This suit for injunctive relief was filed in a civil district court of Dallas County by appellants, owners and operators of commercial motor vehicles on public highways, against the Public Safety Commission of Texas, its members, the Texas Highway Patrol, sheriffs and constables. Section 6 and various other provisions of Article 827a a, Vernon's Ann.P.C., were involved. The trial court, upon agreed facts and stipulations, permanently enjoined appellees from unloading the motor trucks of appellants in order to weigh same and ascertain their weight when empty; also from filing more than one complaint against their truck drivers for hauling loads in excess of 7,000 lbs. net, on a continuous journey through Texas. Appellants were refused an injunction, restraining appellees from weighing empty motor trucks and from, themselves, unloading same of all excess *Page 513 loads over 7,000 lbs. net. All parties have prosecuted an appeal.
Appellants' view of the law relative to a proper construction of the pertinent sub-divisions of said Article 827a, Vernon's Ann.P.C., is: "(1) That appellees have no authority to, and that no duty is imposed upon them to, weigh appellants' commercial motor trucks while same are being operated upon and over the public highways empty; (2) That appellees have no authority to, and no duty is imposed upon them to, themselves, unload any portion of the load of any commercial motor vehicle under any circumstances whatsoever; (3) That when the driver or operator of one of the commercial motor trucks of appellants, or any of them, has a complaint filed against him, the said driver or operator, charging him with operating a commercial motor vehicle over the public highways, carrying thereon a net load in excess of 7,000 pounds and either an appearance bond is posted for the appearance of such driver or operator of such commercial motor vehicle in court on such charge, and/or the final disposition is made of such complaint, constitutes former jeopardy with reference to any and all other charges that may be filed against the driver or operator of such commercial motor truck for the same offense when such driver or operator is operating the same motor vehicle on the same continuous journey transporting thereon the same load or cargo"
The present record is quite analogous to very recent decisions by our Supreme Court and Court of Criminal Appeals. We refer to the cases of State of Texas et al. v. Hon. Bryce Ferguson, District Judge, et al., State v. Hon. H. F. Kirby, District Judge, et al., Tex.Sup.,
With reference to appellants' second contention above, that appellees have no authority to, themselves, unload any portion of the load of a commercial vehicle under any circumstances, it is apparent that appellants' attack particularly challenges the authority of license and weight inspectors of the State Highway Patrol. Unloading of commercial motor vehicles would reasonably be for the purpose of determining improper registration, Article 805, art. 827a, § 5a, Vernon's Ann. P.C.; Article 6675a-1 et seq., Vernon's Ann.Civ.St., or of investigating excess loads, Article 827a, Sec. 6; it being held that the authority contemplated in said Sec. 6 is granted exclusively to license and weight inspectors. Head v. State, 131 Tex.Cr.R.,
Further, with respect to appellants' said contention, it is held in New Way Lumber Co. et al., v. Smith et al.,
We gather from the briefs that the real appellees and defendants herein are Public Safety Commission of Texas, its members, and the officers and members of the State Highway Patrol; all others being nominal parties.
It is our opinion that the trial court's judgment enjoining appellees from unloading trucks and then weighing same; and enjoining them from filing more than one complaint against drivers and operators of appellees' trucks, carrying loads in excess of 7,000 lbs., be reversed and rendered, dissolving such restraint. The portion of said judgment refusing to enjoin appellees in the other particulars of which complaint is made, will be affirmed.
