delivered the opinion of the Court.
Thе purpose of this original proceeding is the collection of a judgment held by relators against the State. The 44th Legislature, 1935, at its regular- session, passed an enabling act granting to Mrs. Dora Martin and her five children permission to bring suit against the State in the district court of Liberty County for damages for injuries resulting in the death of A. J. Martin, husband of Mrs. Martin and father of her children, while on duty in the employ of the State Highway Department, Acts of 44th Leg. Ch. 217, p. 511. Thereafter, suit was instituted in that court by Mrs. Martin and her children against the State resulting in a judgment in favor of her and two of her children, Buster and Jack Martin, for damages in the sum of $12,-500.00, apportioned by the jury between the three of them. The 49th Legislature, 1945, passed a special act (Ch. 263, p. 410) setting forth in full the judgment of the district court of Liberty County and appropriating money from the State Highway fund in the State Treasury, not otherwise appropriated, to pay same. The act authorized and directed the Comptroller of Public Accounts to issue warrants on the State Treasury for the satisfaction of suсh judgment. Upon the advice of the Attorney General that the judgment was void and that the appropriating act was unconstitutional, the Highway Commission refused to approve the claim sand the Comptroller refused to issue the warrants, whereupon this action' was instituted in this court by Mrs. Martin and her two sons, the judgment creditors, to compel by mandamus the Highway Commission to approve their claims and the Comptroller to issue warrants in payment of their judgment with interest as provided therein.
The State takes the position that the judgment of the trial court is void. If that court did not have jurisdiction, both of the parties and of the subject matter of the litigation the judgment is void and subject to attack in this collaterаl proceeding. If, on the other hand, the court had jurisdiction of the parties and the subject matter; the judgment is not void, however erroneous it may be. The State is not liable for the negligence of its employee while engaged in the performanсe of a governmental function, unless it has expressly assumed such liability. Martin v. State,
Section 3 of the enabling act reads as follows:
“That such suit upon said cause of action shall be determined in the trial and appellate courts, according to the same rules of law and procedure as to liability and defense that would be applicable if such were ag'ainst an ordinary Texas corporation.”,
Upon the authority of State Highway Department v. Gorham,
And, further, it is provided in Section 5 of the act that, if any paragraph, clause, or provision thereof should be held to be invalid or unconstitutional, the validity of the other рrovisions of the act shall not be affected thereby. Striking from the act the third section, there remains an express permission granted to relators to bring suit in the district court of Liberty County" for damages on account of the injuries sustained by A. J. Martin which resulted in his deаth and the further provision that process might be served upon the Governor and the Attorney General. It cannot be questioned that the legislature had the power to grant relators permission to sue the State and to provide the manner of serviсe. By virtue of that act and by the service of process and the appearance of the State through its Attorney General, the court clearly acquired jurisdiction of the parties to the litigation.
The subject matter of the litigation was a сlaim for damages in the sum of $30,000, an amount within the jurisdiction of the district court. That court had jurisdiction to pass upon the demurrers urged by the State to the petition and upon the motions of the State for an instructed verdict and for judgment non obstante veredicto. Had the court sustained the demurrers or granted the motions, or either of them, there would have been no qustion of the validity of its judgment. Since it had the power to sustain the demurrers and grant the motions, it had the power to overrule them. The jurisdiction of a cоurt must be determined, not upon the court’s action in deciding the questions presented in a case, but upon the character of the case itself. Jurisdiction is the power to decide, and not merely the power to decide correctly. Security Trust Co., v. Lipscomb County,
The State advances this proposition: “In a mandamus suit against a public body on a money judgment, the court may refuse the writ if it appears from the face of the record that the judgment rests upon no cause of action whatsoever.” As we
In thе Langham case a state of facts somewhat similar to that in the instant case existed and the holding of the court on this question is reflected by this language taken from the opinion on rehearing:
“We only deem it necessary to notice two of the grоunds for rehearing. The first seeks to question the validity of the orginal cause of action. This was settled adversely to the city by the rendition of the original judgment, and the question cannot be raised collaterally in this proceeding to enforce such judgment by mandamus.”
Our conclusion on this point is that we are not' authorized to deny the mandamus on the ground that relators’ judgment was not based upon any cause of action against the State. The same record which discloses that the judgment was not authorized by the рleadings and findings discloses also that the trial court ruled upon the sufficiency of the pleadings, the evidence, and the findings, and, since it had the jurisdiction to do so, its rulings thereon cannot be challenged in this proceeding. ¡
“In Commissioners v. League,129 U. S. 493 , 9 Sup. Ct. 327, there is a seeming qualification of the rule (that the court cannot look behind the judgment, in a mandamus proceeding to enforce its collection), but in that case — which was for a mandamus to compel a tax levy to pay a judgment rendered upon coupons to certain bonds — it was merely held that when it is necessary for the relator to go behind his judgment to show authority for a levy for taxes for its payment, and it appears that there was no law authorizing the creation of the debt, and none to levy a tax for the particular purpose, a levy will not be compelled.”
It aрpears that the contention of the State has some support in a case from the Supreme Court of Georgia and two cases from the Supreme Court of Oklahoma, Brunson v. Caskie,
There remains for decision only the question of whether a valid appropriation was made by the 49th Legislature for the payment of the judgment in this case. As pointed out above, the act authorized the issuance of warrants for the payment of the judgment “out of the State Highway fund in the State Treasury not otherwise appropriated.” In the residual or general appropriations clause of the regular biennial appropriation act of
“All revenues, fees, and grants in aid received for credit to the State Highway Fund during the biennium beginning September 1, 1945, together with the balance of suсh funds on hand at the beginning of each year of the biennium, are hereby appropriated for the payment of the specific appropriations herein made for the State Highway Department and the Department of Public Safety, and fоr the establishment of a system of State Highways and the planning, construction, and maintenance thereof, as contemplated and set forth in Chapter 1, Title 116, and Chapter 186, General Laws of the Regular Session of the Thirty-ninth Legislature, and amendments thereto. Provided, however, that an amount not to exceed One Hundred Seventy-five Thousand ($175,000.00) Dollars is hereby appropriated for the Certificate of Title Division.”
In one of the briefs filed here in behalf of the State, the contention was made that because of the above provision there remained no unappropriated money in the State Treasury belonging to the State Highway Department against which the Comptroller could draw warrants for the payment of the Liberty County judgment. This contention is not sustained. Acts of the same session of the legislature should be construed together as if embodied in one single act. Cain v. State,
It is our conclusion that relators are entitled to the relief sought. Writ will therefore be issued in accordance with the prayer of their petition.
Opinion delivered April 16, 1947.
