Quinn v. Dickinson

146 S.W. 993, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 367
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 24, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 146 S.W. 993 (Quinn v. Dickinson) 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
Quinn v. Dickinson, 146 S.W. 993, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 367 (Tex. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinions

This appeal is before us from a judgment rendered in the district court of Lubbock county on June 7, 1911, and during a term of court held in that county, and which convened on May 29, 1911, and adjourned on the 10th day of June of the same year. Under the first *Page 995 assignment of error in the brief of appellants J. H. Quinn and wife, and also under the first assignment of error in the brief of appellant J. M. Patton, contention is made that the judgment appealed from is void (1) because the same was rendered at a term of the court not authorized by law; and (2) if the term of court at which the judgment was rendered was authorized by law, the judge who presided was not empowered so to do.

These contentions are based on the following state of facts: By an act of the Thirty-Second Legislature, approved March 25, 1911, found at page 212, Regular Session Acts, the Seventy-Second judicial district was created, and the Thirty-Second, Fiftieth, and Sixty-Fourth judicial districts were also reorganized to meet the conditions arising from the fact that the counties composing the Seventy-Second judicial district had been taken from said three districts. The Seventy-Second district, as created, is composed of Lynn, Dawson, Yoakum, Terry, Lubbock, Crosby, Garza, and the two unorganized counties of Hockley and Cochran, which are by said act attached to Lubbock county for judicial and all other purposes. The counties of Lynn, Yoakum, Lubbock, Terry, and the two unorganized counties of Hockley and Cochran, having formerly formed a part of the Sixty-Fourth district, while the counties of Dawson and Garza had formerly formed a part of the Thirty-Second judicial district, and the county of Crosby had formerly been a part of the Fiftieth judicial district.

Prior to the passage of the act of March 25, 1911, the Sixty-Fourth judicial district was operating under a law passed in 1909 (Acts 31st Leg. c. 9), reorganizing and establishing the same, and the Thirty-Second judicial district was also operating under a law passed in 1909 (Acts 31st Leg. c. 8), reorganizing and establishing it; while the Fiftieth district was operating under a law passed in 1905 (Acts 29th Leg. c. 9), reorganizing and establishing it. It will thus be seen that for information as to the time at which court, under the law, could be held in the several counties now in the Seventy-Second judicial district, prior to the passage of the act of March 25, 1911, it is necessary to look to the acts under which the Sixty-Fourth, Thirty-Second, and Fiftieth judicial districts were operating.

The act of March 25, 1911, provides for the judge of the Seventy-Second judicial district to begin holding court in Lynn county; the terms under the act requiring the holding of courts in said district as follows: In Lynn county on the second Monday in March and September and continue in session three weeks, and an inspection of the calendar will show that the second Monday in March and September, 1911, came on March 13th and on September 11th. It provides for the court to be held in Dawson county on the third Mondays after the second Mondays in March and September, and an inspection of the calendar will show that these terms, as thus provided for, fell on April 3 and on October 2, 1911. Provision is made for holding court in Yoakum county on the fifth Mondays after the second Mondays in March and September, and an inspection of the calendar will show that these terms for 1911, under the act, began on April 17 and October 16, 1911. Provision is made for holding court in Terry county on the seventh Mondays after the second Mondays in March and September, and the calendar shows that these terms fell on May 1 and October 30,1911. The act provides for terms of court in Lubbock county on the ninth Mondays after the second Mondays in March and September, and an inspection of the calendar shows that these terms for 1911 began May 15 and November 13, 1911. Provision is made for holding court in Crosby county on the fifteenth Mondays after the second Mondays in March and September, and the calendar shows that these terms for the year 1911 would have begun on June 26 and December 25, 1911. This act provides for the holding of terms of court in Garza county on the seventeenth Mondays after the second Mondays in March and September, and the calendar shows that these terms for the year 1911 fell on July 10, 1911, and January 8, 1912.

An inspection of the act of 1909, creating the Sixty-Fourth and Thirty-Second judicial districts, and the act of 1905, creating the Fiftieth judicial district, will show that, prior to the creation of the Seventy-Second judicial district, terms of the district court were required to be held in Lynn county in 1911 on May 15th and November 13th; in Dawson county on May 8th and December 4th; in Yoakum county on April 24th and October 23d; in Terry county on May 1st and October 30th; in Lubbock county on May 29th and November 27th; in Crosby county on June 29, 1911, and January 22, 1912.

As the act creating the Seventy-Second judicial district did not become a law until March 25th, and under its requirements a term of court should have been held in Lynn county on March 13th, it is thus made to appear that it was impossible for the terms of the act to be complied with, at least as to this county, for the spring term of 1911; and, as, under the law as construed by the decisions of our courts, each circuit of the courts in a judicial district is, in a sense, regarded as an entirety, it follows that it was improper for the judge of the Seventy-Second judicial district to have held court in either of the counties in that district for the spring term in accordance with the provisions of the act of March 25, 1911, as was expressly held in the case of Ex parte L. W. Thompson, 57 Tex.Cr.R. 437, 123 S.W. 612, and in Nobles v. State, *Page 996 57 Tex.Cr.R. 307, 123 S.W. 126, and in Bowden v. Crawford, 103 Tex. 181,125 S.W. 5.

The district having been created, however, and a judge of said court having been appointed and properly qualified, there was a de jure judge for each of said counties composing the Seventy-Second judicial district, and it became his duty, and he was authorized and empowered under the Constitution and the law, to hold the spring terms of court in each of said counties; but, to do so under the decisions above referred to, they must be held at the time provided by law prior to the passage of the act creating the Seventy-Second judicial district, for the reasons fully stated in the decisions above quoted, as well as in the case of Womack v. Womack, 17 Tex. 1.

For the reasons above stated, and under the authorities cited, we hold that the term of court at which the judgment appealed from was rendered was legally and constitutionally held, it having been held on May 29th, the date provided for holding said court in said county under the act in existence prior to the passage of the act creating the Seventy-Second judicial district; and we also hold that the judge who presided over said court had constitutional and statutory authority so to do, and for these reasons the assignments mentioned will be overruled.

Under assignments urged in this court by appellants J. H. Quinn and wife, it is contended that the judgment appealed from is void, in that the trial court had no power to render the judgment; there having been a final judgment rendered in this cause by the district court of Lubbock county at a former term, which judgment, rendered at the former term, had in no way been vacated or set aside or appealed from.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
146 S.W. 993, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 367, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/quinn-v-dickinson-texapp-1912.