Lytle v. Halff

12 S.W. 610, 75 Tex. 128, 1889 Tex. LEXIS 1042
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 15, 1889
DocketNo. 2784
StatusPublished
Cited by81 cases

This text of 12 S.W. 610 (Lytle v. Halff) 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
Lytle v. Halff, 12 S.W. 610, 75 Tex. 128, 1889 Tex. LEXIS 1042 (Tex. Ct. App. 1889).

Opinion

STAYTON, Chief Justice.

The Legislature at its last session passed an act whereby the county of Bexar was divided into two parts by a line running through the center of the court house, aud that part of the county on the north and west of that line was declared to constitute a new judicial district, to be known as the Forty-fifth Judicial District, while all that part of the county south and east of that line was declared to constitute the Thirty-seventh Judicial District.

Bexar County before this act composed the Thirty-seventh Judicial District, and the judge and district attorney in office in that district were continued in office in the new district bearing the same number, but provision was made for the appointment of a judge for the Forty-fifth District, his successor to be elected by the electors resident in that part of the county which was declared to constitute the new district. The act provided that the courts in both districts should have concurrent jurisdiction throughout the limits of Bexar County of all matters, civil and criminal, to the extent this is conferred on District Courts by the Constitution, and that grand and petit juries should be selected and drawn from the body of the county; providing, however, that no grand jury should be organized in the Forty-fifth District.

[131]*131The judge of the Thirty-seventh District, however, is required at each term of his court to organize a grand jury empowered to inquire into all ■offenses committed within the entire county, whose indictments, together with all appeals in criminal cases from inferior courts in the county, are made returnable to the District Court for the Thirty-seventh Judicial, District.

Civil actions brought in the county or appealed to the District Court from inferior tribunals in any part of the county may be filed in either court, at the option of the plaintiff or appellant.

act authorizes the judge of either district, at his discretion, to transfer any cause, civil or criminal, which may be pending in his court to the other court; and upon the taking effect of the act the clerk of the District Court for Bexar County is directed to enter on the docket of the court for the Thirty-seventh District all causes then- pending in that court, or to be filed therein subsequently under the provisions of the act, and to place on the docket of the court for the Forty-fifth Judicial District all causes that may be transferred to that court by the judge for the Thirty-seventh District or filed in the court under the provisions of the

The act further declared all laws and parts of laws in conflict with it repealed. Gen. Laws 1889, p. 165.

In accordance with the act a judge was appointed for the Forty-fifth Judicial District, and the act having become operative, appellees brought an action in the District Court of that district against- appellant on a promissory note for more than five hundred dollars.

Citations were duly issued and served on appellant, who failed to answer, and a judgment by default was entered against them.

Before the adjournment of the court appellant filed a motion to set aside the judgment and dismiss the cause upon the ground that the act creating the district was unconstitutional, but the motion was overruled, and from the judgment this appeal is prosecuted.

It is agreed by the parties that there is no question involved other than the validity of the act before referred to, and that if the act be held constitutional the judgment shall be affirmed, but if it be held otherwise the judgment shall be reversed and the cause dismissed.

It is contended on the one side, while there is no provision in the Constitution which expressly prohibits the creation of two judicial districts in one county, an implied prohibition arises from the various provisions of that instrument, and that some parts of the act are in violation of article 3, section 56, of the Constitution, which forbids the passage of local or special laws therein enumerated.

On the other hand, it is claimed that none of the provisions of the act are in conflict with the section of the Constitution referred to or with any other, and that so much of the act as creates two judicial districts in [132]*132one county is not so repugnant to any express provision of the Constitution as to justify a holding that such legislation is impliedly forbidden.

There is no pretense that the act in question in any way conflicts with any superior law other than the Constitution of this State, and if it be-not forbidden by that it must be sustained.

It has frequently been said that an act of a State Legislature must be: held valid unless some superior law in express terms or by necessary implication forbade its passage.

A prohibition of the exercise of a power can not be said to be necessarily implied, unless looking to the language and purpose of the Constitution it is evident that without such implication the will of the people, as illustrated by a careful consideration of all its provisions, can not be-given effect.

The prohibition which it is claimed ought to be implied in this case is. not one affecting any private or personal right, nor is it one that can arise because the power to do the act has been conferred on some department of the government other than the Legislature, from which an implied prohibition to the Legislature will arise.

The implication sought to be raised relates to a mere matter of expediency, which there is a manifest propriety in leaving to the determination of the Legislature from time to time, and which it is seldom the purpose of a Constitution to determine. It affects neither a public nor private right.

An intention to restrict the power of a State Legislature, and especially in reference to such a matter, further than this is done by express limitations, is not to be presumed, and when it is claimed that this is done by implication those so claiming ought to be able to point out the provision or provisions of the Constitution which require such implication to give effect to the will of the people evidenced by the entire instrument.

That necessary implications exist under the provisions of the Constitution of this State rve do not question, and one of them is found in article 5, which establishes certain courts and fixes their several jurisdictions. In absence of an express prohibition the Legislature would have no power to declare that the several courts thus created should not exercise the powers conferred on them, or to create other courts and transfer these powers to them, except as the Constitution may provide for such change of jurisdiction.

Now there is an implied limitation placed on the Legislature resulting from the fact that the people, acting in their sovereign capacity, have declared that certain courts with defined powers shall exist and constitute one of the three departments of the government, which the people never could have intended might be destroyed in whole or in part by another department or all the other departments.

The declaration is that the executive, legislative, and judicial depart-[133]*133meats shall exist—this is the fiat of the people; and neither one nor all of the departments so created can enlarge, restrict, or destroy the powers of any one of them except as the power to do so-may be expressly given by the Constitution.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
12 S.W. 610, 75 Tex. 128, 1889 Tex. LEXIS 1042, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lytle-v-halff-texapp-1889.