Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion

EATTOR~EY'GENERAL ‘QDF TEXAS ‘. ALUwnN 11. TEXAS PRICE DANIEL ATTORNEYCENERAI. January 26, 1950 Honorable A. C. Winborn District Attorney ul/&,-xJ7 Houston, Texas Opinion No, V-990 *1c/ ZLLd, 212 (MS0 ) Re: The status of H-B, 656 and S.B. 425, Acts Slst Leg., 1949, relative to contributing to child delinquency in view of apparent Dear Mr. Winborn: iaconeistency between them. Your request for an opinion relates to the etatus of H.B. 656 and S.B. 425, Acts 51st Leg., R-S,, 1949,‘Chaptera 500 and 488, pages 924 and 910, respectively, both of which undertook to add to and strengthen the law for punishment of those who encourage or contribute to child delinquency. The general purpose of the two bills, in so far as they relate. to child delinquency, is the same. But so many details and special provisions of the two bills are different that both bills on the same offense earnrot stand., You ask which, if either, of the bills is now effective. H.B, 656, which contained an emergency clause, was fi- nally enacted by the Legislature on June 21, 1949, It was subsequently approved by the Governor on June 29, 1949, and reads as follows: ‘Section 1. In all cases where any child shall be a delinquent, dependent OP neglected child, as defined in the Statutes of this State, irrespective, of whether any formal proceedings have been had to determine the status of oneh child, the parent or parents, legal guardian, or any person having such custody of such child, or any other person or persons who shall by any act encourage, cause or contribute to the dependency or delinquency of such child, o,k who acts in conjunction with such child in the I acts which cause such child to be dependent or delinquent, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and upon conviction shall be punished by fine not exceeding Five Hundred Dol- lars ($500), or by imprisonment in the county jail for not more than six (6) months, or by both fine and imprison- mentg provided, however, that the court in which the case is heard may suspend the sentence for violation of the provisions of this Act, and impose conditions upon the de- fendant as to his future conduct, and may make such sus- pension dependent upon the fulfillment by the defendant ,of , Hon. A. C. Winborn, Page 2 (Opinion V-990) such conditions, and in case of the breach ‘of such con- ditions or any part of them, the court may impose sen- tence as though there had been no such suspension. The court may also as a condition of such suspension, re- quire a bond in such sum as the court may designate, to be approved by the Judge requiring it, to secure the performance by such person of the conditions placed by the court on such suspension; the bond by its terms shall be made payable to the County Judge of the county in which the prosecution is pending, and any money re- cefv@d from a breach of any of the provisions of the bond shall be paid into the county treasury. The provisions of law regulating forfeiture of appearance bonds shbll govern so far as they are applicable. Exclusive juris- diction of the offense defined in this Act is hereby ccn- ferred on Juvenile Courts, in accordance with the pro- visions of law establishing such courts. ““Sec. 2. By the term ‘delinquency,’ as used in this Act, is meant any act which tends to debase or injure morals, health or welfare of a child, drinking oe in- toxicating liquor, the use of narcotics, going into or remaining in any bawdy house, assignation house, dis- orderly house or roadhouse, hotel, public dance hall, or other gathering place where prostitutes, gamblers or thieves are permitted to enter and ply their trade, going into a place where intoxicating liquors 0~ narcotics are kept, drunk, used, sold or given away, or associating with thieves and immoral persons, or enticing a minor to leave borne or to leave the custody of its parents, guardians or persons standing in lieu thereof, without first receiving the consent of the parent, guardian or other person, in addition to all of the other acts which any other laws now in effect define to be delinquency or which create any child a delinquent, “Sec. 3. Nothing contained in this Act shall be con- strued to repeal or affect any other Statutes regulating the powers and duties of Juvenile Courts; but Srticle 534 of the Penal Code is expressly repealed.” S.B. 425, which purported to amend Art. 534 of the Penal Code, was finally enacted by the Legislature on June 22, 1949, and was approved by the Governor on June 2 9, 1949. This Act was effective ninety days after adjournment of the Legislature or on October 5, 1949. It reads as follows: “Section I. That Article 534 of the Penal Code of the State of Texas, as amended by Acts 1907, page 209; Hon. A. C, Winborn, Page 3 (Opinion V-990) Acts 1918, 4th Called Session, page 125; Acts 1929, 41st Legislature, Chapter 