Millican v. McNeil

49 S.W. 219, 92 Tex. 400, 1899 Tex. LEXIS 130
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 30, 1899
DocketNo. 727.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 49 S.W. 219 (Millican v. McNeil) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Millican v. McNeil, 49 S.W. 219, 92 Tex. 400, 1899 Tex. LEXIS 130 (Tex. 1899).

Opinion

BROWN, Associate Justice.

The Court of Civil Appeals for the First Supreme Judicial District has certified to this court the following statement and questions:

“The appellant brought this suit in the District Court of Harris County against appellees, J. C. McFeil, Steve Munson, Henry Munson, Travis L. Smith, E. S. Weinger, J. E. Williams, and H. Masterson, the last named being a resident of Harris County, and the rest of Brazoria County. The petition, after alleging that the plaintiff was a qualified voter of said county of Brazoria, and had been a resident thereof for more than two years prior to the 3d day of Fovember, 1896, and that he was in the enjoyment of a good reputation, and that he possessed the confidence and respect of the people in said county, and of the people of many other counties also, avers that at a general election held in said county on said 3d day of Fovember, 1896, plaintiff was duly elected at said election to the office of county assessor; that plaintiff was competent *402 to discharge the duties of said office and that he was entitled to the emoluments of same, and that said office was worth the sum of $8000 during its term, and, after giving the names of each and all the candidates for offices of said county, who were elected at the same time that the plaintiff was, the petition further avers that on the 11th of November, 1896, the Commissioners Court of said county issued to plaintiff a certificate of election, and plaintiff received notice thereof on the 12th of December, 1896, and after giving the name of each candidate for a county office at said election who was defeated, including among the names that of defendant H. Masterson and his brother, A. B. Masterson, who is elsewhere in the petition alleged to have been the county judge previous to and at the time of said election, the petition charges, that a few days after the election, the said defendants, actuated by hatred and ill will against the plaintiff, and by a desire to further their own selfish interests, and that of their friends and kindred and the interest of factional bias and prejudice, and intending and conspiring to injure and defraud the plaintiff, did combine and confederate to hinder and defeat him from qualifying for the office to which he had been elected, and, as a means to that end, to prevent the approval of his official bond, or any he might tender, by the Commissioners Court and thus to defeat him from obtaining said office, and for this purpose, immediately after the election, they began to arouse the personal bias and prejudice of their friends and partisans in said county, and to plan and work up an organization, which the plaintiff believes then and is now called the White Men’s Union or Taxpayers Union of Brazoria County, and by means of fraudulent statements and misstatements about plaintiff and the other candidates elected with plaintiff at said election, stating in substance, among other false things, that plaintiff was a corrupt politician, a social and political outcast; that he was a defaulter in a previous office, and was morally and intellectually unfitted to hold said office; that he and the others elected with him were combined together and engaged in a scheme to excite the prejudices of the negroes in said county, who outnumbered the whites in said county, for the purpose of perpetuating themselves in office, and to array said negroes against the material interests and well being of the white people, and especially the property owners, and to turn over the government of said county into the hands of ignorant and illiterate negroes and vicious and corrupt white men; that if plaintiff and his political associates were permitted to obtain the offices to which they were elected, the plaintiff and his said associates would waste the funds of said county; would corruptly and dishonestly run their offices and thereby rob the taxpayers; and that in the end such administration of the affairs of the county would encourage the ignorant and vicious element of the negroes to be domineering and insulting to the white people, and would result in bloodshed and race riot. All of which statements the petition avers are false; that the said defendants falsely represented that their only purpose was to secure good and sufficient bonds from those elected to office in the county, when their real purpose was to *403 deprive plaintiff and others elected with him to office of the offices to which they were respectively elected, and to place others from among their friends and partisans in said offices. The petition avers that there were others, whose names are given, and others besides, whose names are unknown, but whose names are known to the said defendants, who joined said organization, the White Men's Union, or the Taxpayers Union, in December, 1896, and who by means of the false and malicious statements and charges aforesaid, and by threats, did incite a large number of people, not members of said union, to acts of hostility and to threats of active violence against the plaintiff, and against the other candidates elected with him, and to become active agents and abettors of the defendants in the scheme to injure plaintiff, to put him in fear of his life, to frighten his friends from corning to his assistance, to wound him in his feelings, to hurt him in his reputation as an honorable man and law abiding citizen, and destroy -public confidence in him, and to deprive him of the office to which he was entitled; that said defendants did so act and so. work upon the members of said organization, did so persuade them to so act, and did so persuade, threaten, and intimidate plaintiff’s friends and the property holders of said county as to render it very difficult for plaintiff to make his official bond with solvent sureties thereon, and that when plaintiff did, despite the efforts of defendants, make said bond and bad tendered the same to the Commissioners Court, and before the said court had passed upon same, the said bond being in everything a sufficient official bond for said office, and before he could take his oath of office, the said defendants, continuing the false and fraudulent acts heretofore set out, by threats and intimidation, and acts of open hostility against the plaintiff, surrounded the Commissioners Court while considering plaintiff's bond with a crowd of men armed with deadly weapons, and by threats of violence against those who should go surety upon plaintiff’s bond and those who should approve the same, openly declaring that the plaintiff and J. L. Dumars, elected to the office of county judge, and other candidates elected on same ticket with plaintiff (plaintiff being a republican and the defendants democrats and populists), should not have said offices, if defendants and others acting in concert with them had to involve the county in bloodshed; and if defendants had to wade in blood of the plaintiff and his friends; and by such threats and hcts, defendants did prevent the real Commissioners Court, whose names are given, from acting upon said bond; and procuring the said A. R Masterson, the County Judge, one J. C. McNeill, and one J. L. Smith, and one N. if. King, and one Frank Jones to act as said Commissioners Court, the said A. K. Masterson, the said McNeill, and said Smith being usurpers of office in said Commissioners Court, who, acting as the majority of said court under the direction of H.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
49 S.W. 219, 92 Tex. 400, 1899 Tex. LEXIS 130, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/millican-v-mcneil-tex-1899.