Court Opinion

ID: 4906692
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-09-03 05:58:41.905236+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:13:09.264044
License: Public Domain

Willson, Judge.
I. The petition asking for an order for an election to determine whether or not the sale of intoxicating liquors and medicated bitters producing intoxication should be prohibited in Limestone county was not filed until the first day of the term of the commissioners’ court at which said election was ordered, but it was filed before said court actually met and convened. It is objected by appellant that said petition was not filed in time to authorize action thereupon at that term of the court.
It is provided by the statute that “ It shall be the duty of the court, at its first regular session after the filing of such petition with the clerk thereof, to order an election,” etc. (Eev. Stats., art. 3229.) Counsel for appellant insists that the word session as used in this provision is synonymous with the word term, and that said petition was filed after the term or session of the court had commenced. We think differently. The word term, when used with reference to a court, signifies “ the space of time during which the court holds a session.” (Bouvier’s Law Die.) A session signifies the time during the term which the court sits for the transaction of business, and the session commences when the court convenes for the term, and continues until final adjournment, either before or at the expiration óf the term. The term of the court is the time prescribed by law during which it may be in session. The session of the court is the time of its actual sitting. (Webster’s Die., “ Session.”)
It is true that lexicographers give very nearly the same meaning to the two words, and make them almost synonymous; yet it will be found upon close examination that the distinction in their signification, which we have stated, is a correct one. It is, in our opinion, unquestionably correct when applied to the word session as used in the statute under consideration. There might have been a regular term of the court after the filing of the petition, at which term there might not have been any session. It was, no doubt, for the purpose *434of providing for such contingency that the word session was used instead of the word term. If the word term had been used, and a regular term of the court, without a session, had expired after the filing of the petition, then the petition could not have been acted on, according to the strict letter of the law, at a subsequent term,— hence the word session was properly used instead of the word term. That a term of court may begin and end without a session, see Eev. Stats., arts. 1127,1128. (See, also, as illustrating the difference between a term and a session, Eev. Stats., arts. 1129,1173,1175,1525.) We are of the opinion that the petition was filed in time to authorize action thereon at any time during the session of the court at that term.
II. Articles 1680 and 1681 of the Eevised Statutes, construed together, authorized the county judge to issue the writs of election. It is only in the case of a vacancy in the office of county judge, or his inability or failure to act, that the commissioners are authorized to issue the writs of election.
III. Considering the order of the commissioners’ court ordering the election as a whole, it unmistakably declares that the purpose of the election was to determine whether or not the sale of intoxicating liquors or medicated bitters producing intoxication should be prohibited in Limestone county. The objection urged against the order by appellant’s counsel is, we think, without substantial merit. The omission of the words “ the sale of,” in one portion of the order where they should have occurred, was supplied by other recitals in the order showing clearly the purpose of the election was to determine as to the prohibition of the sale of intoxicating liquors, etc.
IY. It is objected to the order declaring the result of the election that it does not literally follow the statute and declare that the prohibition of the sale of intoxicating liquors, etc., in the county shall continue until such time as the qualified voters of the county, at an election held for that purpose, by a majority vote should decide otherwise. We do not think that it was essential that the order should so declare. The election having resulted in favor of prohibition, it was only necessary that the order should declare that fact and prohibit the sale of intoxicating liquors, except for certain purposes specified in the statute, within the limits of the county. The duration of such prohibition was fixed by the law, and could not be affected by the order of the court. It would have added nothing to the legal effect of the order to have included in it the declaration in question, nor does the failure to include the same therein in val i-*435date the order. We think the order as it reads is in substantial compliance with the statute.
Y. That the commissioners’ court ordered an election to determine whether or not the sale of intoxicating liquors, etc., should be prohibited in a justice’s precinct in said county, to be held on the same day that the prohibition election for the county was held, and that said precinct election was held on said day, does not, so far as we can perceive, invalidate the county election. We can see no reason why it should be held to have such an effect. It did not prevent a full, fair, free expression at the ballot-box of the wishes of the voters upon the question of prohibition in the county. It interfered in no way with the county election, and, even had the entire vote of this precinct been omitted from the count, the result of the election in the county would have been unchanged.
We find no error in the judgment and it is affirmed.

Affirmed,

[Opinion delivered November 25, 1885.]