State v. Brady

118 S.W. 128, 102 Tex. 408, 1909 Tex. LEXIS 167
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedApril 14, 1909
DocketNo. 1950.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 118 S.W. 128 (State v. Brady) 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
State v. Brady, 118 S.W. 128, 102 Tex. 408, 1909 Tex. LEXIS 167 (Tex. 1909).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Brown

delivered the opinion of the court.

The parties agreed in writing upon a statement of the facts upon which the trial court gave judgment for Brady and the Court of Civil Appeals adopted the statement which follows and affirmed that judgment:

"1. It is agreed that the facts alleged and set out in plaintiff’s petition are true and correct and shall be taken as facts in the trial of this suit, especially as to the official acts of the said John W. Brady, the dates and amounts of the judgments recovered and of the fees retained by the said Brady as county attorney under the Anti-Trust Laws of 1899 and 1903 of the State of Texas. However, it shall not be taken as admitted by the said Brady that the fee alleged in the motion to be the fee allowed by law is the fee allowed him by law, in this respect he only admits that he received as county attorney 35 percent of each respective judgment for penalties as alleged in plaintiff’s motion and claims that he was entitled to the same under the law.

“3. It is agreed that in all of the suits named in said motion, except that of J. M. Guffey Petroleum Co., and the facts as to that are correctly stated in defendant’s answer, the said John W. Brady appeared and represented the State, under, the direction of the Attorney General of Texas.

“3. That on March 31, 1903, C. K. Bell was Attorney General of Texas, and held that office until on or about January 3, 1905. That on July 14, 1904, the said John W. Brady, as county attorney of Travis County, Texas, assisted by D. A. McFall and G. W. Allen, attorneys, brought suit in the District Court of" Travis County, Texas, in behalf of and in the name of the State of Texas, against the J. M. Guffey Petroleum Company and the Beaumont Confederated Oil & Pipe Line Company for violations of chapter 146 of the General Laws of the State of Texas of 1899; and by agreement recovered a judgment in said suit for $5,000. That said judgment was ^collected in full by said John W. Brady on or about December 5, 1904, and that said Brady retained $1,350 as his official fee in said suit of the State of Texas against the J. M. Guffey Petroleum Company and the Beaumont Confederated Oil & Pipe Line Company. That out of said fees he paid under contract to the said ‘two attorneys, two-thirds thereof, for their services therein. That the settlement which resulted in said judgment and collection was at the time approved by said C. K. Bell, Attorney General, as the construction of *414 the Anti-Trust Laws of 1899 and 1903, by which the said John W. Brady retained one-fourth of said judgment as his official fees therein.

“3%. It is agreed that in all the judgments rendered in the cases in which collections were made and in which penalties were assessed for violations of the Act of 1899, such penalties were assessed for the minimum penalty of $300 per day for each day’s violations, as provided in said Act of 1899, and collections made accordingly.

“4. That the suit No. 121,046, the State of Texas v. The United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co. et al., was filed while C. K. Bell was Attorney General, but was settled a short time after R. V. Davidson qualified as Attorney General.

“5. That all the suits named in plaintiff’s motion, including those filed and settled upder the administration of Attorney General Bell, as well as under the administration of Attorney General Davidson, were settled by agreed judgments, approved in terms and amounts by the Attorney General. That all of the fees retained by the said John W. Brady in said suits were retained by him in good faith, believing that he was entitled thereto under the law. That in so retaining said fees he relied upon and followed the construction given to the anti-trust laws of 1899 and 1903, by Attorneys General Bell and Davidson, viz.: That the repeal of the Act of 1899 by the Act of 1903, with the saving clause in the latter Act, had the effect of keeping alive the Act of 1899 as to all acts committed before the Act of 1903 took effect, not only as to the penalties named in the former Act, but also as to all its machinery and provisions for the enforcement of the same, including the compensation of 35 percent to county and district attorneys. That such construction is still adhered to by the Attorney General’s Department of this State.

“6. That upon the faith of said construction by the Attorney General’s Department, the said John W. Brady, with the knowledge and sanction of said Department, employed attorneys and made contracts with them for contingent interest in said fees, based upon the construction that he was entitled to 35 percent of the recovery under the Act of 1899, to assist him and the Attorney-General in the prosecution of each of said suits. That said attorneys actively assisted in the work of preparing said cases for trial, and performed all legal services therein required of them by the said John W. Brady or by the Attornev-General. That out of the fees received by him in said cases the said Brady has paid out to said attorneys and in expenses for procuring testimony and preparing the same for trial over two-thirds of the fees actually retained by him upon the faith of said construction.”

The Anti-Trust Law of 1903 contained this language:

“That all laws and parts of laws in conflict with this Act be and the same are hereby repealed, . . . and that an Act entitled ‘An Act- to prohibit pools, trusts, monopolies and conspiracies to. control business and prices of articles, to prevent the formation or operation of pools, trusts, monopolies and combinations of charters of corporations that violate the terms of this Act, and to authorize the institution and prosecution of suits therefor,’ approved May 35, 1899, and published and known as Chapter CXLVI of the General Laws of the *415 Twenty-sixth Legislature, be and the same are hereby expressly repealed,” etc. “Provided nothing in this Act shall be held or construed to affect or destroy any rights of the State of Texas to recover penalties or forfeit charters of domestic corporations, or prohibit foreign corporations from doing business in this State, for acts committed before this Act takes effect.”

The only question in this case is, did that language, quoted from the Act of 1903, repeal this part of the Anti-Trust Law of 1899:

“The prosecuting attorney shall receive for his compensation one-fourth of the penalty collected; provided, the fees allowed the prosecuting attorney representing the State, provided for in this section, shall be over and above the fees allowed him by the general fee bill now in force.”

It is a well established rule of construction that when a statute repeals another with a saving clause or proviso attached by which the right of some person or of the State is reserved, such proviso or saving clause must be strictly construed, and will not be held to embrace anything which is not fairly within its terms. (Endlich on Int. Stat., sec. 186; Sutherland Stat. Const., sec. 223.)

When a statute repeals a pre-existing law with a clause saving the rights of the State, as in this case, the right of action only is preserved. The right to recover or to enforce the right under such conditions must be prosecuted under the new law or some other existing law. Endlich Int. Stat., sec. 487; Aaron v. State, 40 Ala., 307; Farmer v. People, 77 Ill., 322; Brotherton v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
118 S.W. 128, 102 Tex. 408, 1909 Tex. LEXIS 167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-brady-tex-1909.