Lusby v. Cozby

402 S.W.2d 799, 1966 Tex. App. LEXIS 3101
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 15, 1966
DocketNo. 16720
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 402 S.W.2d 799 (Lusby v. Cozby) 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
Lusby v. Cozby, 402 S.W.2d 799, 1966 Tex. App. LEXIS 3101 (Tex. Ct. App. 1966).

Opinion

BATEMAN, Justice.

This is a contest of an election in the Town of Coppell, Texas, wherein four propositions authorizing the issuance of bonds were reported to have carried by margins of 19, 8, 22 and 12 votes, respectively. The appellants, Quentin Lusby and Dr. Charles Tilley, in their suit to contest the election alleged that twenty-two qualified voters, each of whom would have voted against all four propositions, thereby defeating them, were unlawfully denied the right to vote.

The trial court, sitting without a jury, denied the contest, and upon request filed findings of fact and conclusions of law. The findings of fact were: that (1) a majority of the legal votes cast in the election were in favor of all four propositions voted upon; (2) on the date of the election twenty-two persons, naming them (and being the same persons alleged by appellants to have been wrongfully denied the right to vote at said election), did not in fact reside within the then existing corporate limits of the City of Coppell, Texas; (3) each of the said twenty-two persons resided in an area which had been on March 1, 1965 discontinued as a part of the corporate limits of the City of Coppell by Ordinance No. 20; (4) said twenty-two persons attempted to vote in said election, were not allowed to do so and, if permitted, each would have voted against all of the propositions voted upon; (5) on March 1, 1965 the City Council of the City of Coppell met at a regular council meeting and adopted Ordinance No. 20; which (6) disannexed from the corporate limits of Coppell the area where the said twenty-two persons resided; (7) on March 1, 1965 the City Council of Coppell also passed Ordinance No. 21, which adopted the provisions of Chapters 1 through 10 of Title 28,1 that are required to be adopted by Article 961; (8) said Ordinances Nos. 20 and 21 were adopted at the same meeting, No. 20 being passed first and No. 21 shortly thereafter; (9) Ordinance No. 21 was filed in the records of the County Clerk of Dallas County on March 2, 1965.

The court’s conclusions of law were that the aforesaid twenty-two persons were not qualified to vote in the election; that the results of the election, as originally canvassed and declared, were the true and correct results, and that the contest herein was without merit; that the authority and power to discontinue territory, as granted by Article 973, can be exercised by cities or towns operating under the provisions of Chapter 11, Title 28, as well as those cities or towns generally referred to as “Chapter 1 Cities” which have adopted the provisions necessary to be adopted under Article 961; that where a city council passes two ordinances at the same meeting, and where technically the validity of one ordinance is dependent upon the prior passage of the other ordinance, but where in fact the council passes the ordinances out of their proper order, but within a few minutes of each other, the mere technicality of passing the ordinances out of their proper order will not invalidate the ordinance first passed, and that the law in such case will construe the ordinances as having been passed in the order necessary to give them legal effect, and will not hold a city council consisting of laymen to such a technical understanding of the law.

By four points of error on appeal the appellants present the sole ultimate question: Were the twenty-two persons who were refused the right to vote qualified voters ? If so, the judgment should be reversed, for their negative votes would have defeated the four propositions of which the appellants complain.

Prior to the council meeting on March 1, 1965, the Town of Coppell was incorporated under the terms and provisions of Chapter 11, Title 28 (Articles 1133-1153a). In that status it had no authority to issue bonds or to create debts. The only way it [801]*801could acquire authority or power to do so was to pass an ordinance accepting the provisions of Chapters 1 through 10 of Title 28, in accordance with the provisions of Article 961.

This is what the City Council did by the passage of Ordinance No. 21 at its meeting on the night of March 1, 1965. Appellants concede the validity of that ordinance, but take the position that the council had no authority or power to pass Ordinance No. 20 (the disannexation ordinance) until after Ordinance No. 21 was passed and a copy thereof, signed by the mayor and attested by the clerk or secretary under the corporate seal, was filed in the office of the County Clerk. The copy was not filed until the next day, March 2, 1965.

The first three points of error, briefed together, assert error in upholding the election because the twenty-two persons, unlawfully disfranchised by Ordinance No. 20, if allowed to vote would have changed the results of the election.

Title 28, V.A.C.S., entitled “CITIES, TOWNS AND VILLAGES,” is a codification of laws pertaining to cities, towns and villages, their incorporation, forms of government, powers, etc., and consists of twenty-two chapters. Chapter 1 (Articles 961-976b) is entitled “Cities and Towns.” Chapters 2 through 10 (Articles 977-1132) contain numerous provisions not pertinent here. Chapter 11 (Articles 1133-1153a) is entitled “Towns and Villages.” There are three general classifications of municipal corporations in Texas; viz., Home Rule, Special Charter and General Law. Here, we are concerned only with General Law municipalities.

General Law municipalities are considered to be divided into two categories; viz., first, those organized under Chapters 1 through 10 of Title 28, known as “Cities and Towns” and, second, those organized under Chapter 11 of Title 28, known as “Towns and Villages.” The difference between them was thus described in 1887 by Judge Gaines in City of Waxahachie v. Brown, 67 Tex. 519, 4 S.W. 207, 209:

“The difference between the provisions of the title referred to in reference to cities, and those relating to towns is remarkable. There are ten chapters devoted to the former, and but one to the latter, class of municipal corporations. The powers granted to towns in chapter 11 of that title are hardly more than are absolutely essential to their existence as bodies corporate. No authority to issue bonds, or to create debts, is given them, and hence there are no enactments regulating the amount or mode of their issue.”

The only statutory authority for discontinuing a portion of the territory within a municipality is found in Article 973, as follows:

“Whenever there exists within the corporate limits of any city or town organized under the general laws within this State territory to the extent of at least ten (10) acres, contiguous and adjoining the lines of any such city or town, which is uninhabited or on which there are fewer than one (1) occupied residence or business structure for every two (2) acres of such territory and fewer than three (3) occupied residences or business structures on any one (1) acre of such territory, the mayor and city or town council may by ordinance duly passed discontinue said territory as a part of said city or town; and when said ordinance has been duly passed, the mayor shall enter an order to that effect on the minutes or records of the city or town council; and from and after the entry of such order said territory shall cease to be a part of said city or town.”

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Bluebook (online)
402 S.W.2d 799, 1966 Tex. App. LEXIS 3101, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lusby-v-cozby-texapp-1966.