Small v. Parker

119 S.W.2d 609, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 160
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 8, 1938
DocketNo. 13862.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 119 S.W.2d 609 (Small v. Parker) 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
Small v. Parker, 119 S.W.2d 609, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 160 (Tex. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

B. W. KING, Special Associate Justice.

This suit was entered by W. R. Parker, for himself and on behalf of all other candidates for elective offices in the Democratic Primaries of Tarrant County, Texas, for the year 1936, against Hugh L. Small, who served as County Chairman of the Democratic Executive Committee of Tarrant County, Texas, for several terms and resigned such office on June 23, 1936, and B. Frank Kauffman, the successor of Hugh L. Small as such County Chairman.

The appellees allege that appellants under and by authority of Article 3108 of the Revised Civil Statutes of Texas, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St. art. 3108, assessed and collected from the candidates of Tarrant County, Texas, the sum of $22,910; and that they lawfully spent of said money the sum of $17,295.04, and the remainder of $5,614.96 was wrongfully and unlawfully expended and kept by the said appellants, *610 which sum was composed of the following items, to wit:

(1) Services rendered by H. L. Small for years 1934, 5, 6, audit p. 9. $2,500.00

(2) Office rent for county chairman, H. L. Small, 24 months prior to 1936 primary, p. 9 of audit. 600.00

(3) Stenographic (office help) H. L. Small 24 months prior tó 1936 Primary, audit p. 9. 480.00

(4) Office phone, long distance . wires, H. L. Small, prior to 1936 Primaries, audit p. 9 . 83.00

(5) Stamps, office supplies, type-. writer equipment for H. L. Small prior to 1936 primary, audit p. 9. 17.00

(6) Jewel Dycus, services, audit p. 21 . 316.63

(7) B. F. Kauffman, services, audit p. 21. 400.00

(8) Tewel Dycus, services, audit p. 21. 25.00

(9) O. E. Tunstill, expenses, audit p. 21.'. 5.00

(10) Cash, unexplained, audit p. 21 . 12.00

(11) A. H. Sanders, audit p. 21.. 5.00

(12) Dr. C. E. Walker, audit p. 21 5.00

(13) The sum remaining in the hands of B. Frank Kauff-man, County Chairman, p. 11 . 914.92

(14) Refreshments, audit p. 21.. 3.10

(15) Cash, audit p. 14. 35.00

(16) Cash and Express items, audit p. 15. 103.54

(17) Refreshments, audit p. 16.. 2.00

(18) Cash and unexplained items on p. 18 of audit. 97.77

(19) Texas Electric Service Co. meter deposit which does not show to have been returned, audit p. 14. 10.00

Grand Total of disputed items... $5,614.96

The appellants’ answers are separate but the allegations and pleas in substance are the same and they answer by Plea in Abatement and General Demurrer, answers in which they set up the authorization of the Democratic Executive Committee authorizing the expenditures as made and the final approval by the whole Committee of the expenditures as so made.

The case was tried on April 9, 1938 before the court, without the intervention of a jury, and judgmqnt rendered in favor of the appellees as against appellant, Hugh L. Small, for the sum of $3,525 and as against appellant, B. Frank Kauffman, in the sum of $1,731.55, which sums were to be distributed among the various candidates as named in the plaintiffs’ petition in proportion to what they had paid in to have their names placed on the ticket, with an order and direction in the judgment that the appellants pay said sums for which judgment was rendered into the Registry of the court for distribution to the appel-lees, and the other candidates named and that upon failure of the appellants to so pay said money into the Registry of the court that the appellees have execution.

The appellants insist that the judgment of the trial court is erroneous and they base this in effect upon five propositions:

(1) That the appellees’ Amended Original Petition is subject to general demurrer.

(2) The money paid in by the various candidates to the County Chairman under and by virtue of Article 3108 of the Revised Statutes of Texas, Vernon’s Ann. Civ.St. art. 3108, became and is the property of the Democratic Executive Committee of Tarrant County, Texas, and that said candidates have no further right or interest in and to said funds.

(3) That Article 3108 of the Revised Statutes vests in the Democratic Executive Committee the exclusive discretion as to the expenditure of funds assessed and collected for defraying the expenses of the 1936 primaries.

(4) That where the Chairman of the Democratic Executive Committee assessed and collected funds under and by virtue of Article 3108 for defraying the expenses of the Primary Elections, and said funds were expended as directed by the Democratic Executive Committee, that any cause of action for the recovery thereof would not be against the Chairman alone, but against the Committee.

(5) That the finding, of the Trial Court to the effect that the funds collected from various candidates of 1936 were trust funds in the hands of the Chairman of the Democratic Executive Committee was not supported by the pleadings and the evidence.

At the outset of this case the appellants question the right of the appellees to main *611 tain this suit in the filing of the general demurrer. The trial court overruled the general demurrer and that question is here for review. Article 3117 of the Revised Statutes provides for the time of the meeting of the various committees of any political party and the order in which the names of the candidates are to be placed on the official ballot and directs the Committee in its business with reference thereto. Article 3108 of the Revised Statutes, as amended, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St. art. 3108, provides as follows

“At the meeting of the county executive committee provided in Article 3117, the county committee shall also carefully estimate the cost of printing the official ballots, renting polling places where same may be found necessary, providing and distributing all necessary poll books, blank stationery and voting booths required, compensation of election, officers and clerks and messengers, to report the result in each precinct to the county chairman, as provided for herein, and all other necessary expenses of holding such primaries in such counties and shall apportion such cost among the various candidates for nomination for county and precinct offices only as herein defined, and offices to be filled by the voters of such county or precinct only (candidates for State offices excepted), in such manner as in their judgment is just and equitable, giving due consideration tothe importance and emoluments of each such office for which a nomination is to be made and shall, by resolution, direct the chairman to immediately mail to each person whose name has been requested to be placed on the official ballot a statement of the amount of such expenses so apportioned to him, with the request that he pay the same to the county chairman on or before the Saturday before the fourth Monday in June thereafter.” '

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119 S.W.2d 609, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/small-v-parker-texapp-1938.