Orr v. Rhine

45 Tex. 345
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 45 Tex. 345 (Orr v. Rhine) 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
Orr v. Rhine, 45 Tex. 345 (Tex. 1876).

Opinion

Moore, Associate Justice.

The only question presented for our determination by this record is, whether the act of May 26,1873, (Sess. Acts, 95,) entitled “An act to confer additional jurisdiction on the presiding justices of the peace in Lamar and Fannin counties, and to prescribe the powers' and duties of the officers of said courts,” is constitutional.

The plaintiffs in error maintain that the design of this bill was to create .a special and local court in said counties of Lamar and Fannin, which, as they insist, the Legislature has not .constitutional authority to do; because, first, the entire judicial power of the State is vested by the Constitution in courts created by it, and these it especially authorized the Legislature to create; second, that the law is special and local in its character, and creates tribunals' for two counties of the State different from those existing or authorized elsewhere.

The consideration of the last of these objections will be postponed for the present, as it will recur again in another aspect of the case, in which the validity of the law is brought in question.

In support of their respective propositions on the first of these objections, we are cited by the counsel for both parties to article 1, section 5, of the Constitution, which says: “The judicial power of this State shall be vested in one Supreme . Court, in District Cotuts, and in such inferior courts and magistrates as may be created by this Constitution, or by the Legislature under its authority.” Plaintiffs insist that the evident import of this section, and only legitimate construction which can be given it, is, that as the entire judicial power, is vested in the courts and magistrates created by the Constitution, or especially authorized by it to be created by the Legislature, as, for example, the • criminal courts, hence the Legislature cannot, by virtue of its general legislative power, as it might otherwise do, create new or additional tribunals to those enumerated in the Constitution, for this could not be done without taking some part of the judicial power of the State given to the courts created by the Constitution, [350]*350and those which it especially authorizes the Legislature to create. On the other hand, the defendant maintains that, by the very language of this section, the power of the Legislature to create other jurisdictions than those mentioned in the Constitution is directly recognized. The decision of the question, here in issue, depends upon" the import to be given to the last clause of the sentence, by which a part of the judicial power of the State is vested, wdien created, in such courts as the Legislature is authorized to create.

The plaintiffs insist, as the Legislature is expressly authorized to create criminal courts on the authority of the axiom, expressio unius est exdusio alterius, we must infer that its general legislative power which, if not restrained by the Constitution, would authorize it to establish such tribunals as the public interest might require, is limited to the creation of the tribunals expressly authorized. It is also urged that the fair construction of the language leads to this conclusion. For it is said, if it was intended to include tribunals not in terms provided for in the Constitution, it would have merely said, “and in such inferior courts and magistrates as maybe created by'this Constitution or by the Legislature,” without the addition of the words, “ under its authority.”

On behalf of the defendant, it is contended, that the language used in this section of the Constitution does not import a limitation either expressed or implied, upon the authority of the Legislature to create such inferior courts and - magistrates as the public interest may demand; and whether a court is created by the Legislature by virtue of the general power which it has under the Constitution, or by virtue of some special authority delegated to it for this purpose, the court is created by the Legislature under the authority of the Constitution. And if it was the purpose, it is insisted, to restrict the exercise of the general legislative power to establish other courts and tribunals which might be found convenient or necessary for the public interest, as claimed by plaintiff, the phraseology of the Constitution should have [351]*351been, such inferior courts and magistrates as may be created by this Constitution, or by the Legislature by virtue of this section of the Constitution,” “ such inferior courts and magistrates as may be created by the Constitution, and such criminal courts as may be established by the Legislature in the principal cities,” &c.

At the last Galveston Term we held that the Legislature had authority to create corporation courts, for the purpose of enforcing the ordinances and by-laws of municipal corporations, such as towns and cities, but withheld any definite opinion on the question of its authority to create inferior courts for the administration of the general laws of the State. Sor do we think it absolutely necessary to decide the question of its authority to do so in this case. From the zeal with which it has been discussed, and seeming confidence with which it is relied upon by both parties, we have deemed it not improper to give a brief outline of their respective positions.

If it is admitted the Legislature was fully authorized to create such an inferior tribunal as it is contended was attempted to be done by the act in question, we think it must be held that they have neither exercised nor attempted to exercise any such power by the enactment of tins law. It is not the necessary or true interpretion of this statute to hold that it creates a new court, to be held by the "presiding justice of the peace. If it did, it would be subject to the •objection of contravening the 17th section of the Í2th article of the Constitution. Its title unquestionably does not indicate such an object. The evident purpose of the act, as shown by the title, is to increase the jurisdiction of the presiding justice of the peace in the counties to which the act refers, and to prescribe the powers and duties of the officers of said courts. The object indicated in the body of the act can certainly, with as much propriety, be held to have been enacted with this view, as with that of creating another-tribunal to exercise the jurisdiction given therein to the presiding justices.

[352]*352But placing this construction upon the act, it is then said it is inoperative and void, because there is no such officer known to the law as the “presiding justice of the peace; ” or, if there is an officer who is known by this designation and title, he has no jurisdiction as presiding justice to which this act can add or enlarge. We think this objection more hypercritical than sound. The Constitution requires one of the five justices of the peace to be elected in each county to reside after election at the county seat; and in defining the jurisdiction to be conferred upon justices of the peace and the duties to be performed by them, it refers to and designates the justice who resides at the county seat as the presiding justice. (Const., art. 5, secs. 19, 20.) And the justice residing at the county seat has been frequently so designated and referred to in the statutes wherein other additional powers have been conferred upon Mm alone or in conjunction with the other justices.

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Bluebook (online)
45 Tex. 345, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/orr-v-rhine-tex-1876.