Martin v. Abernethy
Martin v. Abernethy
Opinion of the Court
The petition of H. G. Mar-
tin and others, brought in their own behalf and for other property owners in Atascosa county against Abernethy, as county judge of said county, and the several county commissioners as such, alleged in substance: That in September, 1893, the Commissioner of the General Land Office regularly issued his certificate designating the center of said county, which certificate with a map was made from the maps, surveys, and other data on file in the General Land Office, was correctly made, and was duly filed in the office of the county judge, and was shown on the official map made of the county in use in the General Land Office, showing the center of the county and the position of Pleasanton, the county seat to be within the radius of five miles from such center. That on or about April 15, 1910, upon the request of the county judge, the Commissioner of the General Land Office, through his chief clerk, Walker, issued another certificate showing the center of the county to be at another place than that fixed by the commissioner in 1893, and something over six miles from Pleasanton, which certificate the county judge caused to be recorded in the deed records of the county. That thereafter, on or about August 30, 1910, the commissioner revoked and set aside his certificate of April 15, 1910, and so notified the county judge. That said certificate was void because a former commissioner, having designated the center, issued his certificate thereof, which, was duly delivered to the county judge, the center of the county was conclusively determined by him, and his act was binding on all subsequent commissioners, who had no power to issue another certificate relating to the center of the county. That there has been no change in the maps, plats, surveys, and other data in the General Land Office affecting the boundaries of the county fixed by statute since September, 1S93. That the center of .the county as established and certified by the former commissioner was correctly determined by him by the proper methods scientifically used for such purpose, and the methods employed by the commissioner in 1910 for the purpose were incorrect and the result incorrectly arrived at in placing the center at a different point from the center. That on August 31, 1910, the county judge, by virtue of a petition of the voters of Atascosa county, caused an order to be entered upon the minutes of the commissioners’ court, ordering an election to be held in the voting precincts of the county on October 1, 1910, to determine whether or not it is .desirable to remove the county seat from Pleas-anton, and in pursuance of such order caused election notices to be posted, and an election was held in the county on October 1, 1910, at which election he caused to be printed tickets in the following form: “For removal to Jourdanton,” “For remaining at Pleasan-ton,” and at said election about 691 votes were cast for the removal to Jourdanton. That said election was void for the following reasons:
(1) The petition for the election failed to represent that an election was desired to remove the county seat from Pleasanton (where it had been for more than 50 years) to the town of Jourdanton, or to any other place, but applied for an order for the holding of an election, “for the purpose of submitting to the electors of said county the question as to whether or not it is desirable to remove the county seat of Atascosa county,” and said petition was not signed by a majority of the qualified electors in said county entitled to vote at the proposed election, there being in the county about 1,500 qualified voters, and the names signed numbered about 600, of whom the county judge determined there were on said petition only 329 proper signers.
(2) Because the order of the county judge, *829 after reciting that the petition had been hied and stating that the question therein presented “as to whether or not it is desirable to remove ithe county seat of said county from Pleasanton, Texas,” and reciting, “It is therefore ordered that an election be held on Saturday, the 1st day of October, in the various voting precincts of said Atascosa county to determine whether or not the' county seat shall be removed from Pleasanton, Texas,” shows that no election was ordered to determine whether or not the county seat should be removed from Pleasanton to Jour-danton, or to any other place, and on that order there could not be an election wherein the voters were authorized to determine whether or not the county seat should be removed from Pleasanton to Jourdanton; that said order was void for the further reason that it provided, “And on each ticket the voter shall write or cause to be written or printed ‘for removal to -’ (inserting the name of the place); ‘for remaining at -’ (inserting the name of the place).”
(S) Because there were no election notices posted notifying the electors that an election would be held to determine whether or not the county seat should be removed from rieasanton to Jourdanton or to any other point, the posted notices stating that ’ said election would be held “for the purpose of submitting to the electors of said election precinct the question as to whether or not it is desirable to remove the county seat of Ata-scosa county, Texas, from Pleasanton.”
(4) Because the tickets prepared by the county judge to be used at said election read as follows: “For removal to Jourdanton” “For remaining at Pleasanton” — the petition not requesting and the order not directing such question as to removal to Jourdanton.
The prayer was for an injunction against the defendants, restraining them as officers from canvassing the returns of the election and declaring the result thereof, etc. Defendants answered by general demurrer and general and special denial. All demurrers were overruled, and the case heard by the judge who rendered judgment against plaintiffs, and dissolved the temporary injunction that had been granted, but specially restrained defendants, in so far as the removal of the county officers and the records to Jour-danton were concerned, pending an appeal.
