Benat v. Dallas County

266 S.W. 539
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 8, 1924
DocketNo. 9165.
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 266 S.W. 539 (Benat v. Dallas County) 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
Benat v. Dallas County, 266 S.W. 539 (Tex. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

LOONEY, J.

This cáse is before the court on appeal from the judgment of the court below sustaining a general demurrer urged by appellee^ to appellant’s petition, and in dismissing the cause.

Appellant’s cause of action, as alleged, is substantially that he has owned, since December, 1921, certain lots in block 34 of Trinity Heights addition No. 3, which became a part of the city of Dallas in the month of April, 1923. He shows that his home and place of business are established and maintained on this property, and .that about April, 1923, appellees, without previous notice to him, attempted to remove certain fences on the premises, and to establish a right of way, and to build a road, but desisted on remonstrance by him; that thereafter, on August 25, 1923, appellant was served with notice that commissioners to assess his damages had been appointed in a condemnation proceeding filed by appellees with the county judge at law of Dallas county, in which they sought to condemn a part of his said premises for the purpose of're-routing, altering, and changing what was known as the Dallas-Lancaster road, and that on the date named in the notice for the hearing, to wit, September 5, 1923, he, through his attorney, appeared before these commissioners, and protested against their action and the condemnation proceeding on the ground that they had no jurisdiction or authority to establish or change a highway within the corporate limits of the city of Dallas, and that the land they sought to condemn was a part of and within.the city of Dallas, over which said city, acting through her duly elected and constituted commissioners under her .special charter provisions, possessed the exclusive power to condemn the land in question for highway purposes; that, notwithstanding appellant’s protest, the commissioners appointed by the county judge at law proceeded to hear evidence, and assessed appellant’s damages at the sum of $250. He alleges that he fears appellees will, under and by virtue of said proceedings, unless restrained, enter upon and take possession of his said property, thereby causing him irreparable injury, for which he has no adequate remedy at law, wherefore he prayed for a permanent injunction prohibiting appellees from in any way entering upon his property, or grading or building a highway through the same, and that the attempted condemnation proceedings be decreed void and of no effect, and that appellees be prohibited from taking any further action therein. ,

The only question presented for our determination is, Did appellees, the county of Dallas and her commissioners’ court, have the power to condemn for highway purposes appellant’s land situated, as it is, wholly within the corporate limits of the city of Dallas?

The Legislature has the undoubted power to name the persons, corporations, and municipalities who may institute condemnation proceedings, but, as the taking of the property of the citizen in this summary manner is in derogation of the common-law modes of procedure, the power to do so must be explicit and undoubted, and those, and only those, persons, corporations, and municipalities upon whom the requisite authority has been conferred by the Legislature can put in motion the statutes furnishing the procedure for the condemnation of property.

The petition filed by appellees with the county judge at law of Dallas county for the condemnation of appellant’s land conferred no jurisdiction or authority for the appointment of the special tribunal to assess damages, unless the Legislature has conferred on Dallas county and her commissioners’ court the power to condemn lands for highway purposes within the corporate limits of the city of Dallas. This authority, if it exists at all, will be found in some provision of the special road law for Dallas county, or in some general statute.

The Thirty-Sixth Legislature.at its second called session in 1919 enacted a special road law for Dallas county, known as chapter 63, p. 172, Loc. & Sp. Sess. Acts. We deem it unnecessary to review at any length this special road law, because it will be examined in vain for any provision giving appellees jurisdiction over any of the streets, alleys, highways, or public grounds of the city of Dallas, and there is nowhere found any authority in appellees for the exercise of the pow *541 er of eminent domain for highway purposes over any lands in said city. In fact, this authority is impliedly forbidden, as section 9 of said act provides that the cardinal and intermediate roads, which are the first-class roads leading to and from the county seat, shall each begin at the corporate limits of the city of Dallas. Thus the idea is excluded that the Legislature, in this act, intended to confer jurisdiction on appellees to exercise ownership, control, or management in or over the highways of said city, or to condemn property therein for highway purposes.

The only general statute bearing on the subject is Rev. St. art. 2252, as follows:

“Whenever the commissioners’ court of any county shall deem it to the interest of the county to erect any bridge or bridges within the corporate limits of any city or town, said court may make contracts therefor, and erect said bridges to the same extent and under the same conditions now prescribed by law for the construction of bridges outside of the limits of any city or town.”

Appellees were not intending to use the land of appellant for the purpose of erecting a bridge, the purpose being to re-route the Dallas-Laneaster road, which involved the location'of a roadbed at a subgrade of seven feet. As the facts of the case do not bring it within the meaning of the statute just quoted, we refrain from expressing any opinion as to its meaning and scope.

Appellees insist that under the doctrine of Smith v. Cathy, 226 S. W, 158, decided by this court, opinion by the late Chief Justice Rainey, the proceedings in question are justified. We cannot accept this view. The Smith-Cathy Case did not involve the right of the county to lay out or control a street in the city of Winnsboro, or to condemn land for that purpose. The suit was by a taxpayer to enjoin the commissioners’- court of Wood county from expending the county’s funds in paving Main street in the incorporated city of Winnsboro. This court held in, harmony with the doctrine of other cases, and also in harmony with rulings of the Attorney General, that the commissioners’ court was authorized to expend county funds to pave the street, as the city authorities did not object. This is as far as the doctrine goes, and is as far, in our judgment as it should be^ extended. To hold that j>here is, within our incorporated cities and towns, a twilight zone in which the County and city authorities have concurrent jurisdiction with equal authority to lay out or regulate and keep in repair, streets, and highways is to invite unseemly conflicts and interminable confusion to the detriment of the public. Commissioners’ courts are authorized to assume control over the streets and alleys of incorporated cities and towns only when the city or town government has ceased to function as such. See article 6862, Revised Statutes.

We are thus brought to the view that, except in cases coming within the scope of some-general or special statute in which authority is' explicitly conferred, counties are without authority to lay out or control streets and highways of the incorporated cities and towns, or to have property condemned for such purposes. State v. Jones, 18 Tex. 874; Norwood v. Gonzales County, 79 Tex. 222, 14 S. W.

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Bluebook (online)
266 S.W. 539, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/benat-v-dallas-county-texapp-1924.