Whitaker v. Dillard

16 S.W. 1084, 81 Tex. 359, 1891 Tex. LEXIS 1370
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJune 12, 1891
DocketNo. 8001.
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 16 S.W. 1084 (Whitaker v. Dillard) 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
Whitaker v. Dillard, 16 S.W. 1084, 81 Tex. 359, 1891 Tex. LEXIS 1370 (Tex. 1891).

Opinion

STAYTON, Chief Justice.

This suit was brought by appellants, who are alleged and shown to be property owners and taxpayers in Bowie County, to restrain the county judge and commissioners of Bowie County from building a temporary court house or making any expenditure of money of the county for public purposes at a place which defendants claim was selected as the county seat at an election held on Hovember 25,1890, for the purpose of removing the county seat from Texarkana and locating it at the place claimed to have been thus selected.

They further sought to restrain these officers from removing any of the offices, books, records, furniture, or papers belonging to the county or the public offices thereof from the town of Texarkana to any other place, on the theory that at the election referred to no place other than Texarkana was selected for county seat.

The petition praying such relief was presented to the district judge on January 6, 1891, for the purpose of obtaining a temporary injunction, but the judge required notice of the application to be given to the defendants and set the application for hearing in chambers on the 13th of the month, and on the 15th the writ was refused and the cause directed to stand for hearing on its merits at the next regular term of the court, when the writ was again refused.

Prior to the final trial the buildings contracted for at the time injunction was first sought had been completed and paid for; and,' although there are averments in the petition to the effect that plaintiffs fear that defendants will make other expenditures of money for the purpose of making other improvements deemed necessary for county purposes at the place claimed to have been selected as the county seat at the election before referred to, it is, to say the least, doubtful if they allege such threatened injuries as would justify the issuance of an injunction; while on the other hand it is made to appear that no intention to erect other buildings or incur other expenses at the new county seat existed *362 at time of trial; but that such buildings and expenditures would be ' .necessary at some time was shown, if the- county seat should remain permanently at the place where the temporary court house had been erected.

As the writ of injunction is used to prevent injuries, and not to afford remedy for injury inflicted, this appeal might be disposed of on the ground that the acts which it was the purpose of this suit to prevent had been accomplished when this cause was tried, in the absence of clear averment of further threatened injury such as plaintiffs as taxpayers would have the right to prevent; but in view of the questions out of which this litigation arises, and of the expressed wish of the parties for an expression of opinion by this court upon these questions, we have thought it proper to consider them.

Prior to November 25,1890, Texarkana was the county seat of Bowie County, but on that day an election was held which it is claimed by appellees resulted in the selection of a place including the geographical center of the county for the future county seat; while it is claimed by appellants that such election was not legally held, because the county judge did not enter the order for the election in the minutes of the Commissioners Court, and because the place to which the removal was sought was not designated with necessary certainty.

The statute regulating elections for the removal of county seats requires the county judge on proper application “to make an order in writing upon the minutes pf said Commissioners Court for the holding of an election at the various voting precincts in said county on a day therein named,” and it is claimed that this was not done, and that for this reason the election was illegal.

The facts with reference to the order are that the order was entered in what is termed by the clerk, who testified in the case, “The Com-, missioners Court docket, * * * which contains a number of orders of the Commissioners Court and county judge which have not been copied in the minute book of the Commissioners Court,” and this book seems to have been used to record matters affecting elections in the county; but it was shown that the Commissioners Court kept what was known as a “minute book,” in which the order was not entered.

It is not necessary that the County Commissioners Court shall keep only one book in which to make a record of. its proceedings, but it may keep books in which proceedings relating to some particular matters may be properly recorded, while proceedings relating to other matters are recorded in other books.

The statute provides that the County Commissioners “Court shall cause to be procured and kept in the clerk’s office suitable books in which shall be recorded the proceedings of each term of the court,” and there can be no doubt that each book kept and used for this pur *363 pose is within the meaning of the law a minute book and the entries therein made minutes.

It seems to us that the objection now under consideration is without facts to support it, and.it becomes unnecessary to consider whether under the particular statute the election could be held illegal if it appeared that the order had never been entered at all, in the absence of some other fact affecting the fairness of the election.

In Ewing v. Duncan, decided at the present term (ante, p. 230), it was held that the failure to enter an order in the minutes of the Commissioners Court directing the holding of an election for the organization of a new county, which included the selection of a county seat, would not render the election illegal.

The application for election ordered and held was one asking an election to determine whether the county seat should remain at Texarkana or be removed to the geographical center of Bowie County; and it is claimed that the order for the election and the election were invalid, “because the petition to the county judge to order an election for removal of county seat did not name any place to be voted for; the geographical center not being a place as contemplated by the laws authorizing the removals of county seats;” and “because there was no such place as the geographical center at the date of the election; the said center had no visible, material, or physical existence at that time, and the voters did not and could not know for. what place nor where they were voting to remove the county seat.”

We do not understand that the statute requires a petition for an election to remove a county seat, nor an order directing an election for that purpose, to state to what point it is desired to remove a county seat, nor that when an election for such a purpose is ordered the people may not vote to place the county seat at any place that may suit them, just as fully as they may select and vote for any person at a general election for county or State officers as they please. ¡Neither the application for the order for an election nor the order of the county judge can restrict the right of the qualified voters to vote for as many places as they please. The order must fix the time when and places where the election must be held, but it can place no restriction on the right of any voter to vote for any place he may prefer.

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Bluebook (online)
16 S.W. 1084, 81 Tex. 359, 1891 Tex. LEXIS 1370, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitaker-v-dillard-tex-1891.