San Jacinto River Conservation & Reclamation District v. Sellers

184 S.W.2d 920, 143 Tex. 328, 1945 Tex. LEXIS 147
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 24, 1945
DocketNo. A-355.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 184 S.W.2d 920 (San Jacinto River Conservation & Reclamation District v. Sellers) 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
San Jacinto River Conservation & Reclamation District v. Sellers, 184 S.W.2d 920, 143 Tex. 328, 1945 Tex. LEXIS 147 (Tex. 1945).

Opinion

Mr. Justice-Alexander

delivered the opinion of the Court.

■ This is an original mandamus proceeding, brought in. this Court by - San Jacinto River Conservation and Reclamation District against the Honorable Grover Sellers as Attorney General of the State of Texas to compel the Attorney General to approve the issuance of certain bonds proposed to be issued by said District.

The San Jacinto River Conservation and Reclamation District was created by Special Act of the 45th Legislature, Reg. Sess., 1937, ch. 426, p. 861, which Act was amended by Acts of the 46th Legislature, Reg. Sess., 1939, ch. 10, p. 1097. As its name will indicate it was created as a conservation and reclamation district, a governmental agency, to carry out the purposes of ■ the provisions of the Constitution, Article XVI, Section 59a,, to conserve, control, and utilize for beneficial purposes the storm and flood waters of the San Jacinto River. Its powers are fully set out in the Act, and need not be copied here in detail.

The boundaries of the District embrace all of the watershed of the San Jacinto River, except that portion thereof lying within the bounds of Harris 'County. The Board of Directors of the District has authorized the issuance of the bonds of the District in the sum of $1,800,000.00, payable serially over a period of twenty-five years, the proceeds thereof to be used in carrying out the purposes for which the District was creatéd.

*330 The Directors of the District propose to issue the bonds of the District without a vote of the taxpayers of the District. The bonds proposed to be- issued by the District contain the following provisions:

“This bond and the issue of which it is a part are secured solely by and payable from the current revenues received by the district from the operation of its properties and facilities, including the proceeds of the taxes remitted to said District under the provisions of House Bill Number 1079 of the Special Laws of the Forty-Sixth Texas Legislature, Regular Session, and the proceeds of any taxes which may be similarly remitted to sdid District under the provisions of any law which may hereafter be enacted for such purpose, but not including the proceeds of any taxes levied on the property in said District by the Board of Directors thereof.”

The Act creating petitioner was passed in 1937, and is found in General and Special Laws of the 45th Legislature, p. 861. Section 10 of said Act reads as follows:

“sec. 10. The San Jacinto River Conservation and Reclamation District shall not be authorized to issue bonds nor to incur any form of continuing obligations or indebtedness for purposes of effecting improvements comprehended in the plan of organization and administration of the-District, nor incur any indebtedness in the form of continuing charge upon land or properties within the District, unless such proposition shall have been submitted to the qualified property taxpaying voters of the District, or, in appropriate case, such voters of a defined area or political subdivision within the District, and approved by a majority of such electors voting thereon.”

In 1939 the Legislature amended the law creating the District, said amendment being found on page 1097 of the Acts of the 46th Legislature, Special Laws. Section 10b, which was added by the Act of 1939, reads as follows:

“Sec. 10b. The District shall have the authority and is thereby authorized to issue its negotiable bonds, secured only by the current revenues of the District in any such amounts as may be authorized by the Directors of such District, for the purpose of making investigations, assembling data and for the purpose of purchasing, acquiring and/or condemning lands, leases, easements, and/or acquittances, right of ‘ways,. structures and/or buildings1, equipments and/or operation of proper structures, dams, reservoirs, suitable for the control of the recurrent, devastating floods in the valleys of the San Jacinto River, which have, over a" long period of years, caused a deplorable loss of *331 life and property, and the erosion of the soil and depletion of the fertility of the lands of said valley and the watershed served by the San Jacinto River in Texas, and the public highways and structures situated in said watershed; all of which is hereby declared to be a public calamity, and in doing all things necessary in the execution for the purpose for which the District is created and exists. And provided that if and when the Legislature remits the ad valorem tax in the counties for a certain period of years, the Directors may in their discretion if necessary with the approval of the Commissioners’ Court of the county in the watershed use part or all of the taxes remitted to said counties for the purpose of paying back to the United States of America or any of its agencies or others the money borrowed by the District for the purpose herein mentioned. As added Acts 1939, 46th Leg., Spec. L., p. 1097, sec. 1.”

While Section 10 of the original Act requires approval by the voters of the District in order to authorize the creation of “any indebtedness in the form of a continuing charge upon land or properties within the District,” Section 10b of the amended Act authorizes the District to issue bonds “secured only by current revenues of the District in any such amount as may be authorized by the Directors of such District.” We hold that under the provisions of the amended Act the directors of the District may issue the bonds of the District secured only by current revenues thereof for any of the purposes named in the Act, without any approval thereof by the voters of the District. Brazos River Conservation and Reclamation District v. McCraw, 126 Texas 506, 91 S. W. (2d) 665; Lower Colorado River Authority v. McCraw, 125 Texas 268, 83 S. W. (2d) 629.

It will be noted that the District proposes to pledge as security for the payment of such bonds the taxes remitted to the District under the provisions of House Bill No. 1079, Snecial Laws of the 46th Legislature, Regular Session. House Bill No. 1079, above referred to, will be found in the Acts of the 46th Legislature, 1939, chapter 10, p. 984. Section 2 of that Act provides as follows:

“Sec. 2. For a period of ten (10) years or for such portion of such period as may be required, but no longer, and commencing with the fiscal year beginning September 1, 1939, there is hereby donated and granted by the State of Texas to the San Jacinto River Conservation and Reclamation District fifty (50) per cent of all State ad valorem taxes collected for General Revenue purposes upon the property and from persons in the Counties of Montgomery, Walker, San Jacinto, and all that part *332 of Liberty County embraced in the San Jacinto Watershed, said counties comprising in whole or in part the respective District hereinabove set out, and shall include the rolling stock belonging to railroad companies which shall be ascertained and apportioned as now provided by law. The taxes hereby donated shall be used by thé respective District for the purpose of carrying out the powers, duties, and functions conferred upon such District by the Legislature of the State of Texas, provided, however, that the taxes herein donated and granted in the Counties of Walker and San Jacinto shall not apply, nor be allocated or donated in this Act, until the provisions, of Senate Bill No.

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184 S.W.2d 920, 143 Tex. 328, 1945 Tex. LEXIS 147, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/san-jacinto-river-conservation-reclamation-district-v-sellers-tex-1945.