Thomas E. Hand, Jr. et al. v. The State of Texas ex rel. Raymond T. Yelkin, et al.
No. A-7896
Supreme Court of Texas
July 20, 1960
417
Application for writ of error in A-7896, Thomas E. Hand, Jr. et al. v. The State of Texas ex rel. Raymond T. Yelkin, et al., is refused, no reversible error. The respondents’ motion for ancillary writ of injunction is overruled. Relator‘s motion for leave to file petition for writ of mandamus is denied without prejudice to the right of either party to present a petition for leave to file a similar application for writ of mandamus in the event the court fails to proceed with dispatch to a trial of the cause on its merits. The court will not entertain motions for rehearing in either of these causes.
Opinion delivered July 20, 1960.
SOUTHWESTERN SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION OF HOUSTON, TEXAS v. J. M. FALKNER, BANKING COMMISSIONER OF TEXAS
No. A-7184
Supreme Court of Texas
January 13, 1960
Rehearing Overruled March 2, 1960
331 S.W. 2d Series 917
The Honorable Court of Civil Appeals erred in holding that the Banking Commissioner has the power under
Will Wilson, Attorney General, C. K. Richards, Assistant Attorney General, Thomas Black and John W. Stayton, Special Assistant Attorneys General, for respondent, Banking Commissioner.
Cited: Imperial Irr. Co. v. Jayne, 104 Texas 395, 138 S.W. 575; Railroad Com. v. Shell Oil Co., 146 Texas 286, 206 S.W. 2d 235.
MR. JUSTICE CALVERT delivered the opinion of the Court.
Suit was instituted by Southwestern Savings and Loan Association of Houston, Texas, hereinafter referred to as petitioner, against J. M. Falkner, Banking Commissioner of the State of Texas, hereinafter referred to as respondent, seeking a declaratory judgment decreeing that petitioner might open branch offices without first obtaining the approval of the Commissioner, and also seeking an injunction restraining the Commissioner from taking any action to prevent the petitioner from opening and operating six branch offices. The trial court denied the prayer for a declaratory judgment, but enjoined the respondent from interfering with the opening of the six branch offices. The Court of Civil Appeals affirmed the holding of the trial court denying the declaratory judgment, but reversed that portion
Petitioner is a building and loan association properly incorporated under the laws of Texas, having its office and principal place of business at 3401 South Main Street, Houston, Texas. In 1954 petitioner notified the Commissioner that it desired to open six branch offices in the Greater Houston area and gave the proposed locations. This has been treated by the lower courts as an application for permission to establish branch offices. The Banking Commissioner refused to act on the application on the ground that he had no authority to approve or disapprove the establishment of branch offices. His refusal to act stemmed from an earlier opinion of office counsel for the Banking Commission, which was to the effect that the Banking Commissioner lacked such authority.
Following failure of the Commissioner to act on its application, respondent proceeded with preparations for establishment and opening of the branch offices and actually opened and began doing business at one such office at 5306 Palm Center in Palm Center Shopping Center on September 1, 1956. On March 11, 1957 the Attorney General advised the Commissioner that prior approval of the Commissioner was prerequisite to the establishment and operation of branch offices. On April 26th, in response to an inquiry from respondent, petitioner advised that the branch office at 5306 Palm Center was in operation and that two others would be opened on June 1st. Thereupon, petitioner‘s attention was called to the Attorney General‘s opinion of March 11th. This suit was filed on December 10, 1957. At that time only the one branch office had been opened. On January 29, 1958 the Building and Loan Section of the Finance Commission of Texas, acting pursuant to authority contained in
The trial court found that at the time the rules and regulations were promulgated the branch office at 5306 Palm Center had been opened and that petitioner “had spent substantial sums, made substantial commitments and spent many months’ time of its officers, agents and employees * * * in preparing for the opening of five other branch offices.” The trial court concluded
1 Regulation of building and loan associations is provided for in
2 A statute should not be shorn of its effectiveness if its purpose can be achieved by a reasonable interpretation. Huntsville Independent School Dist. v. McAdams, 148 Texas 120, 221 S.W. 2d 546; Haverbekken v. Hale, 109 Texas 106, 204 S.W. 1162. That principle should control here rather than the one for which petitioner contends, i.e., that administrative officers and boards can exercise only such authority as is conferred upon them by the Legislature. Board of Insurance Commissioners v. Guardian Life Ins. Co. of Texas, 142 Texas 630, 180 S.W. 2d 906; Humble Oil & Refining Co. v. Railroad Commission, 133 Texas 330, 128 S.W. 2d 9. We hold that the power of the Banking Commissioner to approve or disapprove the establishment and operation of branch offices of building and loan associations is necessarily implied by a reasonable interpretation of
3 Petitioner contends that the statutes are unconstitutional if they be given the interpretation we have given them because they set no standards by which approval or disapproval of branch offices is to be determined. Generally a legislative delegation of rule-making authority must fix standards in order to be valid. Housing Authority v. Higginbotham, 135 Texas 158, 143 S.W. 2d 79, 130 A.L.R. 1053. But under our interpretation of
Petitioner contends that even if approval of the Commis-
Petitioner does not contend that the Commissioner is estopped from requiring it to secure his approval before opening the branch offices. On the contrary it disavows in its briefs in this Court, many times over, that it claims an estoppel. What petitioner does contend is that the Commissioner‘s declination to act on the letter application made in 1954 on the ground of a lack of power to act, amounted, in law, to approval. In support of that contention petitioner cites State v. Jarmon, Texas Civ. App., 25 S.W. 2d 936, writ dismissed; Box v. Newsom, Texas Civ. App., 43 S.W. 2d 981, and City of Dallas v. Rosenthal, Texas Civ. App., 239 S.W. 2d 636, writ refused, n.r.e. None of the cited cases support the contention advanced.
