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Smith v. Patterson

Supreme Court of Texas.May 24, 1922111 Tex. 535242 S.W. 749 (Approx. 6 pages)

Smith v. Patterson

Supreme Court of Texas.May 24, 1922111 Tex. 535242 S.W. 749 (Approx. 6 pages)

111 Tex. 535
Supreme Court of Texas.
SMITH
v.
PATTERSON.
(No. 3788.)
May 24, 1922.

Attorneys and Law Firms

**749 *535 A. L. Green, Geo. C. Butte, and Ira P. Hilderbrand, all of Austin, for appellant.
*536 J. M. Patterson, of Austin, W. A. Keeling, Atty. Gen., and Bruce W. Bryant, Asst. Atty. Gen., for appellee.

Opinion

PLERSON, J.
The certificate of the honorable Court of Civil Appeals for the Third District is as follows:
‘The above cause is pending in the Court of Civil Appeals for the Third District, and an agreed motion to certify the controlling point in the case to the Supreme Court has been granted, and this certificate is made for that purpose.
‘John T. Smith, the appellant, brought this suit against J. M. Patterson, chairman of the Democratic executive committee of Travis county, for the purpose of compelling said Patterson to certify Smith's name as candidate for the Legislature, under the act of the Thirty-Second Legislature redistricting the state into representative districts, as shown by the general and special laws passed by that Legislature at its first called session (pages 80 to 88). That act was repealed by the Thirty-Seventh Legislature by an act reapportioning the state into representative districts, which is printed on pages 264 to 272 of *537 the general laws enacted by that Legislature, if the latter act is constitutional.
‘Appellant charges in his petition that the last act referred to is unconstitutional, null, and void, because of the fact that it makes no disposition of the county of Swisher, and fails to include it in either of the districts therein specified; the further contention being that, if that act is unconstitutional, the former act of the Thirty-Second Legislature redistricting the state is still in force.
‘The district court held that the act of the **750 Thirty-Seventh Legislature is constitutional, and sustained a general demurrer to the plaintiff's petition; and the latter has brought the case to this court by appeal, and the ruling referred to is assigned as error. For further particualrs, reference is made to the appellant's brief, a copy of which accompanies this certificate.
‘The question involved is one of great importance, and should be finally decided as soon as possible. Therefore, upon its own motion, as well as in complaince with the request of as well as in compliance with the request of to the Supreme Court of the state this question: Is the act of the Thirty-Seventh Legislature unconstitutional because of the fact that, in redistricting the state, it omits Swisher county, and thereby fails to provide any means by which the voters of that county can have any voice in the election of representatives to the Legislature?’
Appellant argues that the statute is unconstitutional and invalid, because by omitting and leaving out Swisher county it disfranchises the citizens of that county: that it cannot be held that the citizens of that county are entitled to the rights of citizenship in selecting representatives to the Legislature under the redistricting act of 1911 (Acts 32d Leg., Sp. Sess. p. 80), for the reason that that act was repealed by the 1921 act (Acts 37th Leg. 2d Called Sess. c. 6 (Vernon's Ann. Civ. St. Supp. 1922, arts. 26, 27)); that said 1911 act was repealed by necessary implication, inasmuch as the purpose, object, and subject-matter of both statutes apply to the same thing; that the 1921 act so dealt with the subject-matter, to wit, the apportioning of the counties of the state into representative districts, and made such changes in their arrangement and composition as to make the two acts wholly inconsistent and impossible of harmonizing, especially in view of the fact that representative district No. 123, of which Swisher county under the act of 1911 was a part, is reorganized by the cat of 1921, and contains other and different counties to what were formerly in the district of that number. He further presents that the intention of the Legislature must be found in the statute itself, and the court has not the right to legislate and add anything to the statute.
The contention of appellee, Patterson, and upon which he bases his case, is that the law does not favor repeal of a statute by implication, and that, if the cat of 1921 is invalid and void, it is void only as to *538 Swisher county, and that the act of 1911 redistricting the state into representative districts is not repealed by implication, and that therefore Swisher county would be and remain in representative district No. 123, as provided in the act of 1911.
It has been repeatedly held by this court and the courts of all jurisdictions that a legislative enactment will not be held unconstitutional and invalid unless it is absolutely necessary to so hold.
In the case of Solon v. State, 54 Tex. Cr. R. 272, 114 S. W. 350, 352, in passing upon the constitutionality of a statute, the Court of Criminal Appeals, in an able opinion by Mr. Justice Ramsey (who afterwards was a member of this court), used the following language:
