid reason. Having been brought into the suit as a proper party thereto by contestants, he would be entitled to defend his action as an official who declared the result of the election being contested.

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Bluebook (online)
273 S.W. 1006, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 552, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ladd-v-yett-texapp-1925.