McCall v. Lewis

263 S.W. 325
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 27, 1924
DocketNo. 6730.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 263 S.W. 325 (McCall v. Lewis) 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
McCall v. Lewis, 263 S.W. 325 (Tex. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinions

BLAIR, J.

Appellants instituted this suit to contest an election ordered by the county judge of Milam county, for the purpose of determining whether the qualified voters of a certain common school district in said community would by a majority vote increase the maintenance tax theretofore levied in said common school district, alleging irregularities occurring during the election as grounds why the declaration of the results of said election by the commissioners’ court of said county in favor of an increase in said maintenance tax should not be permitted to stand. A notice of appellants’ desire to contest the election was served by the sheriff of Milam county, upon A. J. Lewis and J. A. Kemp, county attorney and county judge, respectively, of Milam county, being the parties named in the statute upon whom service of notice might be had in cases of this character, and a copy of appellants’ petition filed in this cause’ setting forth the grounds of the contest accompanied said notice.

Appellees answered in their official capacities by a general denial, and then admitted the election ordered to be void because it is alleged that it was violative of the statutes relating to elections for the increase of school taxes, in that the petition averred, and the order of the county judge granting the election recited, that said election was to determine whether or not a tax should be levied not to exceed 75 cents on the $100 valuation, while it is contended the statutes provide that they should recite that said election was to determine whether or not a tax should be levied not to exceed $1 on the $100 valuation of taxable property in said district; or that some definite amount should be stated in said petition and order. Accompanying this answer were copies of the petition anil the order of the county judge calling the election in controversy; and appel-lees prayed that the election be declared void.

Appellants filed a general demurrer to ap-pellees’ answer, which was overruled; and' upon a finding that the facts alleged in ap- *327 pellees’ answer were true, the court entered its order declaring the election void, and found that it was unnecessary to pass upon the facts alleged in appellants’ petition, in view of such holding; to which ruling and holding of the court the appellants duly excepted, gave notice of an appeal, and have perfected said appeal to this court upon a supersedeas bond.

The findings of fact by the trial court are as follows, and we adopt them as our own findings of fact in this case:

“(1) I find that heretofore on the 30th day of April, 1923, a petition was filed with the county judge of Milam county, Tex., .asking for an election in said Yarrellton common school district No. 55, of Milam county, Tex., as shown by. said petition in evidence, and that in pursuance of said petition the county judge duly ordered said election, and the same was duly held in accordance with said petition and in accordance with said order for said election.
“(2) I find that in said petition, the petitioners ask for an election to determine whether or not the rate of taxation in said district should be increased from the present rate of 50 cents to a rate of ‘not exceeding 75 cents on the $100 valuation of taxable property in said district’; and that the order for said election conformed to said petition.”

The conclusions of law found by the trial court state the propositions of law involved in this appeal:

“I conclude from an inspection of said petition and said order for election which were adduced in evidence upon this hearing, that the character of' election asked for in said petition and provided for in said order, and held thereunder, is not provided for by law, and that the petition and order for the election to be valid would have to be for a rate of taxation not exceeding $1 on the $100 valuation of taxable property, or for some specific rate as provided by law, and that said petition nor said order for said election complied with such requirement of law, and that in consequence there was no provision of law for the holding of the ehaiaeter of election provided for, and that in consequence the election was void and no levy pr taxation could be made thereunder, and being of such an opinion, a judgment was entered in accordance therewith.”

The trial court seems to have determined, in passing upon appellants’ demurrer to appellees’ answer, that the petition for and the county judge’s ordfr granting the election were violative of the statutes relating to such matters; or that the petition prayed for and the order granted an election not provided for or authorized by such statutes, and therefore the election was rendered void. This judgment of the trial court necessarily construed the law relating to the manner in which the Legislature provided that the qualified voters could increase the maintenance tax for a common school district, and held that the authorities charged with the ordering of the election for that purpose had failed to comply with the provisions of the said law, or had ordered an election not authorized by the said law. Under the view that we take of this case, the trial court’s judgment is erroneous. The statutes relating to contests of an election do not authorize such contest upon the ground that the law under which the election was held was void, or that it did not authorize such an election as was held; hut the contest must be based upon some ground or grounds provided in the statutes tending to establish that the election was not properly ordered as to form, or fairly conducted, or that illegal votes were cast, or upon some other act which in itself would impeach the fairness of the results of said election. It is not contended by appellees that the petition for, or the judge’s order granting, the election were void or irregular because of any defect in themselves; or that the mode and manner in which the same were acted upon and granted in any way- impeached the fairness of the election held; but merely that the statutes under which the election was held did not authorize the same, rendering it void. To set aside an election and declare it to be void because not authorized by law, it seems that the proper procedure would be an injunction to prevent its enforcement, as the statutes providing for contests of elections do not specify such as a ground of contest; and since an election contest is not a civil suit and cannot, therefore, be tried by methods prescribed in civil suits, but must proceed in conformity with statutes authorizing such contest, the court’s judgment is clearly erroneous. Bassel v. Shanklin (Tex. Civ. App.) 183 S. W. 107, and cases there cited.

Before the amendment to the Constitution in 1891 giving jurisdiction to district courts to try election contests, it was universally held, by the courts construing the statutes then in existence in this state relating to election contests, that to decide the results of an election was a part of the process of political organizations and not of private right; find that where the law provided a mode of deciding cases of election contests designed to be final, the courts had no authority to adjudicate such eases, other than in the manner and for the reasons given by the law to them. Wright v. Fawcett, 42 Tex. 203; Lindsey v. Luckett, 20 Tex. 516. These cases construed statutes relating to election contests practically identical with those now in force in this state.

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Bluebook (online)
263 S.W. 325, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccall-v-lewis-texapp-1924.