‘The rule is universal that the courts will not declare an act of the Legislature unconstitutional, unless such infirmity and vice clearly appears. Indeed this rule is necessary, and evidences that respectful regard in which the judicial should hold the legislative department of our government.’
Mr. Cooley, in his work on Constitutional Limitations, in discussing this subject, says:
‘They (the courts) will approach the question with great caution, examine it in every possible aspect, and ponder upon it as long as deliberation and patient attention can throw any new light upon the subject, and never declare a statute void, unless the nullity and invalidity of the act are placed, in their judgment, beyond reasonable doubt. A reasonable doubt must be solved in favor of the legislative action, and the act be sustained.’
‘A statute will not be declared unconstitutional in a doubtful case. * * * Courts should uphold the statute as valid, unless clearly unconstitutional; every intendment and presumption being in favor of constitutionality.’
We could quote many texts and many authorities, from our own state and other jurisdictions to the effect that the greatest liberality must be exercised in upholding the validity of a statute and in giving full faith and credit to the acts of the Legislature, a co-ordinate department of government. We are in hearty accord with these views, and would add our emphasis to them.
We agree with appellant that, if the citizens of Swisher county are deprived of the right of suffrage by the redistricting act of 1921, said act would be unconstitutional and invalid. Section 19 of article 1 of the Constitution provides that—
‘No citizen of the state shall be * * * in any manner disfranchised, except by the due course of the law of the land.’
And section 2 of article 6 of the Texas Constitution provides that all citizens not disqualified by section 1 of the same article are guaranteed the right to vote for state, county, and district officers.
Sec. 26. The members of the house of representatives shall be apportioned among the several counties, according to the number of population in each, as nearly as may be, on a **751 ratio obtained by dividing the population of the state, as ascertained by the most recent United States census, by the number of members of which the house is composed; provided, that whenever a single county has sufficient population to be entitled to a representative, such county shall be formed into a separate representative district; and when two or more counties are required to make up the ratio of representation, such counties shal be contiguous to each other; and when any one county has more than sufficient population to be entitled to one or more representatives, such representative or representatives shall be apportioned to such county, and for any surplus of population it may be joined in a representative district with any other contiguous county or counties.
Sec. 27. Elections for sentators and representatives shall be general throughout the state, and shall be regulated by law.
Sec. 28. The Legislature shall, at its first session after the publication of each United States decennial census, apportion the state into senatorial and representative districts, agreeably to the provisions of sections 25 and 26 of this article; and until the next decennial census, when the first apportionment shall be made by the Legislature, the state shall be and it is hereby divided into senatorial and representative districts as provided by an ordinance of the convention on that subject.’
The Constitution requires that the Legislature divide the state into senatorial and representative districts according to population, and, in a district containing two or more counties, the counties shall be contiguous to each other. This means the entire state, including all of its counties.
It is clear to our minds that a statute that takes away or denies the citizens of any county, or subdivision thereof, the right of suffrage is invalid, as an infringement upon their constitutional rights, and is a violation of the provisions of the Constitution above referred to. Inasmuch as it is clear that chapter 6 of the acts of the Thirty-Seventh Legislature (Acts of 1921) redistricting the state into representative districts omitted to name the county of Swisher, and failed to expressly place it within any of the 127 districts into which the state was divided, the said act must be held invalid, unless there is a legal and sufficient basis upon which to ascertain in what district it was the intention of the Legislature to place Swisher county. The act of 1921 itself furnishes the evidence. The Constitution required the Legislature to redistrict the state into legislative districts according to its directions as to population, and *540 as to contiguity of counties in districts composed of more than one county. It will be presumed that it was the intention of the Legislature to place Swisher county in some district, and thereby to apportion the entire state, as required by the Constitution, and to enact a valid redistricting law. This intention is disclosed by the caption of said act, which in part is as follows:
‘An act to apportion the state of Texas into representative districts.’
The act of 1921 clearly purported to apportion the entire state, including Swisher county. It is just as apparent that Swisher county was included as if the caption had read:
