Shults v. State

696 S.W.2d 126, 1985 Tex. App. LEXIS 12146
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 20, 1985
Docket05-83-00482-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 696 S.W.2d 126 (Shults v. State) 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
Shults v. State, 696 S.W.2d 126, 1985 Tex. App. LEXIS 12146 (Tex. Ct. App. 1985).

Opinion

WHITHAM, Justice.

Appellants, Jerry Shults, Lori Shults and Gas Pipe, Inc., appeal from a judgment ordering forfeiture of certain items of personal property as “drug paraphernalia” to the appellee, the State of Texas. Of owners’ nine points of error, we find merit only in the sixth. Consequently, we conclude *130 that the first two of the four seizures at issue were not subject to the trial court’s jurisdiction for purposes of forfeiture. Accordingly, we affirm as to the last two seizures and reverse and remand with instructions as to the first two seizures.

We first address a jurisdictional question involving the entire case. In their third point of error, owners assert lack of jurisdiction in the trial court because there is no law authorizing this cause of action in the State of Texas. In light of owners’ argument, the dates events occurred become important. Dallas police officers seized various items alleged to be drug paraphernalia from the Shults’ store, the Gas Pipe, on four occasions. The first seizure took place on October 29, 1981. On November 24, 1981, the State filed an original notice of seizure and intended forfeiture which, under the Texas Controlled Substances Act, TEX.REV.CIV.STAT.ANN. art. 4476-lb, § 5.05 (Vernon Supp.1985), commenced the State’s forfeiture action with respect to the first seizure. The remaining seizures took place on February 17, 1982, April 20, 1982, and July 26, 1982. The State filed notices of seizure and intended forfeiture with respect to these seizures, commencing forfeiture actions on each, on March 17, 1982, April 28, 1982, and August 3, 1982, respectively. All of these forfeiture actions were eventually consolidated in the present action. On October 20, 1982, trial began on the consolidated actions. The jury found that items taken in the seizures were drug paraphernalia and the trial court ordered forfeiture of those items in a judgment rendered January 6, 1983.

Owners argue that at time of trial and judgment there was no statute authorizing any of these forfeiture actions. This argument is based on two bills enacted by the 67th Legislature. The legislature, in Tex. H.B. 733, 67th Leg., 1981 TEX.GEN.LAWS 742, 744-45 (House Bill 733) provided:

Section 5.03(a), Texas Controlled Substances Act, as amended (Article 4476-15, Vernon’s Texas Civil Statutes), is amended to read as follows:
(a) The following are subject to forfeiture as authorized by this subchapter:
⅜ ⅝ ⅜£ ⅝ sjs ⅜
(7) all drug paraphernalia.

Subdivision seven was a new addition to section 5.03(a). Thus, House Bill 733 made drug paraphernalia subject to forfeiture as of September 1, 1981, the effective date of House Bill 733. In that same 1981 legislative session, the legislature again amended article 4476-15, § 5.03(a). That amendment, Tex. S.B. 394, 67th Leg., 1981 TEX. GEN.LAWS 2313, 2317 (Senate Bill 394) provided:

Subsection (a), Section 5.03, Texas Controlled Substances Act, as amended (Article 4476-15, Vernon’s Texas Civil Statutes), is amended to read as follows: “(a) The following are subject to forfeiture as authorized by this subchapter:
sfi ⅝ ⅜ ⅜ ⅜ ⅜:
“(7) triplicate prescription forms required by this Act to be returned to the Department of Public Safety.”

Senate Bill 394 did not contain any subdivision under section 5.03(a) authorizing forfeiture of drug paraphernalia. Instead, Senate Bill 394 substituted a new subdivision seven, authorizing forfeiture of certain triplicate prescription forms, for the original subdivision seven added in House Bill 733. Senate Bill 394 became effective January 1, 1982. For all practical purposes, the Senate and House each passed the other’s bill on May 29, 1981. Two years later, in the 1983 regular session, the legislature amended article 4476-15, § 5.03(a) once again. This latest amendment, Tex.H.B. 1191, 68th Leg., 1983 TEX.GEN.LAWS 2361, 2394-95 (House Bill 1191) which sets forth the version of article 4476-15, § 5.03(a), now in effect, provides:

Section 5.03(a), Texas Controlled Substances Act (Article 4476-15, Vernon’s Texas Civil Statutes), as amended by Section 10, Chapter 268, Acts of the 67th Legislature, Regular Session, 1981; Section 3, Chapter 277, Acts of the 67th Legislature, Regular Session, 1981; and Section 5, Chapter 570, Acts of the 67th *131 Legislature, Regular Session, 1981, is amended to read as follows:
(a) The following are subject to forfeiture as authorized by this subchapter:
* * ⅜ * * *
(7) all drug paraphernalia; and
(8) triplicate prescription forms required by this Act to be returned to the Department of Public Safety.

Thus, this 1983 amendment continued the original subdivision seven of House Bill 733 and renumbered subdivision seven of Senate Bill 394 so that it became subdivision eight. House Bill 1191 became effective August 29, 1983.

Therefore, we must apply the rule of law applicable in the construction of two acts of the same session of the legislature. To state the rule, we quote the supreme court in Wright v. Broeter, 145 Tex. 142, 147, 196 S.W.2d 82, 85 (1946):

The rule is, that in the construction of acts of the same session, the whole must be taken and construed as one act, and to make a latter provision repeal a former, there must be an express repeal, or an irreconcilable repugnancy between them; and then the latter will control. [N]oth-ing short of expressions so plain and positive as to force upon the mind an irresistible conviction, or absolute necessity, will justify a court in presuming, that it was the intention of the legislature that their acts passed at the same session, should abrogate and annul one another. The decent respect due a co-ordinate department of the government, would seem to forbid that such a presumption be indulged by the court. As we had occasion to say in Neil v. Keese, ‘it would not be a reasonable mode of construing acts of the legislature, so to construe them as to make one act repeal another passed at the same session. It cannot be supposed that it was their intention that acts thus passed should abrogate and repeal one another.’ [citation omitted].

Therefore, we must decide whether there has been an express repeal or an irreconcilable repugnancy. By its language, Senate Bill 394 did not repeal House Bill 733. Moreover, we fail to see how inclusion of “triplicate prescription forms” in Senate Bill 394 to the list of items subject to forfeiture can be repugnant to forfeiture of “all drug paraphernalia” as provided in House Bill 733. Therefore, we take and construe House Bill 733 and Senate Bill 394 as one act authorizing forfeiture of both “triplicate prescription forms” and “all drug paraphernalia.” Consequently, we hold that article 4476-15, section 5.03(a), authorized the four forfeiture actions consolidated in the present case. It follows, and we so hold, that the trial court had subject matter jurisdiction over all four forfeiture actions consolidated in the present case.

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696 S.W.2d 126, 1985 Tex. App. LEXIS 12146, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shults-v-state-texapp-1985.