Sterrett v. Gibson

168 S.W. 16, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 1089
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 3, 1914
DocketNo. 5324.
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 168 S.W. 16 (Sterrett v. Gibson) 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
Sterrett v. Gibson, 168 S.W. 16, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 1089 (Tex. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

FLY, C. J.

This is a suit instituted by appellee against W. G. Sterrett, Game, Fish, and Oyster Commissioner of the State of Texas, hereinafter styled Commissioner, and W. E. Everhart and Joe A. Williams, deputies of the Commissioner, for $10,000 damages and to restrain them from executing certain orders issued by the Commissioner in regard to fishing in the waters described therein. The court issued a temporary injunction restraining appellants from executing such orders, and this appeal has been perfected from that restraining order.

One of the orders declared certain described waters closed against fishing, and the other gave notice of rules to govern fishermen and is as follows:

“All American citizens desiring to fish for market with nets and seines in the open waters of the Gulf of Mexico and in the open waters of the Laguna Madre, are hereby notified that they will be permitted to carry seines or nets to the Gulf through Corpus Christi Bass under the following rules:
“1st. Such seines or nets shall only be carried through such pass on each Tuesday of the week between the hours of sunup and sundown.
“2nd. In going to such other waters of the Gulf through the pass, the seines or nets shall at once be carried or taken to a point at least a mile from such pass.
“3rd. Persons desiring to carry or take seines or nets through the closed waters where the Laguna Madre and Corpus Christi Bay meet will be permitted to carry and take such seines or nets through such closed waters on Wednesday of each week under the following rules:
“1st. Such seines or nets shall only be carried through such closed waters between the hours of sunrise and sunset.
“2nd. Such seines and nets shall not be left in or on such closed waters or on boats in such waters.
“Any seines or nets found within one mile of Corpus Christi Pass whether in the water, on land, or boats, will be at once destroyed, and persons either in possession of them or placing them within one mile of such pass,_ will be prosecuted and on conviction they will be deprived of their licenses to fish for market.
“All seines or nets found in the waters or on boats within the closed waters of Laguna Madre, will be at once destroyed and the persons either in possession of them or who, has placed them in such closed waters will be prosecuted, and on conviction, will be deprived of their licenses as recorded fishermen.
“Where boats are anchored in any of the closed waters mentioned, they are under the law prohibited from having seines or nets on their boats.”

[1,2] The Commissioner filed a plea of privilege to be sued in Travis county and also pleaded that no court except the Supreme Court of Texas had jurisdiction to entertain such an action against him, for the reason that the Game, Fish, and Oyster Commissioner is a member of the executive department of the state of Texas. If it be conceded that the Commissioner is a head of a department as contemplated in exception 20 under article 1830, Rev. Stats, of 1911, still *18 this suit is not one for mandamus, but for damages and injunction, and the statute wouid have no application. We do not think, however, that the Commissioner comes with1 in the purview of the statute.

[3] The statute which gives the Supreme Court exclusive jurisdiction to issue the writ of mandamus or injunction, or any other mandatory or compulsory writ of process against any of the officers of the executive department of this state confines that jurisdiction to such named writs as are issued— “to order or compel the performance of any act or duty which, by the laws of this state, they, or either of them, are authorized to perform, whether such act or duty be judicial, ministerial or discretionary.” Rev. St. 1911, art. 5732.

The exclusive jurisdiction of the Supreme Court is confined to cases in which it is sought to compel an officer of the executive department to do or perform an act or acts enjoined upon him by the laws of the state, and the statute does not apply to cases in which the rights of person or property are invaded by such officer. In such cases swift, decisive action is demanded, and redress would be practically denied for trespasses and torts committed by members of the executive department. What act or duty is appellee seeking to order or compel the Commissioner to perform that is authorized by the laws of Texas? He is not seeking to compel him to perform any act or duty, but to restrain him from performing an act or duty enjoined upon him by the laws of the state, which appellee claims are invalid. The district court had jurisdiction of the cause.

[4] The act of the Thirty-Third Legislature, Gen. Laws of 1913, p. 268, which amends articles 901 to 923, inclusive, of the Penal Code, and adds thereto articles 923a to 923k, inclusive, and repeals articles 868 and 869, is assailed by appellee as being incapable of enforcement, because it provides two different penalties for the same offense. As upholding this contention, it is claimed that as article 906 provides that:

“Any one violating any of the provisions of this act shall be deemed guilty of a misdemean- or and, upon conviction thereof, shall be fined in any sum not less than twenty-five nor more than two hundred dollars”

—and other articles in the act provide other and different penalties, the act is inconsistent, unintelligible, and wholly inoperative. The word, “act,” used in article 906, clearly refers to the article, and not to the whole law made up of different articles defining different offenses and providing different penalties. The construction sought to be placed upon the statute is violative of the rules of statutory construction. In construing it, every part of the statute must be viewed in connection with the whole so as to harmonize all the parts, and that construction must be given that will sustain and not destroy the law. Another rule is that statutes must be construed according to rules of reason and ■common sense and conformably to the intention of the Legislature. In this instance the Legislature was passing an act to secure protection for the fish and oyster industries, and to punish the acts of those who would destroy those industries if not restrained by the strong arm of the law. Each article of the act is a separate act, complete in itself, rendering criminal the doing or failing to. do certain things, and providing a punishment therefor. In one, it makes it unlawful not to scatter culls, and provides a punishment; in another, it makes it an offense to catch fish, turtle, terrapin, or shrimp in certain waters with seines, dragnets, fykes, set nets, trammel nets, traps, dams, or weirs, and so on with each separate article. It is reasonable to so construe article 906 as to make it refer to its own provisions alone, as was clearly the intent of the Legislature, and it should be upheld. Railway v. Gross, 47 Tex. 428. As said by the Supreme Court in the case of Russell v. Farquhar, 55 Tex. 355, in discussing an attempt to construe statutes by the mere literal meaning of the words in which they are couched:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
168 S.W. 16, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 1089, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sterrett-v-gibson-texapp-1914.