163 S.W. 1020 | Tex. App. | 1913
The trial court found all of these allegations to be true, and the testimony is sufficient to sustain these findings of the court. The defendant answered by general demurrer and general denial, and by several special exceptions hereinafter referred to. The trial court rendered judgment for appellee for the sum of $10,920.30, with interest thereon at the rate of 6 per cent. per annum from the date of said judgment.
2. The first issue presented by the motion to dismiss is as to whether the action of the district judge of Travis county, before whom the case was tried without a jury, was that of a special commissioner or of a court. It will be seen, by reference to the act of the Legislature referred to in the above statement of facts, that the claim of Mrs. Haldeman was to be paid, "provided said claim is established by any district court of the state of Texas." It will further be seen that said act authorized Mrs. Haldeman to institute suit against the state of Texas for the recovery of said claim. We hold that the district judge, in rendering judgment in this case, did so as the district court of Travis county, and not as a special commissioner.
3. Appellee's claim having been sued upon in the district court of Travis county, it was not necessary that the act authorizing such suit should have specially provided for the right of appeal, inasmuch as the Courts of Civil Appeals are given, by the Constitution of this state, "appellate jurisdiction, coextensive with the limits of their respective districts, which shall extend to all civil cases of which the district courts or county courts have original jurisdiction." Article 5, § 6. The proceedings herein in the district court had all the elements of a "case." The plaintiff was seeking to recover from the defendant a sum of money, and the defendant was resisting such recovery, and the issue thus formed was submitted to the arbitrament of the court. Slaven v. Wheeler,
4. Appellant insists, under appropriate assignments of error, that the appropriation bill referred to in the statement of facts, under and by virtue of which this suit was instituted and judgment herein rendered for plaintiff, was and is void and of no effect, because the same is contrary to and in violation of section 44, art. 3, of the Constitution of Texas. Said article among other things provides that: "The Legislature * * * shall not grant * * * by appropriation or otherwise, any amount of money out of the treasury of the state, to any individual, on a claim, real or pretended, when the same shall not have been provided for by pre-existing law." The issue here presented is as to whether or not the act of 1899 (Gen. Laws 1899, c. 5), authorizing the erection of said buildings, was a preexisting law, providing for the payment for work done and material furnished on said buildings in excess of the sum of $47,500, the aggregate amount of the appropriation for such buildings; that is to say, did the directors of the asylum have authority, under said law, to contract for buildings in excess of the amount appropriated therefor? *1022
We hold that they did not. Nichols v. State,
It is true, in the Nichols Case, supra, the act expressly provided that the amount to be expended for the building therein provided for should not exceed the sum of $40,000; but we hold that, when the Legislature appropriates a specific amount for a public building, this is equivalent to limiting the amount to be expended on such building to the amount named in the appropriation bill. The Legislature might authorize commissioners to contract for the erection of a public building of such a character and at such cost as to them might seem best, but such a proceeding would, to say the least of it, be unwise, and such has not been the usual course with reference to public buildings in Texas. It is well known that it is the custom with Legislatures to appoint committees to investigate the needs of public institutions, to hear evidence and visit and inspect such institutions, and to pass appropriation bills for definite amounts for the support, maintenance, and erection of buildings therefor. We do not think by the passage of the appropriation bill above referred to, wherein the specific amount of $47,500 was appropriated for the buildings for the lunatic asylum, the Legislature intended to grant the directors of said institution discretion to incur liability on the part of the state for more than this amount. This view of the case is emphasized by the fact that the act referred to provided that the architect should be paid for his services out of the amount thus appropriated.
5. The Constitution of this state has especially hedged the Legislature about with limitations as to its expenditure of public funds. In addition to the article of the Constitution above referred to, section 53 of article 3 provides that: "The Legislature shall have no power to grant * * * any extra compensation, fee or allowance to a public officer, agent, servant or contractor, after service has been rendered or a contract has been entered into, and performed in whole or in part." In this case the amount claimed is for extra compensation for work done and material furnished, after the contractor had entered into and performed part of the contract.
6. Inasmuch as the claim herein sued on was not a legal debt against the state, for the reason that it was in contravention of section 44, art. 3, of the Constitution, above referred to, we do not think that the Legislature had any authority to make an appropriation for the payment of said claim, even had it done so absolutely, without requiring the same to be established by judgment of the court. Section 49, art. 3, of the Constitution of this state, provides as follows: "No debt shall be created by or on behalf of the state, except to supply casual deficiencies of revenue, repel invasion, suppress insurrection, defend the state in war or pay existing debts." The claim sued on herein was not for any of the items mentioned above, unless it be to pay "existing debt." If the debt was illegal, it did not exist; and the effect of the appropriation bill was to create, as well as to pay, the debt.
For the reasons hereinbefore given, the judgment of the trial court is reversed and here rendered for appellant.
Reversed and rendered. *1023