96 S.W.2d 94 | Tex. App. | 1936
Appellant, as plaintiff, brought this suit in the district court of Tom Green county, Tex., for mandamus to compel the Texas Liquor Control Board to issue to him a permit for the sale of liquors in unbroken packages at a designated location in justice precinct No. 1, in said county. From an order refusing to grant such mandamus, he has appealed.
The issue presented is whether such justice precinct No. 1 is wet or dry territory. The facts are undisputed, are agreed to, and are as follows:
Commissioner precinct No. 1 and justice precinct No. 1 in said county have identical boundaries and include the city of San Angelo. In November, 1918, a local option election was held, under the constitutional amendment of 1891, in commissioner precinct No. 1, at which election said precinct voted to prohibit the sale of intoxicating liquors therein. At that time the Constitution authorized the holding of local option elections in commissioner precincts as well as in justice precincts. In the amendment to the Constitution (section 20 of art. 16) adopted in 1935, and in the Liquor Control Act (Acts 2d C.S. 44 Leg. c.
It is appellant's contention under these facts and circumstances: (1) That the 1918 local election being held in a commissioner precinct, and not as a justice precinct election, and the 1935 constitutional amendment preserving a dry status only as to counties, justice precincts, cities, or towns which had theretofore voted dry, that no such dry status was preserved as to commissioner precincts, but that such precincts by the adoption of the 1935 amendment thereby became wet territory where intoxicating liquors might be legally *95 sold; that justice precinct No. 1, not having had a local option election as such prior to 1919, became wet territory under the 1935 amendment; and (2) that because the ballot used in the January, 1936, election for such precinct was that prescribed by section 40 of the Liquor Control Act (Vernon's Ann.P.C. art. 666 — 40) to be used in elections in dry areas, when such justice precinct No. 1 was, as a matter of law, then a wet area, this irregularity rendered that election void, thereby leaving said justice precinct No. 1 still a wet area. Consequently, that since appellant had complied with all the requirements of the law governing the issuance of a liquor permit, it was the duty of the Liquor Control Board to issue same to him.
If justice precinct No. 1 was dry territory under the 1918 election held in commissioner precinct No. 1, constituting identically the same area and containing the same voters, then it continued as dry territory under the 1935 amendment to the Constitution; and the 1936 election held therein, under the assumption that it was dry territory, was regular, and it continued to remain dry territory. Appellant cites us to cases by the Court of Criminal Appeals, particularly Ex parte Mills,
If, however, we be in error as to the dry status of justice precinct No. 1 at the time the 1935 amendment to the Constitution was adopted, we think the trial court properly refused to grant the mandamus applied for. While the Court of Civil Appeals at San Antonio, in Moyer v. Kelley,
Affirmed.