30 S.W. 868 | Tex. | 1895
1. We are of the opinion, that the Commissioners Court of a county can not be required to provide for the sale of the property of a supposed corporation, the charter of which has been declared void, and for the disposition of the same for the settlement of the debts due by it. The powers which the Commissioners Courts may be compelled to exercise are defined in the Constitution in the following language: "The county commissioners so chosen, with the county judge as presiding officer, shall compose the County Commissioners Court, which shall exercise such powers and jurisdiction over all county business as is conferred by this Constitution and the laws of the State, or as may be hereafter prescribed." Art. 5, sec. 18. The powers which the Legislature may require them to exercise are confined by this section to county business; and we think it clear, that the administration of the effects of a dissolved corporation and the payment of its debts are not such business.
Persons who have conveyed property to an ostensible corporation are not in a position to plead its illegality as against its creditors. The latter, when its organization has by due course of law been annulled, have a superior natural right to so much of the property acquired in its name as may be necessary to satisfy their demands. Therefore, there would seem to exist no constitutional impediment which would prevent the Legislature from providing a method by which such creditors may enforce their rights. The difficulty arises when the attempt *202
is made to impose the administration of the assets upon the county commissioners, as a court, and to compel them to perform it. Whether, if they should voluntarily act, their action would be legal, is a question we are not asked to determine. They may have the power to do an act which it is not their legal duty to perform. In the case of Brown v. Wheelock,
2. If the sale of the property of a dissolved corporation and the distribution of the proceeds of such sale among its creditors is not a business pertaining to a county, neither is the levy of a tax for the payment of such debts a duty which may be devolved upon the Commissioners Court as county business. That the Legislature can not by any method impose a tax upon the people of a territory embraced within the limits of an ostensible corporation, which has been judicially declared never to have been legally created, for the payment of the debts of the supposed municipality, is announced in Ewing v. Commissioners Court,
We answer the second question in the negative, which renders the answer to the third unnecessary, except in so far as it has been herein before incidentally answered.
Delivered April 25, 1895.
DENMAN, Associate Justice, did not sit in this case. *203