196 S.W. 247 | Tex. App. | 1917
Nothing to the contrary appearing in the record, we are inclined to think this court should assume that the vats were built before May 1, 1917, as directed in the order of the commissioners' court, and thereupon paid for; that the dipping of cattle was then commenced and thereafterwards carried on, as was further directed in the order: and that the cattle in Harrison county, including those belonging to appellants, have all been dipped, and the expense thereof paid by the county. If such assumptions should be indulged, then the appeal should be dismissed on the ground that (the alleged threatened unlawful acts having been consummated) to now grant an injunction as prayed for would be a useless act. 1 High on Injunctions, § 23. We will not pursue that course, however, but, being of the opinion it does not, sufficiently appear from the record that the court erred when he refused to grant appellants the temporary relief they sought, will affirm the judgment. In doing so, the conclusion reached with reference to the contentions appellants made will be briefly stated.
The first of these contentions is that the commissioners' court had no lawful right to use funds of the county for the purpose of building and charging vats and dipping cattle. It seems to be conceded that the "tick eradication law" approved April 8, 1913 (General Laws, p. 353) was in force in Harrison county at the time the order of the commissioners' court in question was entered. And it is conceded that by the terms of the act approved March 17, 1917 (General Laws, p. 107), which superseded said Act April 8, 1913, and which was in force at the time the judgment appealed from was rendered, the commissioners' court was authorized to use the county's funds for such purposes. The contention is that the act 1913 alone can be looked to, and that it does not confer such power on said court. We are inclined to think that the provision in the act 1913, which made it the duty of the commissioners' court "to co-operate with and assist the Live Stock Sanitary Commission in protecting the live stock of their respective counties from all contagious, infectious or communicable diseases, whether such exists within or outside of the county, and in other ways protecting the live stock interest of their counties," operated to confer upon the commissioners' court power not inhibited by section 7 of article 11 of the Constitution, to incur, and pay with the county's funds, such expense as was necessary to make effective assistance it was required to render to the Live Stock Sanitary Commission.
But we do not agree that the court below could not also look to the act 1917 for such power in the commissioners' court. That act was in force at the time the application for the temporary writ was acted upon; and, if such power then existed in the commissioners' court, the fact that it did not exist in them at the time they made the order of February 16, 1917, would not be a reason for granting the writ. The trial court should not have enjoined the commissioners' court from exercising power they then possessed, because they did not possess it at the time they entered the order providing for the vats.
Declaring that "all elections held prior to the taking effect of this act whereby any county in this state has by a majority vote, voted to eradicate ticks, is hereby in all things declared to be a valid election and is in all things ratified," the act of 1917 by its express terms repealed the act 1913. That the Legislature intended the provisions of the act 1917 to apply in counties where the tick eradication law of 1913 had been adopted cannot be doubted. That it had power to make the provisions of the later act apply where those of the repealed act formerly applied we think follows from the decision of the Supreme Court in Ex parte Dupree,
It is further insisted, however, that both the act 1913 and the act 1917 are violative of section 19 of article 1 of the state Constitution and section 1 of article 14 of the federal Constitution, in that they were "an unwarranted invasion of private property rights," because they required all cattle to be dipped, whether infected with ticks or not, and whether kept on the owner's premises or not. We think the acts were not violative of the provision in the state Constitution specified. Section 23 of article 16 of that Constitution authorized the Legislature to "pass laws for the regulation of live stock and the protection of stock raisers." Armstrong v. Traylor,
The other contention made by appellants is that it appeared that building the vats and dipping the cattle would be violative of that part of section 7 of article 11 of the Constitution which declares that:
"No debt for any purpose shall ever be incurred in any manner by any city or county unless provision is made, at the time of creating the same, for levying and collecting a sufficient tax to pay the interest thereon and provide at least two per cent. as the sinking fund."
It was shown that the commissioners' court regarded the expense to be incurred in building vats and dipping cattle as an ordinary one, and contemplated paying same out of the county's third class fund. It is insisted that it appeared that that fund was wholly insufficient to pay such expense and other ordinary expenses of the county, and that the use of any part of it to pay for building the vats and dipping cattle inevitably would result in creating indebtedness which could not be paid out of the current revenues of the county. If it followed that the expense authorized to be incurred by the order providing for building vats, etc., when incurred, would create a "debt" against the county within the meaning of the provision of the Constitution set out above, as distinguished from an "ordinary expense" of the county, the contention should be sustained, for it appears that the only provision made for paying it was that made for paying ordinary expenses of the county. We think the expense was an ordinary one, and do not understand appellants to be in the attitude of denying it was. Their contention is, as we understand it, that the commissioners' court did not have a right to incur the expense because to do so would increase the total of the ordinary expenses of the county for the year 1917 to a sum the current revenues for that year would be insufficient to pay. The Supreme Court has defined the word "debt," as used in the provision in the Constitution in question, as meaning:
"Any pecuniary obligation imposed by contract, except such as were, at the date of the contract, within the lawful and reasonable contemplation of the parties, to be satisfied out of the current revenues for the year, or out of some fund then within the immediate control of the corporation." McNeal v. City of Waco,
While the testimony showed that the current revenues of Harrison county for 1917 would be insufficient to pay ordinary expenses already incurred and which it was contemplated would be incurred by the county during the year, it further showed that the county, at the time the order in question was entered and at the time the judgment appealed from was rendered, had in hand funds sufficient to pay the expense of building the vats and dipping cattle and all ordinary expenses theretofore incurred by the county.
So the question which confronted the trial court was, it seems, whether it was beyond the power of the commissioners' court to incur the expense contemplated by its order, because to do so, if other contemplated ordinary expenses of the county were incurred during the year, would result in creating indebtedness against the county which its current revenues were not sufficient to pay. If building the vats and dipping cattle was an ordinary expense of the county which it could pay out of "some fund then within its immediate control," as we have seen was the case, we do not think the commissioners' court was without power to incur it for the reason stated. We have not found and have not been referred to anything in the law which required the commissioners' court to give to one contemplated ordinary expense precedence over another where the current funds of the county were not sufficient to pay both.
There are provisions of the statute, however, which, it seems to us, point out a way to determine when the commissioners' court has reached the limit of its power under the Constitution to create indebtedness against the county on account of its "ordinary expenses." Article 1433, Vernon's Statutes, provides for a classification of all claims against the county. Article 1438 provides for a classification of the funds belonging to the county. Article 1432 provides for the registration by the county treasurer of all claims against the county. Article 1436 requires the claims to be numbered in the order presented. Article 1437 requires the claims to be paid in the order they are registered. Where the requirements of the statute have been complied with, it seems to us it easily could be determined at any time whether the sum of claims representing ordinary expenses of the county amounted to as much as it reasonably could be expected the current revenues of the county would amount to. When it was found they did, it seems to us it might very well be said that such ordinary expenses of the county as were thereafterwards incurred were within the prohibition of section 7 of article 11 of the Constitution.
The judgment is affirmed. *251