Cartwright v. Warren

177 S.W. 197, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 656
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 22, 1915
DocketNo. 7462.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 177 S.W. 197 (Cartwright v. Warren) 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
Cartwright v. Warren, 177 S.W. 197, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 656 (Tex. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

TALBOT, J.

This is an appeal from an order of the district judge of the Third judicial district, made in chambers, granting to the appellee a prohibitory and mandatory injunction against the appellant. The injunction prayed for was granted and caused to be issued without notice to appellant, or an opportunity given him to be heard, and the question for our decision is whether or not the allegations of the petition show such facts as entitled appellee to the summary relief granted. The petition alleges, so far as is necessary to state, that the plaintiff and defendant own adjoining tracts of land of about 40 acres each; that the defeudant’s land lies east of the plaintiff’s land, and the division line is about 550 yards long. The fifth paragraph of the petition is as follows:

“That about midway on said division line the water divides, and the water north of this division line runs north, and the water south thereof runs south. The petition further alleges that there is a wire fence separating the plaintiff’s land from the defendant’s land, which is practically on the dividing line; that there is a natural channel or water course, adjoining and on the east side of the said division fence, which begins immediately south of the division line set out and described in paragraph No. 5 of this petition, and said channel extends south and on the east side of said division fence a distance of about 250 yards, to where said channel intersects or comes in contact with another draw or natural channel which runs or courses practically east and west, and in this last-named channel the water runs east, or really it runs southeast; that there is a natural draw or channel coming from the northeast through a portion of the defendant’s land, which carries considerable water, and the same intersects and empties its water into the said channel on the east side of the said fence, at a point about 100 yards south of the beginning of the said channel on the division line described in paragraph 5 of this petition; that a great deal of water accumulates and empties into the said channel coming' from the defendant’s land, and this in turn empties into the channel on the east side of the said fence, and in addition to this a great deal of surface water from the defendant’s land accumulates and empties into the channel on the east side of the said fence; that at a point about 150 yards from the beginning point of the said channel, located on the east side of the said fence, and running south with said fence, the defendant has recently filled up a dam and obstruction in said last-named channel, and has opened up a passway for the water under the said division fence, and that the water in the future coming down said channel at said last-named point will be diverted by said obstruction, and will pass under said division fence, and the water will spread out over plaintiff’s land and crop, and that it will destroy the plaintiff’s crop and injure his land; that he expects to plant said land, and cultivate the same in potatoes within the next few days; that the defendant has completely stopped up the said channel on the east side of the said fence at a point about 150 yards from its beginning, as aforesaid, and the water cannot longer pass through and down the natural channel south of the said point, but is and will be diverted and caused to pass under said division fence to the west and on to the plaintiff’s land and crop, as aforesaid; that, in truth and in fact, the defendant has opened up a way for the said water to pass under the said division fence and on to the plaintiff’s land; that on the east side of the said division fence and at a point where the natural channel runs practically east and west, under and near said division fence, the defendant has built up a dump or dam, and has blockaded said channel, which will cause the. water to back west and spread over the plaintiff’s land and crops, and will thereby damage the plaintiff. Plaintiff further charges that the defendant is threatening and is in the act of opening up a water way, on the east side of said division fence, and by the side of the said division fence, and south of the said channel running practically east and west; that on account of the lay of the ground it is impossible for the water to be carried away; that the opening up of this channel will cause the water to spread over the plaintiff’s land on the west, and injure the same, together with, his crop; that the defendant has created a tank of water in the northwest corner of his said 40 acres of land; that said tank has considerable water in it, and has had for quite a while; that the defendant has so constructed *199 said tank that he has caused said -water to spread ont and ba^k up over plaintiff’s land, and to injure the plaintiff’s said land, as well as*said division fence; that by reason of all of which the plaintiff is prevented from using a portion of his said land. Plaintiff further show's to the court that by reason of all of the wrongs herein charged this plaintiff will be greatly damaged; that, if the defendant is permitted to continue said wrong, as he has already done and threatens to do, plaintiff will be greatly damaged: that said injuries are irreparable, and cannot be compensated in damages; that the plaintiff’s farm or the east portion of it will be practically ruined and destroyed if the defendant is permitted to continue his wrongdoing and his said obstructions are not removed, and that his crops will be destroyed; that the defendant is not now', and would not be, in the opinion of the plaintiff, at the termination of this suit, the owner of property, real or personal, that is subject, to execution, sufficient to satisfy this plaintiff for the damages he would ultimately sustain from the diversion of the said water from its natural channel as aforesaid and the flooding of his lands and crops, as the defendant is now doing and is about to do.”

The prayer is for a writ of injunction “restraining the defendant from further interfering with said channel, and that the defendant be required, under the order of the court, to remove said obstruction in said channel, and that the water be permitted to pass as it did before the defendant interferred with the same,” etc. By the judge’s fiat indorsed on the petition the injunction as prayed for was granted, and the clerk of the court directed to issue the same upon plaintiff, giving bond in the sum of $300. The bond was given and the writ of injunction issued as directed, and the defendant appealed.

As is well understood, injunctions are mandatory or preventive according as they command defendant to do or to refrain from doing a particular thing. And, while a court of equity is always reluctant to grant a mandatory injunction upon an interlocutory application and before final hearing, it may yet do so in an extreme case when the right is clearly established and the invasion of the right results in serious injury. High on Inj. (4th Ed.) § 2. Mr Joyce, in his excellent work on Injunctions (section 97a), states the rule substantially as follows: An applicant for a preliminary mandatory injunction is required to show a clear right and a case of necessity or extreme hardship, and the court will seldom grant a mandatory injunction pendente lite unless the plaintiff’s right is so clear that the denial of the right must be either captious or unconscionable. In other authorities it is held that, to justify a court of equity to issue a mandatory injunction before hearing and without notice, the complainant must show “a strong and mischievous case of pressing necessity.” In the case of Railway Co. v. Anderson County, 150 S. W.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
177 S.W. 197, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 656, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cartwright-v-warren-texapp-1915.