State v. International & Great Northern Railway Co.

179 S.W. 867, 107 Tex. 349, 1915 Tex. LEXIS 163
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 10, 1915
DocketNo. 2670.
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 179 S.W. 867 (State v. International & Great Northern Railway Co.) 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. International & Great Northern Railway Co., 179 S.W. 867, 107 Tex. 349, 1915 Tex. LEXIS 163 (Tex. 1915).

Opinion

Mb. Justice YANTTS

delivered the opinion of the court.

Suit was by the State of Texas to recover penalties for the alleged violation of articles 6581 and 6582, Eevised Statutes, 1911, which required the erection and maintenance of a building or shed by every person, corporation, or receiver, engaged in constructing or repairing railroad cars, trucks or other railroad equipment, and provided a penalty of from fifty to one hundred dollars for each ten days of its violation.

The Act has several exemptions, by the terms of which such person, corporation, or receiver, would be absolved from its penalties. Among these exemptions is the provision that the Act shall not apply at “points where it is necessary to make light repairs only.” A general demurrer was sustained to the State’s petition upon the ground that the Act was too indefinite in its terms to be enforcible, the trial court holding that the term, “Light repairs is a relative term, and wholly unintelligible.” The Court of Civil Appeals affirmed the judgment of the trial court, adopting its opinion, which was in writing, for its own opinion, and which can be found in 165 S. W., 892.

The Act of the Legislature which is assailed, is as follows:

“Art. 6581. Every person, corporation, or receiver, engaged' in constructing or repairing railroad cars, trucks or other railroad equipment, shall erect and maintain a building or shed at every station or other point where as many as five men are regularly employed on such repair work, the building or shed to cover a sufficient portion of its track so as to provide that all men regularly employed in the construction and repair of ears, trucks, or other railroad equipment shall be sheltered from rain and protected from other inclement weather. The provisions of this article shall not apply at points where less than five men are regularly employed in the repair service, nor at division terminals, or other points where .it is necessary to make light repairs only on cars, nor to cars loaded with time or perishable freight, nor to cars when trains are being held for the movement of said cars.

“Art. 6582. Any person, corporation, or receiver who shall violate the provisions of the foregoing article shall be liable to the State of Texas for a penalty in any sum not less than fifty dollars nor more than one hundred dollars, and each ten days of such failure or refusal to so comply shall be considered a separate infraction authorizing the recovery of a separate penalty; provided, however, that all persons, *352 corporations, or receivers, affected by the preceding article, shall have until June 1, 1911, within which to comply with the provisions thereof.”

The holding of the trial court, and of the Court of Civil Appeals, that the statute in question was too indefinite in its terms to be en-forcible, presents the only question for our determination. It will be observed that the Act of the Legislature in question is penal in its nature, and for this reason it should be strictly construed. Construing it strictly, if its provisions are vague and uncertain of meaning to a degree that those engaged in the line of industry affected by the Act as operatives and managers of such industry could not comprehend its meaning, then the Act should be held inoperative and void for uncertainty of meaning. The provisions of the Act, in order for it to be enforcible, should be plain enough in meaning for those operating the industry affected by it to know and realize whether by engaging in an act of repair they would breach its terms. If the Act meets and fulfills the requirements of this rule, it would be sufficiently definite in meaning to be operative. If it is not sufficiently plain in meaning for those engaged in the line of industry affected to - so understand its terms and provisions, then the Act would and should be held void for uncertainty, as it would be inexcusable for a government to fine or punish its citizens for an infraction of a law which in its terms could not be understood by them. But it is equally true that if the Act of the Legislature is as definite in meaning as the nature of the subject would allow, no more than this should be expected to meet the rule of certainty required; to hold otherwise would be to nullify the power of the Legislature to legislate at all on a proper subject for its consideration.

It is worthy of notice to observe that the term “light repairs,” as used in said section, is not a portion of the act which penalizes the infraction of its provision, and not a portion of the Act which creates the quasi penal offense, but the term is used in a provision exempting from suit or prosecution under the Act the persons affected by its provisions. It is one of the defenses to a prosecution under the Act, which the Act itself provides for the benefit of those engaged in the construction' and repair of railroad equipment. As used ■ in this connection we think the meaning of that portion of the Act of the Legislature which creates the offense is not rendered as uncertain as it would be if the term “light repairs” constituted an ingredient of the offense itself.

The subject of legislation was the protection of those engaged in repair work from exposure to inclement weather. This was a proper subject for legislation, and the Legislature was within its constitutional powers in considering the subject; it was their duty, however, in passing upon it to write the law plain enough to advise persons affected by it when and under what circumstances their acts and conduct would breach its terms. At the same time, no one should contend that it was the Legislature’s duty to accomplish in expression *353 •of clearness that which is impossible. While within their jurisdiction they were legislating upon a proper subject, could the Legislature have made this exemption any plainer in meaning than they did make it? The term “light repairs” is composed of two words of common and constant use by those engaged in every line of employment, .and when used together should be reasonably plain in meaning to any person; and when the term “light repairs” is considered by those engaged in a special line of industry and calling, such as the railroad business, it is possible that it might have a technical meaning in common use as applied to such industry, and in such event the expression '“light repairs” would" mean what it is commonly understood to mean among those engaged in such special line of industry. But aside from the possibility of this technical meaning, the inquiry is pertinent as to whether the Legislature could have used plainer words than “light repairs,” and conveyed a clearer meaning than that term imports. What clearer expression could have been used? What could have been provided in the Act to make the meaning plainer? It occurs to us that a more definite expression could not have been used to cover the subject intended. If a definition of the term “light repairs” had been attempted, it would have been impossible of construction unless a catalogue of all repairs that might be considered light was embraced in the Act. This would have been indeed a difficult, if not an impossible task, when all the separate parts of the complicated machinery in use in the equipment and operation, of railroads which might need repairs were considered, and the character of the repairs to each of said pieces of machinery, whether “light” or otherwise, were taken- into account.

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Bluebook (online)
179 S.W. 867, 107 Tex. 349, 1915 Tex. LEXIS 163, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-international-great-northern-railway-co-tex-1915.