Case Name: Ex parte NORTON
Court: Texas Court of Criminal Appeals
Jurisdiction: Texas
Decision Date: 1929-01-09
Citations: 21 S.W.2d 663
Docket Number: No. 10886
Parties: Ex parte NORTON.
Judges: 
Reporter: South Western Reporter Second Series
Volume: 21
Pages: 663–666

Head Matter:
Ex parte NORTON.
(No. 10886.)
Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas.
Jan. 9, 1929.
State’s Rehearing Denied Nov.-13, 1929.
L. C. Boswell and W. W; Arnold, both of Texarkana, for relator.
A. A. Dawson, State’s Atty., of Austin, for the State.

Opinion:
MORROW, P, J.
Relator is under conviction in the corporation court of the city of Texarkana for an offense denounced by article 1346, Pen. Code 1925, which offense is within the jurisdiction of the county court, hut not within the jurisdiction of the justice court, and in which a six months' jail penalty may be assessed.
The validity of the judgment depends upon whether the corporation court had jurisdiction of the subject-matter. Such jurisdiction is claimed by the city to come from certain legislative and corporation acts, a résumé of which follows:
In the year 1907, the city was, by special act of the Legislature (Sp. Laws 1907, c. 104), granted a charter in which, by sections 131 and 144, the corporation court was created and jurisdiction defined, as covering offenses denounced by the city ordinances and state laws, when the latter came within the jurisdiction of the justice or county court, and were committed within the city. Appeals were provided for to the county court, and from that court to the Court of Criminal Appeals, when the judgment in the county court amounted to a fine of $100.
Section 132, of the charter makes the may- or, or, at the option of the city council, a recorder appointed by the council, a magistrate to preside over the court and exert the powers granted by the act.
In the, year 1909, by special legislative act, section 144, supra, was amended so as to give the right of appeal in all cases tried in the corporation court, such appeal, however, to be to the Court of Criminal Appeals in all cases. Special Laws, 31st Leg., 1909, e. 96.
By special act. of the Thirty-Third Legislature in the year 1913 (Sp. Laws 1913, c. 65), section 144, supra, was again amended so as to deny appeals in all cases where the punishment was by a fine of less than $25. Certain sections of the charter were amended by a vote held under the Home Rule Amendment to article 11, § 5 of the Constitution, and by chapter 13, title 28, Rev. St. 1925 (articles 1165-1182).
The writer is of the opinion that that part of the city charter which confers upon the corporation .court jurisdiction of offenses against the state law, not cognizable by the justice court, but cognizable by the county court, is not valid. Such opinion is entertained for the reason that it is believed that the provisions last mentioned offend against many general laws of the state, as well as various provisions of the Constitution. Whether that conclusion be sound or not, it is believed that a prosecution is which a jail penalty may be assessed cannot be transferred from tbe county court situated at tbe county seat and tried by a corporation court situated elsewhere. This the writer understands to be in accord with tbe announcement of tbe Supreme Court of this state in tbe case of Turner v. Tucker, 113 Tex. 434, 258 S. W. 149.
Before entering upon a review in detail of tbe reasons for tbe conclusion mentioned, it may be said that the act of 1913, supra, is not effective, because at tbe time it was passed, all power to grant or change a city charter by a special law had been withdrawn by amendment to article 11, § 5, of the Constitution adopted November 5, 1912. See Rev. St. 1925, title 28, c. 13 (articles 1165-1182), relating to the Home Rule Amendment ; also King v. State, 105 Tex. Cr. R. 416, 289 S. W. 69. The conviction can gather no sanction from the amendment of the charter by a vote for the reason that tbe amendment of article 11, § 5, and the statute mentioned above inhibit a city charter "containing any provisions inconsistent with the Constitution of the State or the general laws enacted, 6y the Legislature."
The general law of the state enacted by the Legislature and set forth in article 1195, Rev. St. 1925, prescribes the jurisdiction and Constitution of city courts in terms quite inconsistent with those contained in section 144 of Acts of 1907 and 1909, supra, particularly in the matter of the restriction of the right of appeal, and the invasion of the exclusive original jurisdiction of the county court. There being no general law of the state which confers upon a corporation court the jurisdiction of offenses against the state law which are cognizable under the terms of the general law by the county court and not by the justice or corporation courts, there arises in the mind of#the writer a serious question touching the power of the city after having amended its charter under the Home Rule Amendment to the Constitution, to operate a corporation court with powers inconsistent with the general law covering the formation and jurisdiction of such courts. In other words, the city, by acting under the authority of the Home Rule Enabling Act, would be obliged to conform the jurisdiction of the court to the general law instead of a special law. Aside from that which has just been written, and accepting the adjustment of the conflict between the opinions of this court'set forth in Leach v. State, 36 Tex. Cr. R. 248, 36 S. W. 471, and those of the Supreme Court announced in Harris County v. Stewart, 91 Tex. 133, 41 S. W. 650, by which adjustment the power of the Legislature to vest in corporation courts jurisdiction of offenses against the state cognizable by the justice courts was upheld, it is believed that there are cogent reasons for denying such power to vest in corporation courts jurisdiction of those misdemeanors which by general law are cognizable alone by the county court and appealable alone to the Court of Criminal Appeals.
