City of Denison v. Smith

260 S.W. 207, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 226
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 1, 1924
DocketNo. 8987.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 260 S.W. 207 (City of Denison v. Smith) 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 Denison v. Smith, 260 S.W. 207, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 226 (Tex. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

LOONEY, J.

The city of Denison, appellant, sued W. L. Smith, appellee, to‘recover $667.53 (afterwards reduced to the sum of $544), the amount of an assessment levied against Smith, personally, by 'the city of Denison, being the proportion of the total cost of street improvements for paving the street upon which his homestead abutted.

Smith’s answer includes a general denial and a sworn plea of failure and want of consideration. He also alleges that the lots in question constituted his homestead; that he had refused, and would continue to refuse, to create a lien upon his homestead to secure the payment for the proposed improvements; that, under such circumstances, neither the city, nor any other concern, or person, is bound to construct the improvements in front of his property, and, under the circumstances,- said improvements will not be constructed, and, until they are constructed and accepted by the city, it is not entitled to collect from appellee the amount of the assessment.

The case was tried by a jury, and judgment was rendered for.appellee Smith on an instructed, verdict. The appellant’s motion for a new trial wás overruled, notice of appeal given, which has been perfected, and errors assigned.

The facts are substantially as follows; The city of Denison, a municipal corporation, chartered by a special act of the Legislature, prior to the date of any of the proceedings involved in this suit, regularly adopted, and was acting under, the provisions of chapter 11, tit. 22, Revised Statutes of 1911.

During the year 1921, the city council of Denison passed various ordinances and resolutions providing for the creation of an improvement district within the city, and for paving the streets in the district, including the street upon which the homestead .'of ap-pellee is situated. All preliminary steps were regularly taken by the city that ultimately resulted in the preparation of specifications for the improvements, the advertisement for bids, the ascertainment of the costs of the improvements, the division of the same between the city and the property owners, and the levy of the assessments against all nonhomestead property and against the owners, as well as against the owners of all homestead property, including the assessment against the appellee in the amount above mentioned, which represented the correct proportionate amount of the entire cost.

The assessment against appellee is not in excess of the actual benefit to him in the enhanced value of his property that will result by means of the improvements if made according to the specifications adopted. The city let the contract for the work to Healty Construction Company, and the only obligation assumed by the city was, to pay for all intersecting paving and any drainage structures needed and the resetting or rebuilding of any -curb made necessary by change of line or grade, the balance of the cost of the improvements to be charged against the abutting property owners, and no price for said construction was payable to the city. >

Appellee refused to execute any contract for paving, and will continue to refuse, and the improvement in front of his property was omitted, and there did not exist at the time of the institution of this suit any contract or any preparation for paving in front of appellee’s property.

Under the contract entered into with Healty Construction Company, it was not obligated to pave in front of the property of ap-pellee; the provision of the contract in relation to this matter is qs follows:

“But said party of the second part [the contractor] is under no obligation to construct such work in front of any homestead property within said district, the owners of which refuse to enter into contracts’acceptable to the party of the second part, but may omit to pave that portion of said street upon which said property abuts.”

The means, ability, and purpose of the city with reference to the construction of a pavement in front of the homestead of appellee are shown by the testimony of the mayor of Denison, as follows;

“That the city has the means and ability to construct the paving in front of the property of the defendant if it is able to collect from the defendant the amount sought to be recovered against him, or, if the defendant and his wife will join in the execution of a mechanic’s lien contract in approved form, but that the city *209 does not intend otherwise to construct said paving.”

The appellant insists upon the following proposition for a reversal of this case; that is: That appellant, having accepted the provisions of chapter 11, tit. 22, Revised Statutes, acquired the legal right to impose a personal liability against the owners of property abutting upon a street the improvement of which has been determined Upon, and to prescribe the time of payment for the liability imposed, and in a suit to recover the amount of the assessment the fact that the paving contemplated has not been constructed is no defense to the action.

Appellee answers the contention of the appellant with counterpropositions as follows:

1. That the owner of a homestead is not liable to the city for the cost of street improvements upon which his homestead abuts, if no such improvements have been installed and there exists no enforceable contract for the construction .of said improvements.

2. That where a contractor, acting under the terms of the contract with the city, constructs permanent improvements upon the public street and, as authorized by the contract, refuses to improve that portion of the street upon which abuts a homestead belonging to an owner who refuses to enter into a contract creating a contractor’s lien upon his homestead to secure the amount of the assessment for the cost of the improvement, and the city sues the homesteader for the cost of constructing that part of the improvement upon which the homestead abuts, the oral declaration of the mayor of the city, not expressed otherwise than in his testimony on the trial of the suit, to the effect that the city has the means to install the improvements in front of the homestead and intends to do so, the time of such installation not stated, if either the city obtains judgment in the suit and collects it, or the homestead owner and his wife will create a lien upon the homestead to secure the payment of the amount sued for, constitutes no consideration for the demand.

3. That, under the Constitution of this state, a city providing for the improvements of streets at the cost of property benefited thereby cannot collect an assessment for the cost of the improvement in front of a homestead without showing that adequate compensation therefor will be made; that the declaration of the mayor of the city on the trial of the suit for the recovery of the assessment, to the effect that the city has the means and ability to construct the improvement for which the assessment was made, and that the city intends to do so in the event it obtains and collects judgment for the amount, or if the defendant and his wife will create a lien upon the homestead to secure the amount of the assessment, is no consideration for the amount sought to be recovered, and the rendition of a judgment under the circumstances would be taking the owner’s property for public use without adequate compensation.

The city of Denison, having accepted the provisions of chapter 11, tit.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
260 S.W. 207, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 226, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-denison-v-smith-texapp-1924.