69 Tex. 55 | Tex. | 1887
This is'a proceeding by quo warranto, to question and have adjudicated the right of the respondents to exercise the powers of mayor, alderman and marshal of the city of Wills Point. There are two grounds on which the petition questions their right.
1. It alleges that the territory embraced within the limits of the city at the time an election was ordered and held to determine whether it should be incorporated, did not have one thousand inhabitants, and on this ground it is claimed that the city was never legally incorporated, and that therefore the respondents are not entitled to exercise the powers which would pertain to the offices severally claimed by them had the incorporation been valid.
The petition, however, in effect alleges, that the steps were taken required by chapter 11 of Revised Statutes, which by subsequents acts has been made applicable to the incorporation of cities and towns having one thousand and not more than two thousand inhabitants. (Act March 26, 1881, General Laws, 63; Act of April 6, 1881, General Laws, 116.)
In proceedings of this kind the great weight of authority sustains the proposition that an inquiry may be made into the legality of a corporation when the rights of a person, claiming to be an officer under the terms of its charter, to exercise such power as the charter proposes to give, is called in question. (People v. Carpenter, 24 New York, 86; The State ex rel. v. Parker, 25 Minnesota, 218; Shumway v. Bennett, 29 Michigan, 452; State v. Weatherby, 45 Missouri, 17.)
Such an issue, in such cases, whenever the claim is that the respondent bases his right to exercise the power on an act of incorporation claimed to be invalid, would necessarily arise; and the fact that the court in a proceeding against the officer would not have the power to enter a judgment that would bind the corporation de facto, unless it be made a party, ought not to deprive a court of power to try the issue of fact between the parties before it, where the existence of the facts on which the validity of the corporation depends, has not been submitted to and determined by some person, or tribunal whose determination is not open to revision by the judiciary.
The Legislature, however, may make the fact of incorporation
The law under which it is claimed that the city of Wills Point was incorporated, requires that an election shall be ordered by the county judge whenever fifty electors residing within the territory intended to have incorporated may file an application with him. (Rev. Stats., art. 507; Gen. Laws 1881, pages 61, 116.)-Before, however, the county judge is authorized to order an election, the statute requires that satisfactory proof must be made that the territory sought to be embraced within the contemplated corporation has the population prescribed for a municipal corporation of the given class. (Rev. Stats., art. 508.) This proof must be made to the county judge who is called upon to order the election, and no provision is made for the revision of his finding as to the population residing within the designated boundaries.
After an election has been ordered and held, the result is required to be returned to the county judge, who is required, if a majority of votes have been cast in favor of incorporation, <c within twenty days after the receipt of the returns, to mate-an entry upon the records of the commissioners court that the inhabitants of the town (or city) are incorporated within the-boundaries thereof, which shall also be designated in the entry, and a certified copy of such entry shall thereupon be recorded in the record of deeds of such county.” (Rev. Stats., 513.) The succeeding article provides that “When the entry mentioned in the preceding article has been made the town (or city) shall be invested with all the rights incident to such corporations under this chapter,” etc.
The petition, in effect, alleges that all these things were done, and bases the invalidity of the corporation on the sole ground that the county judge erroneously found that the requisite population existed. The statute evidently intended to make the finding of the county judge conclusive upon this question; for it provides no method by which his finding may be revised, and we are therefore, constrained to hold, from the facts stated in the petition, that the territory had the requisite population.
If the State desires to abolish a municipal corporation, created
2. It is urged that the respondents were not elected at an election ordered by competent authority. The petition alleges that an election was ordered and held, soon after the city was incorporated, and that thereat certain persons were elected to the several offices held by the respondents, and that the persons thus elected, other than the marshal, on the-day of March, 1885, ordered an election to be held for municipal officers, at which certain named persons were elected, but that during the time the officers last elected were holding the several offices, the county judge ordered an election to take place for all the municipal officers, under which, on August 13, 1885, an election was held and other persons elected. The petition alleges that the county judge ordered the election, last referred to, on the ground that the municipal offices were vacant, but it does not state the grounds on which the vacancy was claimed to exist. It does aver, however, that the persons who were elected, at the election ordered by the county judge, did qualify and assume the right to discharge the duties pertaining to their several offices, and that they did order and cause to be held an election for municipal officers on April 5, 1887, at which the respondents were elected to the several offices which they now assume to exercise.
Under contingencies named in the law, a county judge has power to order an election to fill vacancies in municipal offices within the county (Rev. Stats., art. 352); and, while the petition ¡before us alleges, in a general way, that the municipal officers elected on April 5, 1885, were holding the several offices at the ¡time the county judge ordered an election to fill vacancies, it ¡does not allege that such persons had qualified, or that they were actively exercising the powers or discharging the duties pertaining to the several offices.
It may be, so far as we can see from the petition, that the action of the county judge was authorized by the facts; but be .this as it may, the petition shows that the persons who were
■ That election was held at the time provided by the statute (Rev. Stats., 519, 345); there is no pretense that the will of the ¡voters was not fully and fairly expressed, nor that every step [necessary to a valid election was not taken, except that the elecftion was ordered by officers de facto, whose right to act is 'questioned.
1 The election at which the respondents were elected would have been valid had the electors held an election at the time and place provided by law, without any order so to do. The election ordered by the person or persons actually exercising the powers of mayor or aldermen must be deemed valid, although such persons may have been only officers de facto.
The petition was not sufficient, and the court below correctly so held, and its judgment must be affirmed.
Affirmed.
Opinion delivered November 8, 1887.