103, be and the, same is hereby amended so as to hereafter read as follows: ” ‘When any person is an habitual drunkard or an addict to cocaine, morphine or other narcotics, and in all cases where a child is caused to become a de- linquent child or a dependent and neglected child under the age of seventeen years, whether previously con- victed or not, the parent, guardian or person having the custody of, or the,,porson responsible for such child, habitual drunkard or narcotic addict, or any person who by any act encourages, causea, acts in conjunctionwith, or contributes to the delinquency, dependency or the neglect of such child, habitual drunkard’or narcotic ad- dict, or who shall in any manner cause, enaourage,. act in conjunction with or eontribute to the delinquency, dependency or the neglect of any such child under the age of seventeen years, or habitual drunkard or nar- cotic addict, shall be fined not exceeding Five Hundred ($500) Dollars or be imprisoned in jail not to exseed one year, or both. By the term ‘*delinquency” as used herein is also meant any act which tends to debase or injure the morals, health or welfare. of such child, habitual drunkard or naraotic addict, and includes drinking intoxicating liquor, the use of narcotias, go- ing into or remaining in any bawdy house, assignation house, disorderly house, or road house, hotel, public dance hall where prostitutes, gamblers or thieves are permitted to enter and ply their trade, going into a place where intoxicating liquors or narcotics are kept, drunk, used or sold, or associating with thieves and immoral parsons, or oause them to leave home or to leave the custody of their parents or guardian or per- sons’ standing in lieu thereof without first receiving their consent or aga~inst their will, or who by undue in- fluence, cause such habitual drunkard or .nascotic ad- d ict to unlawfully cohabit with, any person known to them to be an habitual drunkard or narcotic addict, and any other act which would constitute sucha child a delin- quent or cause it to become a delinquent by committing such act, The fact that a child has not been declared a delinquent child or a neglected or dependent child, as defined by the Statutes of this State, shall not, be a de- fense under this Act,” n It is readily apparent that even though the two acts are in emateria ,they are inconsistent with eaoh other in various pro- visions, including those pertaining to jurisdiction, punishment, author- ity to suspend sentence, and requiring bond. It is also to be observed Hon. A. C. Winborn, Page 4 (Opinion V-990) that the Act passed June 22, 1949 (S-B. 425) did not contain a pro- vision expressly repealing the Act passed June 21, 1949 (H.B. 656). When two acts on the same subject passed at the same legislative session are in irreconcilable conflict, and the first contains an emergency clause but the second does not, and both acts are approved by the Governor on the same day, which act, if either, is controlling? It is stated in 1 Sutherland Statutory Construction (3rd Ed. 1943) 484, Sec. 2020 that: ““In the absence of an irreconcilable conflict be- tween two acts of the same session, each will be con- strued to operate within the limits of its own terms in a manner not to conflict with the other act. w- ever. when two acts of the same session cannot be harmonized or reconciled, that statute which is the latest enactment will operate to repeal a prior statute of the same session to the extent of any conflict in their terms . e D .M (Emphasis ours) The same rule is announced in 59 Corpus Juris 928. Statutes, Sec. 533, wherein it is said that: 00 0 0 I)where two acts relating to the same subject matter are passed at the same legislative session, there is a strong presumption against implied repeal, and they are to be construed together, if possible, so as to reconcile them, give effect to each, and thereby avoid an implied repeal, rather than to infer that one destroys the other; but, if the two are irreconcilable, the one which is the later expression of the legislative will or- dinarily prevails over, and impliedly repeals, the other PO 90e* The rule is stated in 39 Tex. Jur- 147, Statutes, Sec. 79, as follo”s: P * D * But where two acts passed at the same ses- sion cannot be reconciled by any known rule of con- struction, the first in time or position must give way to the last, which will stand as the final expression of the legislative wiLw The above rules have been followed in this State by both the Supreme Court and the Court of Criminal Appeals. In Townsend v. Terre& 118 Tex. 463, 16 S.W.2d 1063 (1929), the Court had before it the question as to which of two acts ppaaed at . Han, A. C, Winborn, Page 5 (Opinion V-990) the same session of the Legislature was controlling. The first act was approved March 22, 1927. The second ‘act was approved March 25, 1927, The two acts were “‘thoroughly inconsistent and irrecon- cilable.