Dallas G. PERKINS et al., Petitioners, v. The STATE of Texas, Respondent.
No. A-9284.
Supreme Court of Texas.
April 17, 1963.
Rehearing Denied May 15, 1963.
367 S.W.2d 140
Clint C. Small, Austin, and Tom K. Eplen, Abilene, for respondents Eplen, Daniel, Hooper & Dickson.
Waggoner Carr, Atty. Gen., Austin, for respondent State of Texas.
John W. Davidson and Les Cochran, Abilene, for respondent City of Abilene.
SMITH, Justice.
This is a quo warranto proceeding brought by the Attorney General in the name of the State of Texas to have de-
We reverse the judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals and affirm the judgment of the trial court. We hold that even if the attempted incorporation of Impact in the first instance was void, the incorporation of the town has been validated by an act of the Legislature.
The qualified voters within the area known as Impact sought to incorporate under
“When a town or village contains more than two hundred (200) and less than ten thousand (10,000) inhabitants, it may be incorporated as a town or village in the manner prescribed in Chapter 11, Title 28, of the Revised Civil Statutes of Texas, 1925, and all amendments thereto.”
The evidence establishes that the area sought to be incorporated comprises 47.43 acres bounded on the west by the meanders of a creek and by an existing fence line which abuts a farming area and on the east by an existing street. The remaining boundaries extend to, but do not include, a right-of-way owned by the West Texas Utility Company and a settlement serviced by utilities from the City of Abilene.
In February of 1960, a count was made of all the buildings in an area known as North Park, which includes Impact. At the time of the counting there were 70 houses, 15 of which were vacant, within the boundaries of Impact. In the area outside of Impact and contiguous thereto, are located 348 more buildings of which 301 are houses, 5 are churches, 25 contain businesses and 17 are vacant. None of the area of North Park outside of Impact is incorporated nor is it within the city limits of the City of Abilene.
It is undisputed that in February of 1960: there were more than 200 people living within Impact, and of this number only 31 were qualified voters. Within the North Park Area and outside of Impact reside some 85 qualified voters exclusive of exemption.
On February 1, 1960, 29 of the registered voters of Impact petitioned the County Judge of Taylor County to call an incorporation election. On that same date the County Judge found that all the requirements of
On August 2, 1961, Impact was declared incorporated; and on August 14, 1961, Impact‘s officials were elected. By write-in votes, Dallas G. Perkins was unanimously elected mayor and his wife was elected secretary of Impact. Since the County Judge declared the results of the incorporation election Impact has functioned as an incorporated town. Elections have been held,
On September 1, 1961, the Attorney General, upon the relation of J. C. McKee et al. and the City of Abilene, and without the joinder of either the county attorney or the district attorney, filed this quo warranto proceeding to have declared invalid the incorporation of Impact. The case was tried before a jury and four special issues were submitted. In response thereto the following findings were made: (1) at the time the petition to incorporate the proposed town of Impact was presented to the County Judge, said proposed town was a portion of a territory comprising a larger unincorporated community or settlement; (2) that the petitioners for the election did not fix the limits and boundaries so as to arbitrarily exclude a portion of the larger unincorporated community of which the proposed town of Impact was a part; (3) the proposed town of Impact was conditioned so as to be subject to municipal government; and (4) the petitioners for the election did intend for the proposed town to be used strictly for town purposes. Based on these findings the trial court concluded that Impact was validly incorporated.
The Court of Civil Appeals, in reversing the judgment of the trial court, placed major emphasis on the jury‘s answer to Special Issue No. 1 in construing
Because of the disposition we make of the case it is unnecessary for us to decide the propriety of the holding of the Court of Civil Appeals that the initial incorporation of Impact was invalid. Neither is it necessary for us to decide whether the Attorney General had a legal right to file and prosecute this suit without the joinder of the district attorney or the county attorney.
