Williams v. Taylor, District Clerk

19 S.W. 156, 83 Tex. 667, 1892 Tex. LEXIS 802
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 11, 1892
DocketNo. 3466.
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 19 S.W. 156 (Williams v. Taylor, District Clerk) 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
Williams v. Taylor, District Clerk, 19 S.W. 156, 83 Tex. 667, 1892 Tex. LEXIS 802 (Tex. 1892).

Opinion

CAIRES, Associate Justice.—

This is presented asan agreed case. Appellant filed a petition in the District Court of the Forty-eighth Judicial District of Tarrant County against Rush Loyd and others in an action of trespass to try title, and demanded of appellee, as clerk of that court, that he should issue citation to defendants returnable to a term of the court alleged to begin on the second Monday in May, 1892. The clerk refused to make the citation returnable as requested, and this suit was brought to compel him to do so. An alternatiim writ of mandamus was issued, but upon final hearing the peremptory writ was refused and the suit was dismissed.

The Forty-eighth Judicial District of the State was created by an act of the Legislature, which was approved February 11, 1891. That act provided, that the regular terms of the court should be held on the second Mondays in February and October of each year; but at a subsequent day of the same session of the Legislature another act was passed, which, in addition to the terms formerly prescribed, proiúded for a third, to begin on the second Monday in May. The appellee claims that this latter act never became a law, and upon the decision of this question the determination of this suit depends. The grounds upon which the validity of the act is assailed are stated as folloAvs in the agreement upon which the case is submitted to this court:

“1. That'the Journals of the Senate of the Twenty-second Legislature, in which said bill originated, showed that it had not been presented and referred to and reported from a committee at least three days before the final adjournment of the Legislature.

“2. That the necessity for the suspension of the rule requiring bills to be read on three several days in each house was not sufficiently stated in said act.”

*671 The power of the courts, under the form of government common to the States of this Union, to declare void an act of the Legislature, on the ground that such legislation is prohibited by the Constitution of the State, was questioned at an early day in the history of our jurisprudence; but that the power exists is now settled beyond controversy. As to the authority of the courts in such cases, there should never have been any serious question. In passing a law, the Legislature acts under the authority conferred by a written Constitution; and whether or not it lias exceeded its authority in the passage of any particular act is a judicial question. The Constitution is the superior law; and when attempted legislation conflicts with its restrictions and purports to make a law, which is thereby prohibited, it is clearly the duty of the courts to declare such legislation void and to give it no effect. In every such case the vice of the enactment appears upon its face, and no one who takes the proper steps to inform himself as to the law need be misled by it.

But in addition to certain laws which the Constitutions of most of our States in terms more or less explicit prohibit their respective Legislatures from making, it has become customary to prescribe in the fundamental law certain rules of procedure by which the two bodies which compose the Legislature are to be guided in framing and passing statutes. Such is the Constitution of our own State; and it is for the supposed violation of these rules of procedure that the act in question in this case is claimed to be void. It would seem upon first blush that there should be a broad distinction between the authority to declare an act of the Legislature void for want of power to pass the law in any manner and the jurisdiction to annul a statute upon the ground that some provision of the Constitution as to the mode of its passage has not been observed. The same distinction exists with reference to the judgments of the courts themselves. If when the validity of a judgment is called in question it appear that the court was without jurisdiction—that is to say, that it had no power to hear and determine the case and to render any judgment in the premises—the judgment will be held void in any suit in which its validity may be involved. But if the court have jurisdiction, no other court would have power in any collateral proceeding to revise its judgment, however irregular its proceedings may have been. Much stronger reasons exist why we should hesitate to annul the action of the Legislature upon grounds of irregularity in its procedure than exist when we are asked to declare void the judgment of a court. Our Constitution devolves the executive, legislative, and judicial functions of the government each upon a separate magistracy, and declares, that no person or collection of persons attached to either of the departments shall exercise the functions belonging to either of the others. Const. 1876, art 2, sec. 1. The courts certainly have no power to reverse or amend the statutes passed *672 by the Legislature; and we think they should ponder well before undertaking to revise the proceedings of either house of the Legislature, and to declare its action void merely on account of its failure to observe some rule of procedure prescribed in the Constitution.

That it was competent to confer such a power upon the courts by the organic law we see no good reason to doubt. But when we consider the consequences of the exercise of such power we think the authority should very plainly appear in the Constitution before the courts should undertake to exercise it. In those tribunals in which it has been held that the Journals of the two branches of the Legislature could be looked to in order to determine whether or not the requirements of the Constitution had been observed in passing a statute with a view to test its validity, the decision has been placed upon the ground that the Constitution required each house to keep a journal of its proceedings; and that the object of that requirement is to provide evidence by which the courts may determine whether the provisions of the Constitution have been complied with or not. The Constitution of our State does not declare such to be the object of requiring the journals to be kept, and we know of none that does. On the contrary, we think the more obvious purpose of the provision was to preserve a record of the action of the individual members of'the house, to the end that their constituents should fix upon them a proper responsibility for their conduct. In the absence of some declaration or language in the Constitution showing that it was intended that the Journals of the two houses should have a conclusive effect in determining whether the acts of the Legislature have properly ripened into laws, we should hesitate long before conceding to them such an effect by remote implications.

Ho one can allege ignorance of the law as an excuse for his conduct. He must determine the law for himself and act upon it at his peril. The policy of modern legislation is not only to declare the statutory law with clearness and certainty, and to promulgate it with the greatest publicity, but also to stamp upon each statute evidence of unquestioned authenticity. That evidence at common law was the enrolled bill, and behind it the courts were not permitted to go. Rex v. Arundel, Hob., 110.

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Bluebook (online)
19 S.W. 156, 83 Tex. 667, 1892 Tex. LEXIS 802, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-taylor-district-clerk-tex-1892.