‘An act to apportion the state of Texas into representative districts, as follows'
-and had named all the counties of the state.
This being the disclosed intention of the Legislature, let us then examine the act in reference to the way and manner of its execution of this intention in the apportioning of the counties in the general vicinity of Swisher county, in the light of the constitutional provisions relating to population and to contiguity of counties, to see if there is any reasonable basis upon which to ascertain its intention as to Swisher county.
The chief draftsman of the land office has kindly furnished us with a map of the 124th, 123d, 122d, 121st, and 120th districts, as created by the act of 1921. The following is the map referred to:
*541 Reference to this map discloses the following facts:
District No. 124, bordering the north line of the state, is composed of 10 counties, and, according to the 1920 United States census, of which we will take judicial knowledge, contains a population of 21,520. (One of the largest districts in amount of territory covered, but not great in population.) This district consists of a block of counties in rectangular form, and calling them off as they **752 are named in the act they read as follows: Hartley, Dallam, Sherman, Moore, Hutchinson, Hansford, Ochiltree, Roberts, Hemphill, and Bipscomb-each county being named immediately after one adjoining it and in consecutive order. By reading the counties on the map in the order named in the act this point is clearly illustrated.
District No. 123 just south of No. 124, is composed of 6 counties, and contains a population of 30,735. This is also a compact district, in rectangular form, and in calling the counties on the map as they are named in the act they read as follows: Carson, Armstrong, Randall, *542 Potter, Deaf Smith, and Oldham-each county being named immediately after one adjoining it and in consecutive order.
District No. 120 lying just south of No. 123, is composed of 7 named counties, which contain a population of 28,139. By calling the counties on the map as they are named in the act they read as follows: Bailey, Parmer, Castro, Lamb, Hale, Briscoe, and Floyd-each county being named immediately after one adjoining it, and would be in consecutive order if Swisher county were also named.
The same observations as to the order of selecting the counties and their relative position to each other apply to the 122d and the 121st districts, as shown by the map, they having populations of 29,249 and 33,078, respectively.
No special importance is attached to the fact that these districts are in rectangular form, but the uniformity of these districts and the location of Swisher county, surrounded on three sides by other and contiguous counties, and the uniformity of method and manner of calling the counties and creating these districts, together with the relative quota of population assigned to each, are significant, and especially so when taken in connection with the further analysis of facts herein stated.
As shown by both parties to this suit, Swisher county, if left out by the act, would be between districts Nos. 123 and 120, and surrounded by them. It would be contiguous to no other district, but would be contiguous to one county in the 123d district and to three counties in the 120th district. In obedience to the Constitution, the Legislature could not have intended to place it in any other than one of these two districts. Under this apportionment act the average population of the districts is 31,488. The districts in this section run quite uniform, and fairly approxmated the average. The 123d district contains a population of 30,735. If the Legislature had placed Swisher county therein, its population would have been 35,123. The 120th district contains a population of 28,139 without Swisher county. If the Legislature placed Swisher county therein, its population is 32,527. The latter population would approximate the average perhaps as nearly as any district of the state.
A detailed analysis of the act, in its construction of these districts, as vividly disclosed by the map, makes it not only reasonable to conclude, but the conclusion is almost irresistible, that the legislative intent was to place Swisher county in the 120th district. It seems reasonably certain that, in calling the counties for this district, in placing them in the order as demonstrated by the map, and the manner in which the adjacent districts were formed, as evidenced by the act, and giving attention to the position of Swisher county, and its contiguity to the counties on three sides of it in this district, and assigning *543 proper apportionment of population for said district, the legislative intent was to place said county in said 120th district. Therefore, regardless of other questions raised in the case, we think Swisher county is a component part of the 120th district, and as such is entitled to representation in that district, and that the reapportionment act of the Thirty-Seventh Legislature is valid.
Therefore we answer the question in the negative.
CURETON, C. J., not sitting.

All Citations

111 Tex. 535, 242 S.W. 749
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