Court Opinion

ID: 3910479
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 09:39:14.199481+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:47:07.537894
License: Public Domain

Appellant was convicted of violating the local option law, in force in justice precinct number 6 of Callahan County, and his punishment assessed at $25 fine and twenty days imprisonment in the county jail.
1. Appellant objects to the validity of the election, upon the ground that the notices of the time and place of the election which were posted in said precinct did not run in the name of the State of Texas. While it is true that all writs and process shall run in the name of the State of Texas (Revised Statutes, article 1443), yet the notice of the election which is here required to be posted is not a writ or process. Article 3230 simply requires the clerk to post copies of the order at five different places within the limits of the proposed district. An examination of the posted copy shows it to be a correct copy of the order, duly certified to under the hand and official seal of the clerk of the court. This, we think, was a full compliance with the law.
2. Appellant further objects to the validity of the election, upon the ground that in entering the order declaring the result and prohibiting the sale of intoxicating liquor, the County Commissioners Court failed to add the words, "except for the purposes and under the regulations specified in this title." It is insisted, that this being a statutory order, no part of it can be omitted without invalidating the whole. The order in all other respects is a literal compliance with article 3233. In Lipari's case, 19 Texas Criminal Appeals, 434, where the order omitted the words, "until such time as the qualified voters therein may, at a legal election held for that purpose, by a majority vote, decide otherwise," it was held, that though stated in article 3233, yet the omission of this clause would not invalidate the order, because it was not essential that the order should so declare; that the duration of such prohibition being fixed by the law itself, could not be affected by the order of the County Commissioners Court omitting to state it. Upon the very same reasoning, the failure of the County Commissioners Court to enter the exceptions should not *Page 598 
invalidate the order. The law itself has made the exceptions, and provided the regulations under which they are made available to any one entitled to plead them.
They can not be affected by the order of the Commissioners Court. Article 3228, Revised Statutes, declares that the preceding article (to-wit, 3227, which authorizes the election) shall not be so construed as to prohibit the sales of wines for sacramental purposes, nor alcoholic stimulants as medicine in case of actual sickness. That is to say, the Legislature expressly withholds from the Commissioners Court the power to prohibit the sales of intoxicating liquor in the instances specified. A failure to enter the exceptions in the prohibiting order can in no way deprive any one of the right of proving that he comes within the exceptions provided by the law. The law could not be put into operation without also putting the exceptions into operation at the same time. We therefore conclude that the order as entered is not invalid, and the judgment of the court below is affirmed.
Affirmed.
Judges all present and concurring.