Poe v. State

10 S.W. 737, 72 Tex. 625, 1889 Tex. LEXIS 1304
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 8, 1889
DocketNo. 2653
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 10 S.W. 737 (Poe v. State) 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
Poe v. State, 10 S.W. 737, 72 Tex. 625, 1889 Tex. LEXIS 1304 (Tex. 1889).

Opinion

Henry, Associate Justice.

On the 16th day of August, 1888, a petition was filed in the District Court of San Jacinto County against ap[627]*627pellant, who was then the sheriff and- ex officio tax collector of said county.

The petition was sworn to by the relators before the clerk of the County Court of San Jacinto County (he being clerk of the District Court also), but he did not attach his seal of office to his certificate.

The petition and an application for citation to the defendant were presented to the judge of. the District Court in chambers on August 18, 1888, when he endorsed on the petition an order to the clerk to cite the defendant to appear at the next term of the District Court for said county on a day named. At the same time the district judge in accordance with a prayer of the petition suspended the defendant from office and appointed his successor upon his giving bond for $1000 payable to the defendant.

On the day named for the hearing the defendant appeared and answered.

The record contains no statement of facts. The answer contained a general demurrer and a number of special exceptions. Some of the special exceptions were sustained. The general demurrer and other special exceptions were overruled.

The relators filed a trial amendment, setting up substantially the same grounds contained in their original petition and supplying the omissions which had been made the grounds of the exceptions sustained by the court.

The trial amendment was sworn to, and in addition the certificate of the officer who administered the oath recited that the relators swore “that their original petition, filed August 16, 1888, was true.”

The grounds for removing appellant from office remaining after the court had acted on appellant’s special exceptions, and after plaintiff’s "trial amendment was filed, were substantially:

1. That the sheriff and ex officio tax collector willfully refused to comply with an order of the County Commissioners Court requiring him to give a new bond as tax collector.
2. That said officer willfully failed to pay over when properly demanded by the Commissioners Court on the sixteenth day of June, 1888, the sum of $1738.61, ascertained on final settlement to be due by him to the county on account of collections of county taxes made by him.
3. That he willfully failed to collect the occupation taxes.
4. That at the May Term, 1887, of the County Commissioners Court, that being a regular term of said court, and the time for a regular quarterly settlement with him, he willfully refused to pay over to the county treasurer the sum of $1377.45 of county taxes previously collected by him.
5. That at the May Term, 1888, of said Commissioners Court, that being the regular time for him to make a quarterly settlement both as sheriff and tax collector, he willfully refused to make any settlement whatever.

[628]*628The jury rendered a verdict finding all of the charges true, upon which, judgment was rendered removing the defendant from office.

The provision of the Constitution on the subject is that “county officers may be removed by the judges of the district courts for incompetency, official misconduct, habitual drunkenness, or other causes defined by law, upon the cause therefor being set forth in writing and the finding of its truth by a jury.” Sec. 24, art. 5.

Section 23 of article 5 prescribes that vacancies in the office of sheriff' “ shall be filled by the Commissioners Court until the next general election for county or State officers.”

The mode of removal of such officers is fully provided for in chapter' 2 of title 46 of the Revised Statutes. The law provides that proceedings, for that purpose may be commenced in term time or vacation by filing a petition in the District Court of the county where the officer resides;, that the “cause or causes” alleged as grounds of removal shall beset, forth in plain and intelligible words, and that the petition shall be sworn to “at or before the filing of the same.” That the judge shall instruct the jury to find from the evidence “whether the cause or causes of removal set forth in the petition are true in point of fact or not, and when, there is more than one distinct cause of removal alleged the jury shall by their verdict say which cause they find sustained by the evidence before them and which not sustained.” That at any time after the issuance of the order for the citation the district judge may suspend temporarily from office the officer against whom the petition is filed, and appoint for the time being some other person to discharge the duties of the office, but. not until the person appointed shall execute a bond, with such conditions as the judge may impose, to pay to the person suspended all costs and damages that he may sustain by reason of his suspension, in case it should appear that the cause or causes of removal are insufficient or untrue. “That the trial and all proceedings connected therewith shall be conducted as far as it is possible in accordance with the rules and practice of the court in other civil cases,” and that “an appeal or writ of error1 may be sued out as in other civil cases.”

The assignments of error involve substantially the following propositions:

1. That under the Constitution but one ground of removal can be set. up in any one proceeding.
2. That plaintiff’s original petition was not properly sworn to because the county clerk did not attach his seal to his certificate of the administration of the oath, and that on account of such defect all subsequent-proceedings were unlawful.
3. That the original petition not having charged that the alleged delinquencies of the sheriff were corrupt or willful, no amendment of it ought to have been allowed.
[629]*6294. That the order of the Commissioners Court requiring defendant to give a new bond was void upon its face because it was made without first citing him to appear, etc.
5. That the district judge has no power to suspend one officer and appoint another in his stead until there has been a verdict of a jury, and that the statutes on the subject are unconstitutional.
6. That a want, of power under the Constitution in a district judge to remove a sheriff from office involves a want of power to suspend him temporarily and bestow his office on another.

Clearly the Constitution does not intend to limit the Legislature in defining the number of causes for which officers may be removed, or, where more causes than one exist, to prevent all from being jointly prosecuted in the same proceeding.

We are not satisfied that the county clerk was required to attach his seal to his certificate, and if it was necessary we see no reason why, he being the clerk of the court in which the cause was pending, might not have been allowed to amend the certificate by attaching his seal, or instead do what was done in this case, to-wit, readminister the oath to the pleadings as amended.

The facts constituting the grounds for removal were set out in the original petition. Some of the grounds, not all, were not charged with the technical precision prescribed by the statute.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
10 S.W. 737, 72 Tex. 625, 1889 Tex. LEXIS 1304, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/poe-v-state-tex-1889.