In State v. Jarmon the Railroad Commission failed to act within a reasonable time on an application for a permit to drill an oil well, whereupon Jarmon proceded to drill without the permit. The State then sought an injunction to restrain the drilling of the well. The Court held that the State, like any other litigant, could not obtain relief from a court of equity when its own conduct had been arbitrary, unreasonable and inequitable. In the case before us the Commissioner is not seeking equitable relief.
Box v. Newsom can be of no comfort to petitioner. In that case Newsom and other truck operators sought and obtained an ex parte temporary injunction restraining Sheriff Box from arresting them for operating their trucks on the highways of the state without permits. The Court of Civil Appeals dissolved the injunction, holding that the mere fact that the plaintiffs had filed applications for permits did not authorize them to operate without permits, and that if the Railroad Commission was actually and designedly refusing to grant hearings to the plaintiffs on their applications their remedy was by writ of mandamus to compel the Commission to perform its duty and set the applications for hearing.
City of Dallas v. Rosenthal was a suit by the City of Dallas
4 The ultimate power of the Commissioner under
5. Petitioner has made application for permission to open six branch offices. The application has never been heard or acted upon, admittedly because at the time it was made the Commissioner was of the opinion that he had no power to act. But however that may be, when the Commissioner was properly advised that he did have the power and that it was his duty to act, five of the offices were not open and operating and it was petitioner‘s duty, if it wished to avoid the possibility of a further futile expenditure of time and money, to then reurge its application and secure approval thereof. The failure of the Commissioner to act and the expenditure of time and money and the making of substantial commitments in the preparation of places of business in which to operate the branch offices did not operate, in law, as an approval of the opening and operation of the five branch offices. Petitioner may yet reurge its application to open and operate those five branch offices. Inasmuch as the rules and regulations of January 29, 1958 governing the making and approval of such applications were in effect before those offices were opened—if they have been opened—there is no reason why they should not apply to and govern the application and the approval
6 On the other hand, there has been an implied approval of the opening and operation of the branch office in Palm Center Shopping Center. Like branch offices of other building and loan associations which, as shown by the record, have been open and operating for many years without express approval of the Commissioner, that office was opened and began operation with his knowledge and without interference or hindrance by him. Since the statute required his approval it was his duty, regardless of his understanding or misunderstanding of it, to see that the office was not opened and put in operation without his approval. When he stood by and permitted the office to be opened and put in operation, it had his tacit approval and the law will imply approval. Approval does not rest upon an estoppel but upon a legal implication. The only case found which is fairly anagalous is City of Erie v. Baldwin, 136 Pa. Super. 496, 7 A. 2d 484, 488. In that case Baldwin, who was operating a public market, sought to defeat a license tax levied on that type of business by contending that he was not liable for the tax because he had not secured a license or permit, required by ordinance, to operate a public market. The court held that since the business was in operation as a public market the law would imply that a permit to operate it as such had been granted. The Court said:
“It is also true that in Pennsylvania the proper municipality may grant or refuse the privilege of conducting a public market, but permission to engage in the business which appellant certified he was conducting may be implied from the failure of the municipal officers charged with the duty of exercising its police powers to take any action looking toward its suppression.”
We are not to be understood as holding that a public official may legalize an unlicensed business required by law to be licensed by winking at its unlicensed operation.
In so far as the judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals affirms the judgment of the trial court denying the declaratory judgment sought, it is affirmed. In so far as the judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals reverses the judgment of the trial
Opinion delivered January 13, 1960.
MR. JUSTICE SMITH, joined by MR. JUSTICE HAMILTON, dissenting.
I respectfully dissent from the majority holding that the State Banking Commissioner has the power under
There is nothing in
The trial court found that the Commissioner has no power under
Opinion delivered January 13, 1960.
Rehearing overruled March 2, 1960.
D. C. BYBEE V. FIREMAN‘S FUND INSURANCE COMPANY
No. A-7353
Supreme Court of Texas
January 20, 1960
Rehearing Overruled March 2, 1960
331 S.W. 2d Series 910
