EX PARTE ED HEINE
No. 25,885
Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas
October 8, 1952
Rehearing Denied February 11, 1953
254 S.W.2d 790
Will G. Sеars, City Attorney, J. Wiley Caldwell, Assistant City Attorney, Sam W. Davis, Criminal District Attorney, King C. Haynie, Assistant Criminal District Attorney, by J. Wiley Caldwell, Houston, and George P. Blackburn, State‘s Attorney, Austin, for the state.
OPINION
MORRISON, Judge.
This is an appeal from an order of the criminal district court of Harris County remanding relator to jаil following a hearing on a writ of habeas corpus.
With the adoption of the Home Rule Amendment to the Constitution (
In an еffort to enumerate “for greater certainty” this constitutional grant of power, the legislature enacted
Following the adoption of this amendment, the city of Houston adopted a Code, a portion of which makes it unlawful for any person to drive or act as a chauffeur of a taxicab without having secured a taxicab driver‘s license frоm the city authorities.
The issuance of the license was dependent, among other things, upon a finding by the city authorities that the applicant was a trustworthy, sober, and reliable person of good moral character. No fee was charged for such license.
Some years later, in 1941, the legislature enacted
Relator contends that, by the passage of
As we view these holdings, they are authority for the proposition that a city is powerless to require the payment of a fee to operate taxicabs within its limits or to collect a fee for the issuance of a chauffeur‘s license.
We are not unmindful of the seriousness of the question here presented.
It resolves itself simply to this: May a city protect its inhabitants, who employ the taxicab as a mode of conveyance, from ex-convicts and social misfits, who, once given control of a taxicab, thereby gain virtual control over the safety of the persons and propеrty of their passengers, who often are children?
We must select between two processes of reasoning.
We must either say that, by the passage of
Or, on the other hand, we must say that, by the passage of said act, the legislature, by implication, limited the power of the city in this field, whether in сonflict or not, notwithstanding
We have been cited no authority from any jurisdiction, nor have we been able to find any on this precise question.
This being so, we are inclined to feel it our duty to hold that the city has the power to require that those who operate taxicabs within its limits be persons of good moral character so that its citizens may be protected. This, we think, is a vital
Having reached this conclusion, the writ is denied.
EX PARTE ED HEINE
No. 25,885
Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas
ON APPELLANT‘S MOTION FOR REHEARING.
Appellant asserts “that the State Law forbids the requiring of this ‘taxicab driver‘s license’ as a prerequisite to the right of Ed Heine to operate his taxicab; that the ordinance of the City of Houston conflicts with the state law and is invalid.”
The рarticular state law to which appellant refers is that part of
“No person holding an operator‘s, commercial operator‘s, or сhauffeur‘s license duly issued under the provisions of this Act shall be required to obtain any license for the operation of a motor vehicle from any other State authority or department. Subsection (c) of Section 4 of
Article 911A and Subsection (b) of Section 4 ofArticle 911B , Revised Civil Statutes, is hereby repealed.”
The quoted section specifically repealed laws concerning the issuance of license to drivers of certain vehicles by the Railroаd Commission of Texas. We think that it was the intention of the legislature only to provide that no license could thereafter be rеquired of a driver by that or any other similar authority or department, and that the language used was not intended to apply to home rule cities or cities specifically authorized under their charter to license and regulate the use of motor vehicles for hire in such cities.
We remain convinced that the ordinance in question is not invalid as in conflict with the above statute, and that the state has not preempted the field so as to preclude the city of Houston from requiring persons who desire to drive a taxicab on the streets of that city to procure a license in the manner provided in the ordinance. At least in the particular pointed out in our original opinion the requirement for the issuance of a taxicab driver‘s license is valid.
Appellant‘s motion for rehearing is overruled.