Appellants’ first assignment of error, stated as a proposition in itself, is that the trial court erred in holding that the petition presented to the county judge was sufficient basis for his action in ordering an election to determine the question of the removal of the county seat from Pleasanton where it had been for more than 40 years; said petition showing that it was merely a petition for an election upon the desirability of removing 'the county seat, and not a petition for an election to determine the removal of the county seat. The petition was as follows: “Your petitioners, resident freeholders and qualified voters of Atascosa county, Texas, petition • your honor to make an order upon the minutes of the commissioners’ court of Atascosa county for the. holding of an election at the various voting precincts of said county on a day therein named which shall be not less than thirty nor more than sixty days from the date of said order for the purpose of submitting to the electors of said county the question as to whether or not it is desirable to remove the county seat of Atascosa county.”
The second assignment is that said petition was insufficient to invoke the order of an election to determine the question of removal of the county seat, because, Pleasan-ton having been the county seat for over 40 years, the statute required the petition to be signed by a majority of the resident freeholders and electors of said county, which was not done, the qualified electors being about 1,400 and said petition was signed by only 631 signers, and the court erred in holding that said petition was signed by the requisite number of qualified electors.
Under the fourth assignment the contention made is embodied in the following proposition: “The petition * * * requested a vote to determine ‘whether or not it is desirable to remove the county seat,’ etc., and an order made thereon was that an election should be held to determine whether or not said county seat should in fact be removed from Pleasanton.” The petition in the form presented did not warrant the court in making the order for an election to determine whether or not the county seat should be removed.
The points raised by the foregoing assignments are:
(1) That the petition for án election to determine whether or not it was desirable to remove the county seat of the county was of itself insufficient as a basis for the ordering of an election to determine the removal of the county seat from Pleasanton.
(2) That the petition was otherwise insufficient because not signed by a majority of the freeholders and electors of the county being signed by 631, and plaintiffs’ petition showing that there were about 1,500.
Under the seventh, eighth, tenth, eleventh,' and thirteenth assignments are presented substantially the following propositions, without our undertaking to copy them: It is contended that the proof showing without dispute that the point designated as the geographical center by the commissioner’s, certificate of April 15, 1910, was not in fact such center of the county, and the method employed by the commissioner in ascertaining and designating such center being shown to be an incorrect method, his certificate was not conclusive, and proof of a mistake, so arising, could be shown in impeachment of it. The method pursued by the commissioner was to bisect the county as constituted by the outer boundaries upon the said Land Office map, which embodied a compilation of all the data in that office on the subject, by a north and south line dividing the area of the county into east and west halves, and by an east and west line dividing the area into north and south halves, and adopting the point of intersection. Appellant contends that the accurate way of determining the center is by what is known as the “gravity system,” which is by cutting a cardboard the. figure of the county, suspending the same by a pin at any extremity thereof, so that it may swing freely and suspending from that point a plumb line, and repeating this from any other point of extremity, and the point of intersection, which would be the same point in every instance, would constitute the true center of the figure. The result of the two methods is not the same. Hunnicut, chief draughtsman of the General Land Office, who did the work of establishing the geographical center in question, testified: “The center of Atascosa county designated by the acting commissioner on April 15, 1910, does not represent or conform with the center ascertained by the gravity system. The center of gravity of the figure represented by the boundary lines of the county of Atascosa as ascertained by me is *831 situated on the map of said county according to measurement by scale 2,250 yaras N. 32%,° E. from tbe center designated upon tbe map by tbe certificate issued April 15, 1910.” Mr. Burmeister, speaking of tbe center defined in tbe certificate of April 15, 1910, testified: “I bave also measured the distance from that center to the town of Pleasanton and by measurement find that it is 6% miles.”
However, there is an intimation in appellants’ brief that the judge considered the commissioner’s certificate as conclusive. The Court of Givil Appeals, in the case of Kilgore v. Jackson, 118 S. W. S22, expressed this view. Certainly it was intended to lodge the exclusive power to determine such fact with the Commissioner of the General Land Office, he being enjoined in the performance of that duty to ascertain the fa'ct “from the maps, surveys, and other data in his office.” A center arrived at through such process would naturally admit of mistake. The process required to be observed in determining such center of a county does not admit of or contemplate absolute precision in the result in all instances. The result expected is the position of the geographical center as found by the commissioner from the maps, surveys, and data in his office according to the best of his skill, judgment, and ability, and, when this is done and the result certified, his act should be taken as conclusive, unless in a case where fraud on his part is charged, or such gross mistake as would imply fraud. The petition contains no such averment, and, if the trial judge held immaterial testimony tending to show, error on the part of the commissioner in locating the center where he did, we think he held correctly.
The said assignments are overruled.
This disposes of all the assignments of error, and we conclude that the judgment should be affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- MARTIN Et Al. v. ABERNETHY, County Judge, Et Al.
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- 1 case
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- Published