229 S.W. 691 | Tex. App. | 1921
This is an appeal from an order dissolving a temporary injunction. The proceeding arose under what is commonly known as the "Tick Eradication Statute" (Acts 35th Leg. c.
Most of the appellants' contentions have been decided adversely to them by the Court of Criminal Appeals and other appellate courts. It has been decided that it is not necessary that cattle should be actually infected with ticks in order to make them subject to the law and the requirement of the Commission that they be dipped. Emberline v. State (Cr.App.) 212 S.W. 953. It has also been held that it is not necessary that each head of cattle or particular held should be inspected but only that some fair investigation or inspection should be made. Trimble v. Hawkins,
Upon the claim that the law is unconstitutional as also the rules and regulations of the Live Stock Sanitary Commission, appellants have cited Ex parte Leslie,
Under the pleadings in the instant case, it is not necessary for us to pass upon these questions. The only ground on which the statute is assailed as unconstitutional in the pleadings is that appellants' cattle were free from statutory disease and that therefore compulsory dipping renders the statute as to them unreasonable and oppressive. If the assumption of fact involved in this proposition be conceded, it would not render the law unconstitutional. The agency selected by the Legislature having, as the result of investigation and inquiry, determined that all the cattle in Coryell county were either infected or exposed to the disease mentioned in the statute, they were subject to the operation of the law. However, in addition to the fact established by the evidence that all of Coryell county was embraced within the quarantine zone, there was also evidence that all cattle in that county were exposed. Therefore we hold that the law is not obnoxious to the Constitution, and is not violative of appellants' rights, personal or property, in the particulars set forth in the pleadings. We are confined by the pleadings to this one ground of constitutional objection, and it is neither proper nor necessary to consider any other constitutional aspect of the law.
As to the contention that the law was being unreasonably and oppressively administered, resulting in injury to appellants' live stock, it is enough to say that the evidence upon this issue is sharply in dispute. There is evidence that the solution being used in the vats was mixed according to the standard formula prescribed by the Department of Agriculture. There is also evidence that the injuries complained of were caused, not by the solution itself, but by the unhealthy condition of the animals, or by the improper handling of same by the owners or caretakers. Such injuries were exceptional, and the evidence does not undisputably establish the claim that the injuries were caused by improper methods of administering the law.
As to the claim that the injunction should have issued to retrain the criminal prosecution pending and threatened against: certain of the appellants, it is a general rule that equity will not entertain a suit for injunction to restrain the prosecution of criminal acts. There, is nothing in the circumstances of this case to justify a departure from this rule. Even if the statute or rules of the Commission were shown to be void, which has not been done in this case, the appellants would have an adequate remedy at law as against the criminal proceedings. If the statute or rules are void, the Court of Criminal Appeals, if necessary, would be the proper tribunal to decide those questions in appeals or habeas corpus proceedings. We refer to the cases collated in Vernon's Sayles' Civil Statutes, note 33, under article 4643.
For the reasons indicated, the assignment, complaining of the refusal of the court to set aside the order of dissolution and to perpetuate the injunction, will be overruled.
There are two assignments of error which complain of the admission of certain testimony. One relates to the testimony of a witness to the effect that, instead of being harmful, the dipping of cattle is beneficial We cannot see wherein this testimony, even if inadmissible, would be prejudicial to appellants, and require a reversal of the case. The Legislature has determined upon the policy of compulsory dipping in the circumstances required by the statute, and it is not a proper subject of judicial inquiry. This question the Legislature has committed to an agency presumably peculiarly qualified to pass upon it. Furthermore, we regard the testimony as admissible in rebuttal of the *693 testimony offered by appellants, that dipping caused injuries to their milk and butter supply. Certainly, in such circumstances, it was not reversible error for the court to admit the testimony in question.
The other assignment goes to the admission of certain documentary evidence. The specific point is that the court erred in admitting a certified copy of the rules and regulations of the Live Stock Sanitary Commission of Texas, because it was not certified to by any member of the Commission, but by the acting Secretary of State; and that the indorsement of that officer is hearsay, and does not purport to certify that the document was a true copy of the rules and regulations of the Commission, but only a certificate that it was a purported copy, as appears of record in his office. We do not think any of these objections are good. The document appears to have been filed in the office of the Secretary of State, and, as we believe, under authority of law. We find no requirement that it should be certified to by a member of the Commission before it would be admissible in evidence; besides, under the burden which rested upon appellants to prove their case, the admission of this testimony, if it were error, would not be grounds for a reversal of the cause.
Finding no reversible error in the record, the judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.