Massay v. Studer

11 S.W.2d 227
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 31, 1928
DocketNo. 3150.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 11 S.W.2d 227 (Massay v. Studer) 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
Massay v. Studer, 11 S.W.2d 227 (Tex. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

RANDOLPH, J.

This action was brought by D. N. Massey and others against John F. Studer, county attorney of Gray county, contesting the validity of an election held in Gray county, Tex., on the 9th day of March, 1928. The purpose of the election was to determine whether or not the county seat should remain at Le Fors or be removed to Pampa. The election resulted in two-thirds of the votes in said election being cast for Pampa for the location of such county seat.

On trial before the court, without the intervention of a jury, judgment was rendered against contestants, the trial court holding that the election held on March 9, 1928, was a legal and valid election, and permitting the removal of the county seat to Pampa. From such judgment, appeal has been taken to this court to have the proceedings in the trial court reviewed.

The appellants attack the judgment of the trial court as being erroneous for the following reasons;

“Where a county seat election was held under the provisions of the Revised Statutes of Texas which at the time of said election provided that the proposition could not be voted on again for five years, an attempted election on the same proposition held less than three years after the first election is untimely and unauthorized by law and illegal and invalid. * * *
“Where the voters of a county vote on the proposition of the removal of the county seat at a time when the law provides that the same question cannot be voted on again in that county for five years, an amendment to the law changing the time within which said county seat proposition can again be voted on does not affect that particular county which had voted on the proposition under the old law, until five years shall have elapsed since the holding of said first election in that county, the Legislature being'powerless to add to or take from any of the material conditions under which the county expressed its will through its voters in the first election.” •

An election was held on March 19,1925, for the location or removal of the county seat of Gray county, at which election it was voted by the electors of that county for such county seat to remain at Le Eors. The appellants contend that such election definitely settled the county seat location for a period of five years from the date thereof, and that no legal election, for the purpose of removal *228 of the county seat of said county, could he held within that period.

Article 1600 of the Revised Civil Statutes 1925, provides as follows :

“When such entry has been made;, the county seat, if the election be held to move the county seat from a point within five miles of the geographical center, to a point more or less than five miles from the geographical center, or from a point more than five miles from the geographical center, to any other point more than five miles from such center, shall be removed to the place receiving the votes of two-thirds of all the electors voting on the subject; and such place shall thereafter be the county seat of such county. If the election be held to move the county seat from a point more than' five miles from the geographical center to a point within five miles of such center, then the county seat shall be moved to the place receiving a majority of all the electors in the county voting at such election, and such place shall thereafter be the county seat of such county.”

Article Í595, same Statutes, provides:

■ “No county seat situated within five miles of the geographical center of any county shall be removed except by a vote of two-thirds of all the electors in said county voting ,on the subject; nor shall any county seat be removed from a point more than five miles from the geographical center of any county to any other point more than five miles from such center, nor from a point within five miles of the geographical center to any other point within five miles of such center, except by a two-thirds vote of all the electors in said county voting on the subject. No person shall be allowed to vote except he be a bona fide citizen of the county in which he offers to vote. A majority of said electors, however, voting at such election may remove a county seat from a point more'than five miles from the geographical center of the county to a point- within five miles of such center; in either event the center to be determined by a certificate from the Land Commissioner.”

Article 1601 of said Statutes then provides that it shall not be lawful for a like application to be made for the same purpose within five years thereafter.

The Legislature amended article 1601, by adding:

“ * * * Provided, that an application may be made and an election held to remove the county'seat from a location more than five miles from a railroad operating as a common carrier, to a location ón a railroad within two years thereafter.” (Acts 40th Leg. c. 185.)

Article 9, § 2, of the Constitution of Texas provides that the Legislature shall pass laws regulating the manner of removing county seats, and the only limitation upon such power contained in the section is that no county seat situated within five miles of the geographical center of the county shall be removed except by a vote of two-thirds of all the electors voting on the subject. This section further provides that a majority of such electors voting at such election may remove a county seat from a point more than five miles from the geographical center of • the county to a point within five miles of such center, in either case, the center to be determined by a certificate from the commissioner of the general land office.

The election held and here in controversy was held before the expiration of five years after the election held on the 19th day of March, 1925, and after the expiration of two years from said date. There is no question but that Pampa was on a railroad operating as a common carrier, and that Le Eors was more than five miles from any such railroad.

In the case of Winder v. King, 1 S.W.(2d) 587, the Commission of Appeals holds that the Legislature, when it passed the amendment to article 1600 above quoted, intended to restrict such elections to a period after the expiration of two years from the date of the last preceding election, and that by the provision, “within two years,” the Legislature intended to provide that such election could not occur until “after two years.” This decision, however, is, to our minds, a recognition of the legality of such election, if held after two years from the date of the last election.

It is true that the point here at issue was not expressly decided in that ease by .the Commission of Appeals, but it is hardly probable that the Commission of Appeals would have held as they did hold in face of a constitutional provision by which there was vested in the particular locality chosen as the county seat the right to retain the same for a period of five years.

Be that as it may, the contention that a vote of the people locating the county seat locates same for a period of five years, and that no legal election can be held within that period, we refuse to sustain.

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11 S.W.2d 227, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/massay-v-studer-texapp-1928.