There is another matter that can have no material bearing on the question of whether or not the attempted incorporation has been validated. The record discloses that since the rendition of our judgment in Perkins v. Ingalsbe and the receipt and canvassing of the vote showing a majority in favor of incorporation of Impact, the qualified voters therein have authorized the sale of intoxicating liquors and have thus created an “oasis” on the boundary of a “dry” city in a “dry” county. This situation is highly displeasing and all but intolerable to a number of the individual respondents and, no doubt, to a large number of other citizens in the area. But whether the attempted incorporation of Impact should be validated was and is a legislative question, and whether intoxicating liquors shall be sold in Impact, if validated, was and is a political question. Through its local option provisions,
The Validating Acts
Perkins relies upon
Article 966h
In 1961 the 57th Legislature passed House Bill No. 4821 which is carried as
“Art. 966h. Cities and towns of 4,500 or less, validation of incorporation; areas and boundary lines; governmental proceedings and acts”
“Section 1. All cities and towns in Texas of four thousand, five hundred (4,500) inhabitants or less, according to the last preceding Federal Census, heretofore incorporated or attempted to be incorporated under any of the terms and provisions of the General Laws of the State of Texas, * * * which are now functioning or attempting to function as incorporated cities or towns, are hereby in all respects validated as of the date of such incorporation, or attempted incorporation; and the incorporation of such cities and towns shall not be held invalid by reason of the fact that the election proceedings or other incorporation proceedings may not have been in accordance with law, or by reason of a failure to properly define the limits of such city or town.”
“Sec. 2. The areas and boundary lines of all such cities and towns affected by this Act, including * * * the boundary lines covered by the original incorporation proceedings * * * are in all things validated * * *”
“Sec. 5. The provisions of this Act shall not apply to any city or town now involved in litigation questioning the legality of the incorporation * * * if such litigation is ultimately determined against the legality thereof.”
On the effective date of the Act, Impact was involved in litigation (Perkins v. Ingalsbe, supra), but not such litigation as would exclude Impact from its coverage, for the Perkins case was not attacking the legality of the incorporation of Impact. The Perkins case was a mandamus proceeding seeking to compel the County Judge to declare the results of the incorporation election. Further, the Perkins case did not have the result of excluding Impact from the coverage of
At the outset it is necessary to dispose of the issues raised by the State‘s contention that the legislative power to cure the type of deficiency said to exist in the initial incorporation of Impact is constitutionally denied or prohibited by
“Cities and towns having a population of five thousand or less may be chartered alone by general law, * * *”
It is argued that the Constitution empowers the Legislature to authorize only cities and
The accepted rule is that the Legislature has and may exercise all legislative power not denied or prohibited to it, expressly or by necessary implication, by the Constitution. Watts v. Mann, Tex.Civ.App., (1945), 187 S.W.2d 917, writ refused; State v. Brownson, 94 Tex. 436, 61 S.W. 114 (1901).
In considering the applicability of a validating act, this court must acknowledge the principle that even though an act of incorporation is void from its inception because of an unwarranted exercise of power or because of an entire absence of power, the Legislature may validate such act and make it live, for what the Legislature has the power to authorize, it has the power to ratify. State v. Bradford, 121 Tex. 515, 50 S.W.2d 1065 (1932). Thus, the Legislature properly exercised its political power when it provided in Section 1 of
The State asserts that the attempted incorporation of Impact is invalid because those initiating the incorporation proceedings arbitrarily fixed the boundaries of Impact so as to carve out only a small part of a much larger unincorporated community. That type of deficiency, if it be one, is covered by both the general and specific provisions of the validating act. To say that the Legislature did not intend to validate incorporation proceedings because the area included within the proposed boundaries is less than the general settlement, or because the limits of the area incorporated are too narrowly drawn, is to ignore the very language of the Act which, being plain and clear, is the sole source from which intent may be derived. Simmons v. Arnim, 110 Tex. 309, 220 S.W. 66 (1920); Gilmore v. Waples, 108 Tex. 167, 188 S.W. 1037 (1916).
