Palacios v. Corbett

172 S.W. 777, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 108
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 6, 1915
DocketNo. 5378.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 172 S.W. 777 (Palacios v. Corbett) 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
Palacios v. Corbett, 172 S.W. 777, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 108 (Tex. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

MOURSUND, J.

R. H. Corbett and 17 other private citizens of Duval county sued J. Y. Palacios, county clerk of said county, the county treasurer, the tax collector, the county judge, the county commissioners, and the Mercantile Bank, the county depository. We take from appellants’ brief the following statement of the pleadings: *779 any way interfering with the inspection and audit of the public records of the county of whatever nature.

*778 “It is alleged in the petition, which was filed in the district court of said county on Blay 22, 1914, that plaintiffs are taxpaying citizens of Duval county, and that on or about January 30, 1914, they had employed competent auditors who were engaged in an audit of such records, books, and vouchers in order to determine the financial condition, of said county for the purpose of determining whether there were any moneys due said county by any of the officers who had collected moneys belonging to the county, and whether any of the moneys of the county had been illegally retained or illegally disbursed by any of the officers charged with the disbursing of the same, and that, while such auditors were engaged in the work of auditing the said books and accounts, the commissioners’ court passed an order directing the other defendant county officers to refuse to allow the plaintiffs and their auditors to further inspect such records, and that the defendants did refuse and still refuse to allow the plaintiffs and their auditors to inspect any of the public records, books, and accounts of the county of which they are custodians. It was also alleged that the plaintiffs were not prompted by motives of idle curiosity in seeking to inspect and audit said records, but desired to make extracts from the same and to make copies thereof for the purpose of a complete audit of the affairs of the county, for the reason that plaintiffs have a well-grounded belief that the finances of the county have not been faithfully administered, and that there are large sums of money due the county of Duval, and that they desire to ascertain the amounts thereof in order that the same may be recovered for Duval county. Plaintiffs then set out in detail certain alleged irregularities, collections, payments, and intermingling of various funds in order to show the necessity for such audit, and also pleaded that their auditors, in making such inspection and audit of the records, were not in any way interfering with the orderly conduct of the affairs of the defendants in their offices, and were inspecting the records during the office hours of defendants, and that it was not their intention or desire to interfere with any of the defendants in the orderly conduct of their official affairs, nor to inspect such records at any other than reasonable office hours. It was further alleged that the members of the commissioners’ court ‘have pretended that said court is auditing or preparing to have an audit made of the finances of the county; and plaintiffs allege that, if said court shall have any audit made of the finances of said county, said audit will not be made for the purpose of determining whether said defendants otve the county any moneys, but for the purpose of “whitewashing” the said defendants and shield them from any suit for any deficit that a competent audit of said county’s finances might disclose.’ It was further alleged that, if a deficit was found, the court would take no action to collect the same, and that the ordinary legal remedies were inadequate to afford the relief desired, and that they feared that the commissioners’ court would fine for contempt any county officer who permitted the records under his control to be inspected by said auditors; and plaintiffs prayed for a mandamus commanding each of the defendants to permit plaintiffs or their auditors to inspect and audit all county records under their control and to get such extracts, copies, and data therefrom as they might desire, and also prayed for an injunction against the county judge and commissioners’ court, restraining them from in
*779 “Each of the defendants filed separate answers to the petition, all of which were, however, practically the same. The defendant Pa-lacios pleaded: (a) In abatement that the plaintiffs had no right to institute suit for or on behalf of Duval county to recover any amount which might be due the county, and that that right was confided alone in the commissioners’ court, and that plaintiffs, as private citizens, had no right to institute any such suit, and therefore the suit to permit them or their auditors to audit the accounts should be abated; (b) misjoinder of parties plaintiff because said petition did not disclose facts authorizing the bringing- of a joint action by all the plaintiffs against this defendant; (c) a misjoinder of parties defendant because the petition showed no such common interest among defendants as would authorize the plaintiffs to prosecute a suit against defendants jointly; (d) general demurrer; (e) special exception to all mattgrs in the petition relating to duties, responsibilities, and negligence or failure of other county officials than himself, and he asked that they be stricken out. And specially answering, defendant Palacios denied that he had refused to permit the plaintiffs to inspect any public records of which he was custodian, and denied that the county commissioners’ court had passed any order directing the defendant to refuse to allow plaintiffs to inspect the records of which he was custodian, or that he had combined with the other defendants to use secretive methods in the administration of the financial affairs of Duval county, in order to render it difficult for plaintiffs to ascertain the facts in regard to disbursing the funds of the county or to deter the taxpayers from inquiring into the same, and alleged that all records under his control were then and had ever been subject to the inspection of any citizen of Duval county, and that he had never refused any of the plaintiffs the right to inspect the same at reasonable times during office hours, and that he was not in combination with any of the defendants to prevent any citizen of Duval county or plaintiffs from inspecting such records, and also specially that ‘at this time all the books in his custody, relating to the finances of Duval county, are being audited by a competent accountant appointed by the commissioners’ court of said county, and the same are in daily use by said auditor for the purpose of said audit and examination.’

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Bluebook (online)
172 S.W. 777, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/palacios-v-corbett-texapp-1915.