Reid v. King Co.

227 S.W. 960, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 641
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 22, 1921
DocketNo. 630.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 227 S.W. 960 (Reid v. King Co.) 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
Reid v. King Co., 227 S.W. 960, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 641 (Tex. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

O’QUINN, J.

This suit was brought by appellants against appellee, L. G. King, county attorney of Nacogdoches county, for the purpose of contesting a stock law election held in a certain subdivision of said county to determine whether horses, mules, jacks, jennets, and cattle should be permitted to run at large in said subdivision. The case was tried before the court, and judgment rendered sustaining the validity of the election, from which judgment the appellants have appealed.

The petition was filed January 1, 1920, with 58 names signed thereto. The election was ordered on January 12, 1920, to be held on February 28, 1920. The subdivision was composed of the Campbell and Trinity school districts, combined.

As disclosed by the petition of contestants, the validity of the election was assailed as void on the ground that the petition for the election was not signed by the required number of freeholders. The petition, as same appears in the record, contains 58 names, and appellants contend that D. L. Campbell, A. A. Price, John Richardson, E. Y. Bass, A. C. Tarrant, H. J. Richardson, S. W. Richardson, R. H. Ainsley, W. M. Tindall, and W. S. Walker (evidently intended for John S. Walker), were not qualified resident freeholders of the subdivision designated by the commissioners’ court, and in which the said election was held. The law required the signature of 50 freeholders, and if the 10, or 9 of the 10, challenged by appellants, were not legal signers, then the election was void, and the judgment must be reversed.

There are no findings of fact, nor conclu-i sions of law found by the court, in the record; nor does it appear that any were requested.

Article 7235, Vernon’s Sayles’ Civil Statutes, under which the election was held, provides :

“Upon the written petition of one hundred freeholders of any” county, “or upon .the petition of fifty freeholders of any such subdivision of a county as may be described in the petition, and defined by the commissioner's court * * * the commissioners’ court of said county shall *962 order an election to be held in such county or such subdivision of a county * * * on the, day named in the order, for the purpose of enabling the freeholders of such county or such subdivision * * * to determine whether,” etc.

Article 7239 provides that said election shall be held not less than 30 days from the date of the order for the election, and article 7244 provides that—

“No person shall vote at any election under the provisions of this chapter, unless he be a freeholder and is a qualified voter under the Constitution and laws.”

Appellants’ first assignment of error is as follows:

“The court erred in holding the petition for said election was good and sufficient because it did not contain the names of 50 resident freeholders and voters at the time it was filed with the commissioners’ court, January 1, 1920, asking the said election be held, in that the petition contained 58 names, and the following were not resident freeholders and qualified to vote under the Constitution and laws of Texas, at the filing of same, to wit: D. L. Campbell, A. A. Price, John Richardson, E. Y. Bass, A. C. Tarrant, H. J. Richardson, S. W. Richardson, R. H. Ainsley, W. M. Tindall, and John S. Walker.”

[1] When the petition was received and passed upon favorably by the commissioners’ court, the legal presumption is that the petition was sufficient, and, the court below having sustained same, the burden was upon appellants to show lack of qualification in the signers assailed. Garcia v. Cleary, 50 Tex. Civ. App. 465, 110 S. W. 176; Linger v. Balfour, 149 S. W. 795.

An inspection of the names signed to the petition for the election, as shown by the record, does not show that of D. L. Campbell. No such name appears thereto. The names “Jim Campbell,” “O. G. Campbell,” and “R. L. Campbell” do appear, but the testimony offered was as to “E>. L. Campbell” and “Bud Campbell,” and there is nothing in the record to show that either of them were in fact “D. L. Campbell.” The assignment as to him falls.

[2] It appeared from the evidence that A. A. Price owned land and lived in the subdivision when he signed the petition, but had moved just across the line out of the district at the time the petition was filed. The assignment as to him is sustained.

[3] Appellants challenge John Richardson, H. J. Richardson, and S. W. Richardson. There is no testimony in the record as to either John Richardson or H. J. Richardson, unless the witness A. A. Price alludes to them. He says:

“I know the negroes Jess Richardson and Joe Richardson. I don’t think they live in the Trinity district, but ain’t certain. I think they live in the Nacogdoches independent district. I am assessor out there and I did not assess them. These negroes are named Henry and Joe. The line runs right along about their house and they told me they were out of the district. I couldn’t say whether they own any land in the Trinity district or not; that is, for sure.”

This is all the testimony in the record as to them, and it will be seen that John Richardson is nowhere named. It may be that Henry and H. J. Richardson are the same, but the record does not so show. The assignment as to John Richardson falls, and we do not think the burden of proof resting on appellants to show the disqualification of H. J. Richardson has been met, and the assignment as to him is overruled.

[4] The testimony shows that S. W. Richardson owned a farm situated in the Trinity district on which he lived up to about May 9, 1919, when his house burned, and he with his children, his wife being dead, moved some 200 yards across the line of the district, ana lived with his mother. 1-Ie testified:

“I did live in the Trinity district until May 9, 1919, and I got burned out. I have not lived in Trinity district since I got burned out. I have a farm over there and I work there. My family and I have been staying over in the Nac-ogdoches district since my house burned down. That was my house that burned and it was in Trinity district. I saved a few household goods when imy house burned. My chickens, cows, farm implements are there now. That is my place and I am building a home there and I intend to move back there. I moved over with my mother until I could build and move back. I couldn’t move back until I built a house.”

Clearly he had not acquired a new residence at his mother’s, but his absence from his own home and residence was involuntary and only temporary. A removal to divest one of his right to vote must be accompanied by an intent to make a new domicile and quit the old. Mere removal, coupled with an intent to retain the original domicile and return to it, will not constitute a change. He was a legal freeholder and voter in the Trinity district. Aldridge v. Hamlin, 184 S. W. 602.

[5] R. H. Ainsley, it appears, had sold his land and moved out of the district at the time the petition was filed, and the assignment as to him is sustained.

[6] W. M.

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Bluebook (online)
227 S.W. 960, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 641, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reid-v-king-co-texapp-1921.