Texas Department of Public Safety v. Morris

436 S.W.2d 124, 12 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 167, 1968 Tex. LEXIS 364
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 31, 1968
DocketB-912
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 436 S.W.2d 124 (Texas Department of Public Safety v. Morris) 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
Texas Department of Public Safety v. Morris, 436 S.W.2d 124, 12 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 167, 1968 Tex. LEXIS 364 (Tex. 1968).

Opinion

POPE, Justice.

The Department of Public Safety gave notice to the eighty-three respondents to surrender their licenses and automobile registrations. The Department had earlier suspended the licenses and registrations, and the respondents appealed the suspension orders to the County Court of Shelby County, where none of them had ever been a resident. The Shelby County Court issued orders which stayed each of the suspension orders, but the Department ignored them, insisting that the Shelby County Court had no jurisdiction over any of the suspension orders. The respondents jointly filed this suit in Harris County after receiving the surrender notices. They asked for a declaratory judgment that the surrender notices are a nullity, and they assert their right to appeal from the notices to surrender. The courts below have sustained respondents’ prayer. 426 S.W.2d 290. The Department contends: (1) The Shelby County Court was without jurisdiction to entertain the appeals and grant orders which stayed the suspensions, and that the suspensions became final. (2) The Department did not have the burden of proof in this case, which was a purported appeal from notices of surrender after the suspensions became final. We reverse the judgment below and render judgment that the respondents take nothing.

The suspension orders, in our opinion, became final, because each respondent, after receiving the order, appealed to a court which had no jurisdiction to entertain his appeal. The eighty-three respondents at different times and places had accidents or owned vehicles which were involved in accidents. Following each accident, the Department took the steps necessary for a suspension of the driver’s license and owner’s registration, as required by the Safety Responsibility Law. A brief review of the law’s requirements and the Department’s action is necessary to an understanding of the case.

Section 4, Article 6701h, Vern.Tex.Civ. Stats., requires an operator of a vehicle involved in an accident to make a report to the Department. Upon receipt of such report the Department, in compliance with Section 5(a) of the Act, must determine the amount of security which is sufficient in its judgment to satisfy any judgments for damages resulting from such accident. The Department is required by Section 5 (b), Article 6701h, within sixty days of its receipt of an accident report, to order a suspension of the license and registration *126 of each operator and owner of the vehicle involved in an accident, unless the operator or owner deposits security in the sum determined by the Department. Section 5(b) requires the Department to send the operator and owner a notice of its suspension order, which notice must show the amount required as security and must be sent not less than ten days before the effective date of the suspension. The Department complied with all of these statutory requirements with respect to each of the accidents and each of the eighty-three operators or owners of vehicles involved in the accidents.

The respondents, as operators and owners of the vehicles involved in accidents, had the right to appeal from the Department’s suspension orders. Section 2(b), Article 6701h accorded them this right, but the statutory right to appeal was “in the county wherein the person aggrieved by such order or act resides, * * *.” Each of the respondents, instead of complying with the order of the Department to deposit security within the time permitted for an appeal, chose the alternative remedy to file a petition for appeal and obtain an order to stay the suspension order.

Each of the appeals by the respondents was by a petition filed in the County Court of Shelby County, which court also issued stay orders in each appeal. The petitions filed by each respondent and the stay orders of the Shelby County Court omitted any statement about the residence of the one appealing. None of the respondents has ever resided in Shelby County. The Department ignored all of the stay orders, since appeals were taken to and the stay orders were rendered by a court which lacked jurisdiction.

The respondent operators and owners say that the Shelby County Court is a court of general jurisdiction, the stay orders issued by that court are valid on their face, and the Department could not ignore them, since that amounts to a collateral attack upon the orders of the Shelby County Court. We do not agree with the contention that the Shelby County Court, when acting on appeals from orders of the Department of Public Safety under Article 6701h, was exercising its general jurisdiction. An appeal from orders suspending drivers’ licenses and owners’ registrations is a special proceeding which exists only by reason of special statutory authorization.

Schwantz v. Texas Department of Public Safety, 415 S.W.2d 12 (Tex.Civ.App. 1967, writ ref.) settled the question about jurisdiction on appeal from orders of the Department of Public Safety. In an opinion which this court approved, the court said:

“No right of appeal from the orders involved in the instant case, therefore, exists ‘in the absence of statutory authority; and where such authority is given the proceeding authorizing it is a special one and governed strictly by the provisions of the authorizing statute.’ City of Strawn v. Board of Water Engineers, Tex.Civ.App., 134 S.W.2d 397, 398, writ refused. ‘The general rule is that where the cause of action and remedy for its enforcement are derived not from the common law but from the statute, the statutory provisions are mandatory and exclusive, and must be complied with in all respects or the action is not maintainable.’ Mingus v. Wadley (1926), 115 Tex. 551, 285 S.W. 1084, 1087. See Goff v. State Board of Insurance, Tex.Civ. App., 319 S.W.2d 383, 385, no writ.

“In Cunningham v. Robison, 104 Tex. 227, 136 S.W. 441, the Supreme Court considered the statute governing removal of disabilities of minority (now Art. 5922, V.A.C.S.), under which, it is enacted, the petition shall be filed in the District Court where the minor resides. The Supreme Court noted that the statute conferred a ‘special authority’ and a ‘special jurisdiction’ on the court. It was held the provision was jurisdictional, and the court had ‘no jurisdiction except over such minors as may reside within the county.’ ”

*127 Mingus v. Wadley, 115 Tex. 551, 285 S.W. 1084, 1089, (1926) stated the rule:

“The rule is well settled in most jurisdictions and in this state ‘that there is no presumption of jurisdiction where a court, although it is one of general jurisdiction, exercises special statutory powers in a special statutory manner or otherwise than according to the course of the common law, since under such circumstances the court stands with reference to the special power exercised on the same footing with courts of limited and inferior jurisdiction.”

We conclude that the attempted appeals from the Department’s suspension orders in Shelby County, and the stay orders issued by the County Judge of that county were void. See, City of Strawn v.

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Bluebook (online)
436 S.W.2d 124, 12 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 167, 1968 Tex. LEXIS 364, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-department-of-public-safety-v-morris-tex-1968.