There has been no dispute that there has been an attempt to incorporate Impact as a town; rather, the State contends that
The third requirement of the Act is more difficult to dispose of. The State contends that
Perkins contends that the Court of Civil Appeals has erred in holding that since Impact‘s population is not shown in the list of all incorporated towns in Texas,
The phrase “according to the last preceding Federal Census” cannot be ignored as Perkins contends, for it is settled that every word in a statute is presumed to have been used for a purpose; and a cardinal rule of statutory construction is that each sentence, clause and word is to be given effect if reasonable and possible. See: McDonald v. Thompson, 305 U.S. 263, 59 S.Ct. 176, 83 L.Ed. 164 (1938), rehearing denied, 305 U.S. 676, 59 S.Ct. 356, 83 L.Ed. 437 (1939); Eddins-Walcher Butane Co. v. Calvert, 156 Tex. 587, 298 S.W.2d 93 (1957).
Webster defines “census” to mean “an official enumeration of the population of a country or of a city or other administrative district * * *.” The phrase “according to the last preceding Federal Census” contained in
The State contends that in seeking the legislative intent behind the inclusion of this phrase in
Impact is not listed in the 1960 Federal census enumeration of all incorporated towns in Texas, and there has been no intervening special census of which we may take judicial notice, likewise, no field canvass has been made by the Bureau of the Census. A showing of the exact number of inhabitants living within Impact at the time the 1960 census was taken could have been made by a field canvass;3 and the courts of this state could have taken judicial notice of the enumerations shown therein, for it is the rule in Texas that judicial notice may be taken of official pronouncements in regard to any Federal census. See: Ervin v. State (1931), 119 Tex.Cr.R. 204, 44 S.W.2d 380; Holcomb v. Spikes, Tex.Civ.App. (1921), 232 S.W. 891, wr. dism.; Smith v. Patterson, 111 Tex. 535, 242 S.W. 749 (1922); See also: McCormick & Ray, Texas Law of Evidence, 203; Wigmore on Evidence, §§ 1671, 2580. Though there is no official pronouncement of the Bureau of the Census of which we may take judicial notice to determine the exact population of Impact, there are official pronouncements of the Bureau of Census from which it can be determined that the population of Impact was less than 4,500 in April of 1960, when the last Federal census was taken.4
Table 8 of the Bureau of Census published report entitled United States Census of Population: 1960, Number of Inhabitants, Texas, lists the population of all incorporated places in Texas and the population of all unincorporated places having a population of 1,000 or more which are outside the urbanized areas of towns in Texas which have a population of 50,000 or more. Table 10 of the above mentioned census report lists the population within the urbanized areas of Texas. Table 8 and Table 10 combined show the population of all incorporated places and all unincorporated places with a population of 1,000 or more in Texas.
The enumeration of the population of the urbanized area of Abilene is shown in Table 10, and from this table we judicially know that there is no unincorporated community outside the city limits but within the urbanized area of Abilene with a population of more than 4,500.5 Since the population of Impact is not shown in Table 8, we
Article 974d-9
Subsequent to the passage of
“Art. 974d-9. Cities and towns of not more than 6,000; validation of incorporation; boundary lines; governmental proceedings; adoption of home rule charter”
“Section 1. The incorporation proceedings of all cities and towns in this state heretofore incorporated or attempted to be incorporated under the General Laws of Texas, and having a population according to the Federal Census of 1960 of not more than six thousand (6,000), * * * and which have functioned as incorporated cities and towns since the date of such incorporation or attempted incorporation, are hereby in all respects validated as of the date of such incorporation or attempted incorporation; and the incorporation of such cities and towns shall not be held invalid by reason of the fact that the election proceedings or other incorporation proceedings may not have been in accordance with law.”
“Sec. 2. The boundary lines of all such cities and towns covered by the original incorporation proceedings are hereby in all things validated.”
The State contends that
The third requirement of
In our opinion if there were any defects in the incorporation, boundary lines, area, or governmental proceedings and acts of Impact, Texas, such defects have been validated by
The judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals is reversed, and the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
CALVERT, C. J., concurs in the result.
WALKER and STEAKLEY, JJ., dissenting.
WALKER, Justice (dissenting).
