Wharton County Drainage Dist. No. 1 v. Higbee

149 S.W. 381, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 913
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 18, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by49 cases

This text of 149 S.W. 381 (Wharton County Drainage Dist. No. 1 v. Higbee) 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
Wharton County Drainage Dist. No. 1 v. Higbee, 149 S.W. 381, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 913 (Tex. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

REESE, J.

This is an appeal from an orl der of the district judge of the Twenty-Third judicial district, sitting in chambers, granting a temporary injunction, returnable to the district court of Wharton county, upon the application of R. E. Higbee and others, against Wharton County Drainage District No. 1, its commissioners, and the county judge and other officers of Wharton county. The application for injunction was presented to the district judge on January 9, 1912. He set the matter down for hearing before him in chambers at Bay City in Matagorda county, on January 29, 1912. At the same time the judge made an order which appears on its face to grant the temporary injunction prayed for, and to order the defendants to appear before him at the time and place named and show cause why the “writ of injunction should not be made perpetual.” At the hearing it was agreed between counsel for the respective parties, and the district judge, that these terms of the order were incorrect, and that the order and writ granted thereunder were intended to have the effect of a *383 temporary restraining order, operative nntil the hearing of the application for the temporary writ, and that the hearing on the 29th of May was to determine whether the temporary writ should be granted. The matter was so treated, and the cause heard on the application for the temporary writ, which was granted.

A very brief statement of the issues presented by the voluminous pleadings will suffice for the purpose of disposing of the questions presented by this appeal.

It was alleged in the petition that upon the petition of the proper number of the freehold resident citizens, taxpayers, and further proceedings thereunder provided by chapter 40, Acts of 1907, as amended by chapter 13, Acts of 1909, Wharton County Drainage District No. 1 had been created and organized, and that the commissioners’ court had, by its order, provided for the issuance of bonds of said district to the amount of $350,000, and had levied a tax for the year 1911 of 101 cents on the $100 valuation of all property real and personal in said” district, to pay the interest and provide a sinking fund for the payment of the principal of said bonds at maturity. It was alleged that the petitioners were “resident citizens and property taxpayers of said drainage district and owners of real and personal property situated therein,” attaching a tabulated statement of said property and the value thereof; the taxes so assessed against this said property being stated to amount to $297.15. Certain irregularities in the holding of said election and counting the votes are charged in the petition wjhich need not be particularly stated here. There was an allegation that the commissioners’ court had passed an order accepting the bid of one My-rick for said bonds, and providing that the said Myrick be paid the sum of $35,000 as 'commissions on said sale. It is made to appear, as to this, however, by the answer of defendants and a certified copy of the order of the commissioners’ court, that said court by an order duly made on January 15, 1912, after the petition was filed and before the hearing, rescinded the order for the sale of the bonds to Myrick, and this rather ugly feature of the proceedings disappears from the ease. The petition, in addition to the irregularities charged in the proceedings for the formation of the district and issuance of the bonds, attacks the constitutionality of the law under which the district was organized and the bonds issued on the grounds: First, that by the terms of the law personal property taxpayers of the district are not given that equal protection of the laws guaranteed by the fourteenth amendment of the Constitution of' the United States, but are discriminated against in not being allowed to join in the petition for the creation of the district, and not being allowed to appear and represent their views upon the hearing as to whether the petition be granted and as to the adoption of the engineer’s report, by the express terms of the 'act; and, second, that the act provides for the levy of taxes for payment of the bonds without regard to special benefits to the property so taxed, or the owners thereof, in contravention to the “due process of law” provisions of both the state and federal Constitutions, and further that such taxation amounts to a taking of their property for a public use without due compensation in violation of the provisions of the Constitution of the state. Other grounds of attack upon the constitutionality of the act are presented in the brief, which wlill be further referred to hereafter.

The defendants pleaded in abatement that by reason of the provisions of article 24a, chapter 118, Acts 32d Legislature, no suit of this kind could be prosecuted except in the name of the state by its Attorney General, and further that the irregularities in holding the election and counting the votes, as set out in the petition, could only properly be availed of in a contest of said election as provided for by statute for that purpose, and that the validity of the organization of said drainage district could only be availed of in a proceeding in quo warranto, instituted by the state or under its authority, and that the validity of such organization could not be collaterally attacked by plaintiffs, as was here sought to be done. Further answering, defendants demurred generally to the petition and filed several special exceptions thereto, the particular nature of which need not be here set out. Defendants further answered as to the facts denying generally the allegations of the petition and specially certain portions thereof; the answer being sworn to by the county .judge, one of the defendants. It does not appear that the answer as to the facts was considered by the district judge. It is stated in appellees’ brief that it was not presented nor read, and this is probably true. The district judge overruled the plea in abatement and general demurrer and special exceptions of defendants, and granted the temporary injunction on the ground, as stated in the order, that the “drainage act under which the defendant drainage district was organized is unconstitutional and invalid.” It is not indicated in the order upon what particular grounds the act is held to be in violation of the Constitution.

By their fifteenth assignment of error it is urged by appellants that the district judge erred in overruling their general demurrer and in holding the drainage district act in question unconstitutional.

In addition to the grounds on which the constitutionality of the drainage act is attacked in the petition, appellees in their brief present the further contention that by reason of the commissions allowed the county judge on sale of the bonds, by .section 28 *384 ,of the act, that officer is disqualified to discharge the duties imposed upon him by the terms of the act by section 11 of article 5 of the Constitution, providing that “no judge shall sit in any cause where he may be interested,” and also that under the provisions of section 18, article 5 of the Constitution, defining the powers of commissioners’ courts, such court could not lawfully discharge the duties imposed upon it by the terms of the •drainage act.

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Bluebook (online)
149 S.W. 381, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 913, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wharton-county-drainage-dist-no-1-v-higbee-texapp-1912.