‘” In holding that the last act prevailed the court said: ““It will be observed that in the amendment approved March 25, 1927, there is no express repeal of the abolish- ing Act approved March 22nd. It is well settled that re- peals by implication are not favored and that all acts and parts of acts inparimateria are to be construed as a whole and interpreted in such manner as that all may stand where such may reasonably be done. It is only where acts are so inconooiatent as to be irreconcilable that a repeal by implication will be indulged. If there exists such conflict, then there is a presumption of the intention to repeal all laws and parts of laws in conflict w$tb the clear intention of the last act. This is neces- sarily true where both acts cannot stand as valid enact- m ents. I0 Again in Wright v. Broeter, 145 Tex. 142, 196 S,W.2d 82 (1946) the Court speaking through the present Chief Justice said: ““There is no better statement of the rule of law ap- plicable in the construction of two acts of the same ses- sion of the legislature than that made by Justice Wheeler in the early ca@e of Cain v. State, 20 Texas 355, This language is taken from that opinion: * ‘* * *The rule is, that in the construction of acts of the same session, the whole must be taken and con- strued as one act, and to make a latter provision repeal a former, there must be an express repeal, or an irre- concilable repugnancy between themi and then the latter “ill control. * s * Cm‘* * *nothing short of expressions so plain and positive as to force upon the mind an irresiat~ble con- viction, or absolute necessity, will justify a court in presuming, that it was the intention of ths legislature that their acts passed at the same session, should abro- gate and annul one another, The dacent respect due a co-ordinate department of the government, would seem to forbid that such a presumption be indulged by the court. As we had oaaasion to say in Neil1 v, Keees, “it would not be a reasonable mode of construing aots of the legislature, so to construe them as to maka one act repeal another passed at the same session. It cannot-be suppose that it was their intention that acts thus passed should abrogate and repeal one another.” 5 Tex, 33,’ Han, A. C. Winborn, Page 6 (Opinion V-990) “‘That rule has been consistently followed. McGrady v, Terrell, 98 Texas 427, 84:S.W. 641; Southern Pacific Co. v, Sorey, 104 Texas 476, 140 S.W. 334; Garrison v. Richards, 107 SW. 861, error dismissed; 39 Texas Jur;# Statutes, Se&ion 78, and authorities cited. In order to uphold both acts the first act may be regarded as an exception to the second. Cain v. State, supra. Under the rule requiring that the two acts be construed to- gether as one, we are not concerned with the question of whether or not any provisions in one may be found to be repugnant to corresponding provisions in the other. Our concern in this case is limited to a consideration of whether or not there is repugnancy between the particular provisions. of the acts with reference to service of pro- cess, If it should be granted, as contended, that certain provisions of the second act are repugnant to corres- ponding provisions of the first, it would not follow that the whole of the first be stricken down, for the second act would repeal the first act only to the extent of the repugnancy. Any provisions in the first act not repug- nant to provisions of the second act would remain as valid portions of the two acts considered as one. As stated in Garrison v. Richards, supra, “Where two acts are passed at the same session of the Legislature they should be construed together as one act, and, if possible, so that both may stand. McGrady v. Terrell, 98 Texas 427, 84 SW. 641; Lewis’ Suth. on Stat. Cons&, Sec. 268. But where the two are repugnant and irreconcilable, the one approved last repeals the other ----- to the extent of the repugnanc)r.P m In Stevens v. State, 70 Tex. Grim, 565, 159 SW. 505 (1913) the Court held that: 66 0In the case of Chile6 v. State, 1 Tex. App. 31, 0 D this court said: ‘The two acts, being passed at the same session of theiLegislature, ought, if possible, to be conetrued together, so that both might stand as one embodiment of the legislative will. But it will be perceived that these two acts, though passed at the same session, cannot, by any known rule of conatruc- tion, be so reconciled as that both may stand: and, in case there is such repugnance between the two as that one must give way, the rule is the last must stand as an expression of the will of the Legislature.’ When the Supreme Court had jurisdiction in criminal matters, in the case of Cain v. State, 20 Tex. 359, Judge Wheeler, speaking for the court* said “The, rule is that, in con- struction of acts of the same session, the whole must be taken and construed as one act, and, to make a latter Hon. A, C. Winborn, Page 7 (Opinion V-990) p~ovisiow repeal a former, there must be an exprese repeal or an irreconcilable repugnancy between them, and then the Ratter winn eontPol*” --citing 3 Moore, 77; SedgwGck 0n Stat. & Con&, Law, 410,‘” To the game effect are the holdings in Parehall v. State, 62 Tex, Grimm, 177, 136 S,W, 759 (1911); Robertson v. State, 70 Tex. C1pim. 307, 159 S.W. 713 (1913); and Ex Parte Nitsche, 170 S,W, 1101 (1914). We rmowpass to a conoideaation of whether the fact that H.B. 656, because 0% ite emergency clause, and therbiore effective. prior to S,B, 425, in any manner changes, or calls for an exception to the above announced rule of statutory construction. We think not. Although we have been unable to find any Texas case where the facts reflect that this exact point was presented and passed upon, it is well e:stabRished in other jurisdf..ctfons that inasmuch as the latest expressiom of the Pagislative will prevails, the statute last passed will prevail over a etaUuhe passed prior to it, irrespective of wheth- er the prior statute takes effect before or after the later statute, People v, Kramea, 328 HU. 512, 160 N,E. 60 (1928); Newbauer v. State, 200 %nad.118, I.61 N,E, 826 (1928): State v. Schaumbueg, 149 La. 470, 89 540~536 (192n)z State v, Mamzurr, 34 NJ& 378, 281 Pac. 454 (1929)i Winsllow v, FBeiechner, 112 Ore, 23, 228 Pac. 101, 34 A.L.R. 826 (1924)~ Buttorff v. York, 268 Pa, 143, PPOAt& 728 (1920), The abow rule warr’stated and followed %n Attorney Gen- eral’aj Ophbn No. O-5891, daUmlMay 30, 1944. Your atUent%onw%e invited to the bacts in State vs Mar~um, oupra, which 5~ our opidann are parallel with those BOW under con- ,. sidesration, Chaptara 107 and 128, Laws (1905) were:botb enacted by the same New Mla~xieo Legislative Assembly and thereafter applrowd by UhhaExaeutive Deparbnent on Uhe same day. Chapter 107 took a%- feet !mme?diatePy upon ita approval, whereas Chapter 128 took effect sixty days a%ter approvaL hn holding that the statute which took effect later clcanatrpdnd, the Cbmt aaid: “When it 68)imnnpoaaaibk mtirely to hammnize Uwo stat&se wh%& aw in pari matada, UhaUtaking the later effect is contnsUim~nng,36 Cye, P15B. The rule applies to Uwo hatatutes approvsd, as wes-4 ti40cs WA the 6)ame dab. Harriwgtona v. Hemingtom”e Eest., 53 Vt, 649; Swift & Co. v. Some, 142 Miss, 660, IlO7So, 881; Nayha v, Bd, of E&co, 216 Ky* 766, 288 S.W. 690, Article 1 took effect at itm passage? Lawo 1905, a0 107, 0 7, Article 2 took e%%kt 60 dayr aff@r Bte passage. Laws R905, e. 128, 8 24, It $&en-m,there%om~ tinat, as regards the matUe% harxe hvoIbadB asUfcla! R ham bean repealed, and the prosecution 6ains.~ Hon. A. C. Winborn, Page 8 (Opinion V-990) We also call attention to People v. Illinois Central Ry. Co,, 295 111. 408, 129 N.E. 66 (1920) wherein it is said: * a 0 The first amendment mentioned above was u approved June 21, 1919, and the last-mentioned amend- ment was approved June:30, 1919, and the question to be here decided is which one of these two amendments controls, Two acts that are passed at the same session of the Legislature are not to be construed as incons s&tent if it is possible to construe them otherwise; but, where it is impossible to give effect to both acts, the latest in point of time will prevail. Huston v. New- gass, 228 111. 575, 81 N.E. 1127; People v. Wabash Rail- road Co., 276 111. 92, 114 N.E. 552. See, also, Lambert v. Board of Trustees, 151 Ky. 725, 152 S.W. 802, Ann. Cas, 1915A, 180, and authorities cited in note. The amendment approved June 21, 1919, was passed as an emergency act, but there was nothing to indicate that the other amendment, approved June 30, was passed as an emergency, but the act approved June 30, being passed later than the other, must be held, under the authorities just cited, as the two acts are absolutely inconsistent and cannot both be in force, to have been intended to repeal the former act and must prevail over the amendment approved June 21. . . ,* Accordingly,.you are advised that S.B. 425, Acts 51st Leg., R.S, 1949, Ch. 488, p0 910, being the later of the two Acts under con- sideration, is controlling and will prevail over the provisions of H.B. 656, Acts 51st Leg., R.S. 1949, Ch. 500, po 924. SUMMARY H.B. 656 and S.B. 425, Acts 5lst Leg., R.S. 1949, Chapters 500 and 488, pp. 924 and 910, dealing with the subject of child delinquency, were approved by the Governor on the same day and were effective June 29, 1949, and October 5, 1949, respectively. The two Acts are in conflict and cannot be harmonized, and Hon. A. C. Winborn, Page 9 (Opinion V-990) since S.B. 425 is the latest expression of the Legislature it will prevail over H,B. 656, APPROVED: Yours very truly, Joe R. Greenhill PRICE DANIEL F i r s t Assistant Attorney General Price Daniel Attorney General By &z-Ad G Ned& Charles D, Mathews Executive Assistant CDM:v