City of Dallas v. Rosenthal

239 S.W.2d 636, 1951 Tex. App. LEXIS 2024
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 13, 1951
Docket14320
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 239 S.W.2d 636 (City of Dallas v. Rosenthal) 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
City of Dallas v. Rosenthal, 239 S.W.2d 636, 1951 Tex. App. LEXIS 2024 (Tex. Ct. App. 1951).

Opinion

YOUNG, Justice.

This is a second appeal; on first appeal the dissent of Associate Justice Looney becoming, on rehearing, the majority opinion of this Court. The cause was there “reversed and remanded to the trial court for further proceedings,” Judge Looney having set forth and discussed the various error on which reversal was based. On application for writ of error to the Supreme Court by the City and residents of the neighborhood (interveners), the writ was refused, “no reversible error.” See Tex.Civ.App., 211 S.W.2d 279 for factual .background of the present controversy and conclusions reached by the majority, necessitating another trial.

Appellants (City and interveners) have again, on this trial, sought injunction against appellee Rosenthal (sometimes referred to as defendant), -charging that his business as conducted at 3307 Lemmon Avenue, Dallas, constituted a public and private nuisance, also that maintenance of same at said location was in violation of existing zoning laws; defendant answering by general denial, assertion of vested rights, in the property and operation of business at a location designated as nonconforming use in an apartment district and reliance on valid permits from office of City Building Inspector for a substantial investment of money. On basis of jury answers to 84 special issues, the City and interveners, were denied all relief by way of injunction; defendant, on the other hand, being granted an injunction permanently restraining appellants from interfering with or molesting him in the operation of his business, on the premises in question as presently carried on, except the smoking of meats,, and from interfering with his completion of the garage building on the premises and use of the garage after completion. From, such judgment final, the City of Dallas has-seasonably taken an appeal along with two of the original 26 adjacent and intervening-property owners.

Naturally the conduct of this, a second’ trial of the cause, both in pleading and procedure was patterned upon the findings- and conclusions of the majority in its. previously cited opinion of reversal and remand; and the errors which this Court has held were committed on the former trial should be detailed prior to an analysis of' the jury issues and answers on which the-present judgment was based.

In the opinion of Judge Looney, the following errors were apparent in the record, generally by way of court rulings and. character of judgment rendered on -said: former trial: (1) That the nonconforming-use in an apartment house district had not been abandoned by Rosenthal’s predecessor-in title and was in existence at time of the latter’s purchase of property at 3307' Lemmon (Lots 11, 12, and 13); such nonconforming use extending to and including the. Lots (10, 14, 15, and 16) upon which defendant Rosenthal was building a garage-when the stop-order was served upon him;. *638 (2) defendant had not subjected the property in question to a new and substantially different use, the “evidence” showing that Rosenthal had continued a use of the property for “cold storage and its accessory purposes” as that- term had been construed and administered by the officials of the City of Dallas; (3) that the City permit to Rosenthal of August 1944, through its Assistant City Building Inspector, “ ‘for the erection, remodeling, repairing and demolition of buildings, or parts thereof, as provided in the Dallas Building Ordinance’ for the operation at the same place of a cold storage plant, including meat storage and curing, was authorized and valid; and not having been appealed from by the City authorities or interested citizens, cannot now be collaterally attacked”; (4) any infraction of regulations incident to defendant’s failure to obtain additional permit for extra expenditures involved in erection and alteration of buildings, also for failure to obtain a certificate of occupancy (“a mere ministerial act”) after completion of the remodeling and alterations, was waived by the City authorities “who from time to time inspected the buildings as the work progressed”; being further estopped from complaining of Rosenthal’s failure to obtain additional permit and certificate of occupancy; (5) the City was fully cognizant of all the facts prior to issuance of permit which it later asserted as grounds for injunctive relief; and defendant, after 18 months and incurrence of heavy expenditures in reliance on permit, had acquired vested rights, and the City’s later action in revocation of permit was arbitrary and unreasonable; (6) that on said first trial the court erred in refusing certain defensive issues (appearing in the instant court’s charge as Issues 62, 68, 71, 72, and 73); (7) in the record on first appeal, the majority found no evidence of fraud or deception practiced by defendant in obtaining of building permits.

The jury issues and answers are lengthy but must be presented at least in substance. By way of clarification, such answers are shown by divisions and according to germane subject matter, with emphasis on material wording (number of issue being given at beginning of each paraphrased answer) :

NUISANCE.

Odors: (1) The operation of defendant’s plant created, odors; (2) which spread to neighboring properties; (3) which are offensive and obnoxious; (4) which substantially impaired the reasonable use and enjoyment of the residential properties near said plant by the occupants thereof; (5) the odors do not materially interfere with the reasonable use and occupancy as a home of the residential property in the near vicinity of said plant by persons of ordinary habits and ordinary tastes and sensibilities; (62) odors can be detected by persons of ordinary sensibilities on the outside of defendant’s plant and beyond the boundary of his property; (63) such odors are not injurious to the health or property of the interveners.

Odors, Noise and Smoke: (6) The operation of defendant’s plant created noises; (7) such noises are audible at the homes in the vicinity of said plant; (9) .¡such noises do not materially interfere with the reasonable use and occupancy as a home of the residential property in the near vicinity of the plant by persons of ordinary habits and ordinary tastes and sensibilities; (10) such noises do not materially interfere with the reasonable use and occupancy of the residential properties near the plant by the occupants thereof; (14) the odors and noises considered together do not materially interfere with the reasonable use and occupancy as a home of the residential property in the vicinity of the plant by persons of ordinary habits and ordinary tastes and sensibilities; (15) the odors and noises taken together do not substantially impair the reasonable use and enjoyment of the residential properties in the near vicinity of the plant by the occupants of said residential properties; (64) the odors, noise and smoke from defendant’s plant were more than the odors, noise and smoke resulting from the operation of the previous ice manufacturing business; (65) the odors, smoke and noise from the operation of the M. K. T. Railroad were less offensive than *639

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Bluebook (online)
239 S.W.2d 636, 1951 Tex. App. LEXIS 2024, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-dallas-v-rosenthal-texapp-1951.