By article 5, § 15, of the Constitution, there is established in each county a county court which should be a court of record; and there should be elected to preside over the court a county judge. In section 16, the county court is given jurisdiction over all misdemeanors of which exclusive jurisdiction is not given to the justices' courts as the same is now or may hereafter be prescribed by law, and when the fine to be imposed may exceed $200. The county court shall not have criminal jurisdiction in any county where there is a criminal district court unless expressly conferred by law. The county court is given appellate jurisdiction from the justices' courts in all criminal cases, and appeals from the county court in criminal cases, when allowed, are to the Court of Criminal Appeals. By section 17 it is declared that the county court shall hold a term for criminal business once in every month as may be provided by law. Justice courts, by article 5, § 19, of the Constitution, are given jurisdiction in criminal ca'ses where the penalty or fine to be imposed by law may not be more than $200. This is concurrent with the county court.
By article 5, § 5 of the Constitution, appellate jurisdiction is conferred upon the Court of Criminal Appeals in all criminal eases under such regulations as may be prescribed by law. By law it is provided that appeals to the Court of Criminal Appeals are upon a record made in a manner which can only be made in a court of record. See Ency. of Law & Proc., vol. 11, p. 657; Words & Phrases, 2d series, vol. 1, p. 1117; vol. 2, p. 60. By article 1602 of the Revised Statutes 1925, it is declared that all terms of the district,'county and commissioners' courts shall be held at the county seat; and by article 1605 it is declared that the officers (the county judge, clerk of the county court, the county attorney, and other named officers of the county) shall keep their offices at the county seat. From the Constitution and statutory provisions to which reference is made, it seems evident that in our system of jurisprudence it is contemplated that the county court, being a court of record, shall hold its sessions to transact business,' including the trial of criminal cases, at the county seat. Upon the subject in hand much light is thrown by the opinion of the Supreme Court of this state in the case of Turner v. Tucker, 113 Tex. 434, 258 S. W. 149, in which an act of the Legislature creating what was designated as the "Texarkana Court at Law" and prescribing its jurisdiction in conformity with- other courts was held to violate certain provisions of the Constitution. By the act in question the corporation court was located at Texar-kana, a place other than the county seat of the county, and the jurisdiction of the district court sitting at the county seat was curtailed by the terms of the act in conferring upon the Texarkana court at law jurisdiction of civil and criminal eases cognizable by the district and county courts of that' county occurring within the territorial limits of commissioners' precinct No. 1 of Bowie county. The Supreme Court, in dealing with the attack upon the validity, of the court, regarded its substance rather than its name and declared it to be in effect but a district and county court established at a place other than the county seat of the county, contrary to the provisions of the statute and terms of the Constitution contemplating that the district and county courts should be held at the county seat. In the opinion are cited the cases of Whitener v. Belknap & Co., 89 Tex. 273, 34 S. W. 594; Ex parte Towles, 48 Tex. 429; Rochelle v. State, 89 Tex. Cr. R. 592, 232 S. W. 838; Shipp v. State, 89 Tex. Cr. R. 584, 232 S. W. 840; Bennett v. State, 89 Tex. Cr. R. 617, 232 S. W. 841; also the statutes which have been adverted to above requiring the county officials to maintain their offices at the county seat and sessions of the county and commissioners' courts to be held there, and certain clauses of the state Constitution.
To the mind of the writer, the validity of the charter provision upon which the conviction rests cannot be upheld without coming in conflict with the decisions of the Supreme Court of this state construing the controlling constitutional and statutory provisions as has been pointed out by reference to the opinion of the Supreme Court in the case of Turner v. Tucker, supra. If there were doubt in the mind of the writer, he would be constrained to resolve it so as to bring the opinion of this court in accord with that of the Supreme Court touching the effect of the provisions mentioned. This state occupying the unique position of having two courts of last resort — one of civil jurisdiction and the other of criminal jurisdiction — it is a cause of satisfaction that in but very few instances have the decisions of the two courts been in conflict. At the present time, so far as the writer is aware, they are in conflict in no matter of statutory construction or substantive law. It is of great concern to the public that such status continue. Aside from the importance of harmony between the two courts of last resort, the writer is of the opinion that in the attempt to transfer to the corporation court not situated at the county seat nor presided over by any officer of the state elected by the people of the county, power to try eases exclusively cognizable by the county court does not exist. The further opinion is expressed that the city of Texarkana, which had previously acted under a special charter enacted by a special act of the Legislature, having elected after the adoption of the Home Rule Amendment to the Constitution giving authority to cities of the population of Tex-arkana to adopt its own charter, and, after the enactment by the Legislature of the enabling act, to take advantage of the privilege of adopting its own charter, could not avail itself of the advantage of the local self-government accorded by the Home Rule Amendment and the enabling act without subjecting itself to the restrictions which were thereby imposed, one of which would be that its corporation court should conform to those prescribed by the general law of the state.
For the reasons stated, the writ of habeas corpus is granted, and the relator ordered discharged.