Woods v. Ball

166 S.W. 4, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 608
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 8, 1914
DocketNo. 5257.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 166 S.W. 4 (Woods v. Ball) 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
Woods v. Ball, 166 S.W. 4, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 608 (Tex. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

FLY, C. J.

T. M. Dubose and John Ball, appellees herein, representing themselves as “resident citizens, qualified voters, and owners of real and personal property in that portion of Duval county placed within the county of Dunn under the terms of an act hereinafter mentioned,” applied for an injunction against S. I-I. Woods, county judge of Duval county, E. Carrillo, A. Parr, J. W. Shaw, and J. M. Corkill, commissioners of said county, and the commissioners’ court of Duval county, alleging that, during the first called session of the Thirty-Third Legislature (chapter 35), an act was passed to create Dunn county out of a portion of Duval county; that appellants were preparing to divide the county into precincts, and to call an election of officers in said Dumi county, and to locate the county seat; that the act of the Legislature is in contravention of that part of section 1 of article 9 of the Constitution of the state of Texas as follows: “No new county shall be created so as to approach nearer than twelve (12) miles of the county seat of a county from which it may, in whole or in part, be taken;” that it is also in contravention of section 56 of article 3 of said Constitution, as follows: “The Legislature shall'not, except as otherwise provided in this Constitution, pass any local or special law, authorizing: * * * Locating or changing county seat, * * * creating offices, or prescribing the powers and duties of officers, in counties, cities, towns, election or school districts.” It was further alleged “that a point on the north line of Dunn county .is eleven and forty-three hundredths (11.43) miles from the county seat, being the unincorporated town of San Diego;” that the courthouse in San Diego is 11.986 miles from a point on the north line of Dunn county, being less than 12 miles from said line. A plat and field notes showing the distances between San Diego and the north line of .Dunn county was attached to and made a part of the petition, as well as the field notes of the north line of said eorfnty. It was admitted in the answer that the 'allegations in the petition as to the distances of the north line of Dunn county from the county seat and from the courthouse, as to the plat, survey, and field notes, and as to other material facts, were true, and they were so found by the district *5 judge, and he also found “that only about six (6) miles along the nearest boundary line between Duval and Dunn counties, as shown by the maps attached to plaintiff’s petition, is it less than twelve (12) miles to the nearest point in San Diego, the county seat of Duval county, and an arc with a twelve-mile radius drawn from such point would cut into Dunn county six miles long and one-half (%) mile wide at its greatest depth.” The court held that the act creating Dunn county was violative of section 1, subd. 2, of article 9, and section 56 of article 3 of the state Constitution, and an injunction was granted against appellant to restrain them and their successors in office from dividing Dunn county into precincts, and from holding an election therein; and that the territory sought to be put in the county called Dunn by the Legislature be restored to Duval county.

[1] It is with reluctance that this court entertains an attack upon the constitutionality of a statute enacted by the Legislature of the state, but it is a proposition well established by the American courts that the Legislature is not the ultimate arbiter of the constitutionality of its acts, but such authority is lodged in the judicial branch of the government. The right of judicial censorship over statutes has been often assailed, and not to a greater extent than by the strenuous ex-President of the United States, who has founded a new party, founded, at least in part, upon antagonism to what he denounces as “judicial nullification,” and who, as a balm for ills, real or imaginary, would submit the constitutionality of the laws of the Legislature, • as well as 'the decisions of courts, to the plebiscite, who are counseled by him to study the history of France, whifch gives untrammeled power to the legislative branch of its government; the only right reserved in the French Constitution against usurpation of power and tyranny by the Legislature being the right of revolution. The American conception ot government is of a different kind from that of the Frenchman, and we doubt that a citizen of our republic can gain any helpful knowledge of popular government by a. study of the French system. Ours is a government in which its attributes and powers have been confided to certain distinct branches, each of which is a check upon the other, with the judicial system as the ultimate resort whenever an attempt is made by any branch of the government to exceed its powers or interfere with the charter of our rights, the organic law of the land. The power intrusted to, or assumed by, the judiciary of passing upon the constitutionality of the acts of other branches of the government has been acquiesced in so long as to become a necessary part of the American system. The power intrusted to the courts has at times, doubtless, been abused, but the remedy is not in revolution or the adoption of imperfect and undemocratic methods of other governments that have lagged far behind the American government in the progress towards the establishment of popular institutions.

A law cannot be held to be constitutional merely because the Legislature passed it. No one is willing to attribute such infallibility to a Legislature, and the courts should never hesitate to protect from assault the rights secured by the supreme law of the land. As said by Justice Harlan, in Smyth v. Ames, 169 U. S. 466, 18 Sup. Ct. 418, 42 L. Ed. 819: “The idea that any Legislature, state or federal, can conclusively determine for the people and for the courts that what it enacts in the form of law, or what it authorizes its agents to do, is consistent with 'the fundamental law is in opposition to the theory of our institutions. The duty rests upon all courts, federal and state, when their jurisdiction is properly invoked, to see to it that no right secured by the supreme law of the land is impaired or destroyed by legislation. This function and duty of the judiciary distinguishes the American system from all other systems of government. The perpetuity of our institutions and the liberty which is enjoyed under them depend, in no small degree, upon the power given the judiciary to declare null and void all legislation that is clearly repugnant to the supreme law of the land.”

These prefatory words have been written, not because of any doubt of the courts having full right and authority to pass upon acts of the Legislature, but in view of the contention of appellees that, “the Legislature having passed the act, it cannot be inquired into.” No man, nor set of men, in America has been clothed with power to do things which cannot be inquired into by some agency of the people, and infallibility of word or action is a status that is conceded to no branch of the government.

[2] It is also insisted that the presumption will prevail that the Legislature acted upon sufficient facts when the law was enacted. Such presumption might prevail in the absence of evidence, but it cannot be expected that this court will indulge in presumption or surmise in the face of the proof that the Legislature, if it had the • facts, acted directly against them. We must conclude that the Legislature was not in possession of the facts, or it would not have acted in defiance of the Constitution of the state.

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Bluebook (online)
166 S.W. 4, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 608, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woods-v-ball-texapp-1914.