For the sake of brevity and since the Court does not hold otherwise, I begin with the premise that the original incorporation proceedings were invalid for the reasons pointed out by the Court of Civil Appeals in its opinion. Tex.Civ.App., 360 S.W.2d 555. The only question then is whether the attempted incorporation was validated by either
A comparison of
In this context “according to” means “as attested or declared by.” Webster‘s New International Dictionary, 2nd ed. 1941. The references to the Federal Census are simply another way of saying that the Legislature wished to validate only those cities and towns that are affirmatively shown by the official compilations of the Bureau of the Census to be within the established classifications. It would also be well to observe at this point that while the burden was on respondent to show the invalidity of the original incorporation proceedings, petitioners have alleged the validating acts as a defense to the action. In my opinion it was their burden to bring themselves within the terms of the statutes. If the application of the validating acts turns upon any unresolved issue of fact, petitioners have waived the defense by failing to obtain or request a jury finding.
There is no testimony showing the number of people which the census enumerators found to be residing in the area embraced by the purported corporate limits of Impact. The record does not contain a special compilation of the Census figures applicable to that territory although the Federal statute apparently authorizes the Secretary of Commerce to furnish such information upon request.
The Court says, in effect, that the information found in Tables 8 and 10 of the census report shows conclusively and as a matter of law that the population of Impact according to the 1960 Federal Census was not more than 4,500. I am unable to agree with this conclusion. Table 8 is a list in alphabetical order of all places in Texas which the census officials regarded as incorporated, and of certain unincorporated places containing more than 1,000 inhabitants, with the population of each according to the 1960 Federal Census. The listed cities and towns range in population from Belcherville and La Isla, each with 35 inhabitants, to Houston with its population of 938,219. With reference to the unincorporated communities, the introduction to the census report discloses that “the Bureau has delineated boundaries for densely settled population centers without corporate limits.” Neither Impact nor North Park is mentioned in Table 8, and the census report does not purport to show the population of either according to the 1960 Federal Census.
Table 10 is a compilation of the population figures for certain urbanized areas. The Abilene Urbanized Area is included in such list, but there is nothing in the census report to identify the boundaries of that Area except a map found on page 46. This map, which contains no metes or bounds and does not purport to show either Impact or North Park, is approximately 5 inches by
The Court assumes that the people residing in Impact were not included in the population figures for Abilene. It then assumes that Impact must lie wholly within or wholly without the Abilene Urbanized Area. On the basis of these assumptions, the Court reasons: (1) If Impact lies wholly within the Abilene Urbanized Area, it can be shown to fall within the statutory classifications by subtracting the population figures for Abilene from those for the Abilene Urbanized Area; and (2) If Impact lies wholly without the Abilene Urbanized Area, the community is shown to have less than 1,000 inhabitants according to the 1960 Federal Census by the fact that it is not mentioned in Table 8. What is the basis for reaching these conclusions as a matter of law? The record contains no information which shows definitely where the census authorities located the city limits of Abilene or the boundaries of the Abilene Urbanized Area on the ground. The mere fact that an area which someone has sought to incorporate is not mentioned in Table 8 does not conclusively establish that the census enumerators found less than 1,000 people residing there. Its absence from the list might be due to the fact that the responsible census authorities did not regard it as a “densely settled population center.” The Court apparently is saying that in view of the information found in the record with reference to the number of acres covered by Impact and North Park, one or the other would probably have been regarded by the census officials as a “densely settled population center without corporate limits” and thus would probably have been included by them in Table 8 if it contained more than 1,000 inhabitants. And yet the criteria by which such officials determined whether a given area was a “densely settled population center” are not disclosed by the census report or by the record in this case.
It might be proper for the trier of fact to resort to this process of reasoning, but petitioners have not obtained jury findings or requested issues to establish the facts on which the majority holding is based. The inferences drawn by the Court from the facts proven and the information contained in the census report appear to be reasonable, but it seems rather strange for a court of law to indulge in assumptions and inferences whose soundness has not been established as a matter of law. Entirely aside from this problem, however, the mere fact that the Court must resort to assumptions, probabilities, and inferences demonstrates rather convincingly that the 1960 Federal census figures at our disposal do not affirmatively declare and attest that the census enumerators found not more than 4,500 and not more than 6,000 people residing in Impact.
I would affirm the judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals.
STEAKLEY, J., joins in this dissent.
