Ardrey v. City of Dallas

35 S.W. 726, 13 Tex. Civ. App. 442, 1896 Tex. App. LEXIS 90
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 22, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 35 S.W. 726 (Ardrey v. City of Dallas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ardrey v. City of Dallas, 35 S.W. 726, 13 Tex. Civ. App. 442, 1896 Tex. App. LEXIS 90 (Tex. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

NEILL, Associate Justice.

— This suit was brought by appellants, A. C. Ardrey and thirty-four others, against the city of Dallas and J. C. Bogal, its tax collector, to enjoin the sale of their property fronting on Akard street in said city, upon the ground that the ordinance of May 7th, hereinafter copied, levying a tax upon their property for local improvements, is void because of the failure of the city to comply with the provisions of its charter, prescribing the manner in which such local improvements should be made and the taxes therefor assessed, levied and collected. A temporary writ of injunction was granted. The city interposed general and special exceptions, which being overruled, it answered by a general denial, and special denials; and that by reason of plaintiffs’ petitioning the council to improve the street, promising in their petition to pay their pro rata part of the expense, and the petition having been granted and improvement made in accordance therewith, with their full knowledge, and which enhanced the value of their property against which the tax is assessed, — they are estopped from objecting to the plans and specifications by which the improvements were made, or to any matter preliminary to letting the contract, or any irregularity occurring either prior to the letting of their contract or subsequent thereto; and by admitting that the special tax was assessed according to the charter of 1889., and averred that as the contract was outstanding, the tax, under the provisions of the amended charter, was properly assessed in accordance therewith.

The city asked that, should the court find any portion of the tax not justly duo, it determine what portion is justly due, and enter an order granting the prayer in plaintiffs’ petition only upon condition that they should within a time to be fixed by the court, pay into court the sum so found due. And that if the court should hold the tax should have been levied according to the terms and provisions of the old charter (of 1885), then that court decree the plaintiffs to pay into court the amounts of money that would be due levied according to the provisions of the old charter, and refuse to grant their prayer to perpetuate the injunction unless they should pay the money into court, or to the defendants within a time to be fixed in the decree. Attached to the answer is a tabulated statement showing the amount of the tax that would be *444 against the property of plaintiffs, respectively, if levied according to the provisions of the old charter.

The cause was tried without a jury, and the court decreed the injunction should he granted, provided the plaintiffs do equity by paying to the city of Dallas the just and lawful- amount of taxes assessed against their property for the improvement of Akard street, which “just and lawful amount” the court found and entered in its decree, the respective sums found against each party opposite his name — stating that such sums would have been the amount of taxes assessed against the properties of said respective plaintiffs if the same had been levied and assessed according to the provisions of the city charter of the city of Dallas at the time of entering into the contract for the improvement of Akard street. It then decreed that if the respective plaintiffs should pay to the city of Dallas, or should- pay into court for the benefit of said city, the respective sums, within twenty days from and after the rendition of judgment, the injunction theretofore granted should be perpetuated. But that if plaintiffs or any of them should refuse or fail to pay to the city of Dallas, or into court for its benefit, within twenty days, the sums in the judgment assessed against them, the injunction as to such plaintiffs so failing or refusing to pay the amounts, should be dissolved.

From this judgment the plaintiffs have appealed; and the following are the charter provisions, ordinances and facts applicable to the case as it is presented to us.

Section 15 of the charter of the city of Dallas (1885) provides: “That the city council shall have power by ordinance to cause to be graded, macadamized, graveled or otherwise constructed, improved or repaired, all streets, sidewalks, alleys and public highways, including cross streets in the city limits, at such times, to such an extent and out of such material, and under such regulations as the city council may provide by ordinance. The owners of property fronting or abutting on any street shall pay pro rata the costs of two-thirds of such improvement, according to the number of front or abutting feet; and the city shall pay the other third. * * * The improvement of intersections and abutments of other streets shall be paid by the city, etc. Whenever the city council determine, by ordinance, that such work shall be done, and the manner and extent of the same, they shall advertise for bids, giving the plans and specifications and extent of the improvements. The work shall be let to the longest responsible bidder in the discretion of the city council, and with such bond as the council may determine. Said council shall levy a special tax on the property fronting or abutting on said street so improved pro rata, according to the number of feet of front or abutment. * * * Said tax shall be levied after said contract is let, and the time of payment of the same, and when it shall become delinquent, shall be specified by ordinance. Said tax shall be used for the payment of such improvement, shall be a lien from the time of levy, and shall be enforced as the collection of other taxes by advertisement and sale of the property * * * levied upon; provided it shall not be *445 necessary to sell at the same time as for other delinquent ad valorem taxes.”

Section 175 of same charter: “That the cost of all work on any sidewalk, including curbing and guttering along side thereof, shall be entirely at the expense of the lot or lots fronting thereon, in proportion to the number of feet frontage, and shall be charged as a special tax thereon, in the manner hereinafter provided for. Wherever the city council, by their own motion or on petition of a majority of the owners of the property fronting on such proposed sidewalk, resolve to construct one, they shall cause the city engineer to make an estimate of the cost of such sidewalk, per square foot, and to give the amount, pro rata, which each property owner should pay, giving his or her name.

“The city council shall provide by ordinance for the construction of such sidewalk, determining its width, dimensions and the material out of which the same shall be constructed. The city council shall notify the property owners through the city secretary, that said "sidewalk has been determined upon, and give such owners the right of having such work done themselves, under the superintendence of the city engineer. If a majority of the property holders have such work done, the others shall be liable for their proportion of the expense, and a special tax shall be levied for that amount. If the city shall have such work done, the entire cost of it shall be levied as a special tax on the property, in the proportion of its frontage on such sidewalk, and such taxes shall be a lien on such property, and in case the same is not paid at the time provided by ordinance for its collection, the assessor and collector shall advertise and sell as in other cases for taxes on real estate.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
35 S.W. 726, 13 Tex. Civ. App. 442, 1896 Tex. App. LEXIS 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ardrey-v-city-of-dallas-texapp-1896.