168 S.W. 408 | Tex. App. | 1914
This is a suit for injunction brought by appellant against the appellee to restrain him from impounding and selling, under the provisions of the stock law, cattle of appellant found running at large in a subdivision of Matagorda county in which it is claimed by appellee that the stock law is in force. An application for temporary injunction was heard by the trial court upon the petition and answer, and the injunction refused. This appeal is prosecuted from the order refusing to grant the temporary injunction.
The only question presented by the appeal is whether the stock law is in force in that portion of Matagorda county lying west of the Colorado river. The facts are as follows: On March 29, 1913, an election was held in said subdivision of Matagorda county, under the provisions of article 7235 of the Revised Statutes (1911), to determine whether or not stock should be permitted to run at large. The election resulted in favor of the stock law prohibiting the running at large of stock. The proclamation of the county judge declaring the result of the election was not issued until January 31, 1914; the delay in issuing such proclamation having been caused by injunction proceedings instituted by stockmen in said subdivision. At the time this election was held, Matagorda county was included in the list of the counties named in the article above cited which were authorized to hold such elections, and the validity of the election was upheld by this court on appeal in the injunction proceedings before mentioned. Holman v. Cowden Sutherland,
"An act to amend article 7235, chapter 6, title 124, of the Revised Statutes of Texas, 1911, with reference to the mode of preventing horses and certain other animals from running at large in counties named, so as to include Ochiltree, Moore, Sherman, Hansford, Henderson, Cameron, Hartley, Dallam, Concho, Pecos, Reeves, Wharton, Gonzales, Kerr, Kendall, Haskell, Young, Cottle, Hardeman and Hall counties, and declaring an emergency."
The Thirty-First Legislature passed an act amending the stock law and including therein the county of Matagorda. This was the first time Matagorda county was included in the provisions of the general stock law. Acts of 1909, c.
The Thirty-Second Legislature (Acts of 1911, c.
We think the trial court correctly held that the bill in question was inoperative in so far as it excluded Matagorda county from the operation of the stock law. This conclusion renders a discussion of the other questions presented unnecessary.
We are, however, inclined to the opinion that as the stock law did not become operative in the territory in which the election was held until the issuance by the county judge of his proclamation declaring the result of the election, if, prior to the issuance of the proclamation, the law authorizing Matagorda county to hold such election had been repealed by a valid act of the Legislature, no proclamation by the county judge could have been legally issued because of the repeal of the law authorizing its issuance, and therefore the stock law would never have been in force in the subdivision in which the election was held.
We are of opinion that the Judgment of the court below should be affirmed; and it has been so ordered.
Affirmed.