City of East Dallas v. Barksdale

18 S.W. 329, 83 Tex. 117, 1892 Tex. LEXIS 704
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 26, 1892
DocketNo. 3127.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 18 S.W. 329 (City of East Dallas v. Barksdale) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of East Dallas v. Barksdale, 18 S.W. 329, 83 Tex. 117, 1892 Tex. LEXIS 704 (Tex. 1892).

Opinion

MARR, Judge,

Section B.—The appellee instituted this suit on the 18th day of May, 1887. There are two counts in her petition. In one of them she seeks to recover “a strip of land two hundred feet long and seven feet wide at one end and three feet at the other end,” and damages for the unlawful entry upon the land and the ouster of herself therefrom by the defendant. In the other count she claims damages for the value of the land taken by the defendant, and such other damages as resulted from the acts of the defendant in their effect upon the remainder of her homestead, etc. She charges, in substance, that the defendant in an attempt to exercise the right of eminent domain, and for the purpose of widening a certain alley in the city of East Dallas, and upon which plaintiff ’ s homestead abutted, unlawfully entered upon, took possession of the said “strip of land,” and tore down, removed, and injured her fence and appropriated this land for the purpose aforesaid, but without complying with the law in that particular, or making her any compensation whatever. We may as well observe in this connection that the very great preponderance of the evidence sustained these allegations. The case was tried without a jury, and the court gave judgment for $613.33i in favor of the plaintiff as her damages, and further decreed, that the title to the strip of land in controversy should be “vested in the defendant, the city of East Dallas.” The defendant has appealed.

■ The first error assigned is to the effect that the court erred in overruling the application for a continuance made by the defendant on account of an absent witness. The bill of exception does not disclose how many continuances had already been granted to the defendant in the case. The number of the application is not stated. The ruling of the court can not be revised as the question is presented. Headly v. Beardslee, 16 S. W. Rep., 1011. We may remark, however, that there was a fatal absence of diligence. The cause had been pending more t>< an two years before any process was obtained for the witness, and was then sued out only a few days before the trial.

*119 The appellant’s counsel also make the following assignments of error, which are grouped in the brief and practically relate to the same question, viz.:

“Second assignment of error: The court erred in rendering judgment for the value of the land, and the damage done by cutting it off from the remainder, after decreeing that the plaintiff owned it.

“Third assignment of error: The court erred in vesting the title to the land in the defendant against its will and making it pay therefor, after decreeing that the plaintiff owned it.

“Fourth assignment of error: The court erred in condemning the land in controversy to public uses and rendering a moneyed judgment against the defendant, since the defendant never sought any condemnation of the property, and the facts showed only a bona fide controversy as to title.

“Sixth assignment of error: The judgment of the court is contrary to and violates the law, since the evidence showed that this was a controversy in good faith over the title to the property, and the judgment deprived the defendant of the right to test title to the property without being compelled to condemn against its will the land it claimed.”

The solution of the questions here presented requires a summary of the evidence adduced upon the issue. It will be' seen that the claim of the appellant is, that it was not the purpose or intention of the city authorities to condemn the land in dispute, but that they took the same under a claim of right or title previously existing and still existing at the time of the taking. In other words, as appears from the evidence offered by the city upon the subject, the appellant claimed in the court below, under a plea of not guilty, that the land in dispute did not belong to the plaintiff, but was in fact already a part of the alley long since established by the proper authority and in the proper manner, and consequently that this is the extent of the assertion of any right or claim to the land by the city; from which it is insisted that the court below mulcted the defendant in damages and forced the condemnation of the land upon the city, without its consent and contrary to its intention, as expressed by acts or declarations. It might be held that the plea of not guilty admitted the plaintiff’s title or “right of possession in the locus in quo,” as the action was reduced at the trial below to one of trespass and for damages only, and that defendant can not justify its acts by proving paramount title in itself without pleading the same. Carter v. Wallace, 2 Texas, 206. We prefer, however, not to rest our decision upon that ground, as there might be some doubt of the exact applicability of that principle to the issues in this case. The claim of the defendant to the land, however, if sustained by the proof, could not amount to a complete justification of the trespass upon and disturbance of the plaintiff’s actual possession and inclosure, committed without a resort to any legal methods for obtaining the *120 possession of the land. As there are no conclusions of the court below in the record, it may be that the court allowed the damages only for trespass and not for the value of the land; and as there is evidence to support such a finding, it does not appear, therefore, in this view of the case, that the judgment for the damages is erroneous. Possibly the city may have been awarded more and the plaintiff less than she was entitled to under the law.

We recur now to the other view of the case as presented in the foregoing assignments. • Was it the purpose' of the city to take the land for public purposes? The plaintiff proved that she was in the actual possession of the land and that it was a part of her homestead, and that “the strip” had never been a part of the public alley. It was within her inclosure. She and her husband, Judge Barksdale, had occupied for years before his death, and she occupied it thereafter. She is the sole devisee of her husband under his will, etc. She introduced deeds down from one, who was proved verbally (without objection) to have been the owner of the land, to her husband. She also proved the following facts: That the city of Bast Dallas had passed through its common council an ordinance for “widening the alley” in question, and that the city marshal, acting under the orders of the mayor of the city, and in the presence of the chairman of the street committee, actually widened the alley to the extent claimed by the plaintiff, tore down her fence and “moved it back into her yard,” and entirely dispossessed her of the “strip of land.in dispute,” over her earnest protest, and without any offer of compensation to her, or any efforts for the assessment of or any agreement upon the amount of damages upon the part of the city authorities. In short, a high-handed outrage upon the rights of property as guaranteed in the Bill of Rights was committed by the city authorities, if the plaintiff’s evidence states the real facts occurring at the time when she was dispossessed. She testified concerning the manner in which her protest against the tearing down of her fence, etc., was received, to the following effect: That she was sick in bed on the day they took the land. She went and told them that if her husband was alive they would not do it.

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Bluebook (online)
18 S.W. 329, 83 Tex. 117, 1892 Tex. LEXIS 704, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-east-dallas-v-barksdale-tex-1892.