City of Ft. Worth v. Capps Land Co.

205 S.W. 491, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 776
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 11, 1918
DocketNo. 8879.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 205 S.W. 491 (City of Ft. Worth v. Capps Land Co.) 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 Ft. Worth v. Capps Land Co., 205 S.W. 491, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 776 (Tex. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

BUCK, J.

This suit was instituted by appellant, city of Ft. Worth, for the use and benefit of the Texas Bituli'thic Company, a private corporation, to recover of appellee, a corporation, a special assessment levied against it by said city of Ft. Worth, in the sum of $1,043.75, its pro rata part of the cost of the paving of Jennings avenue between Berry and Shaw streets, in front of lots 7 to 12, inclusive, in block 35, South *492 Hemp-Mil Heights addition to the city of Et. Worth. ' Appellant, plaintiff below, alleged that it ordered the improvement of said portion of Jennings avenue, that specifications were ordered, prepared, and were approved by the city commissioners, bids advertised for and contract entered into with the Texas Bitulithic Company, notice given to property owners, and an ordinance passed levying and assessing the special assessment against the lots mentioned and against the appellee company ; that said work and improvement was completed and was accepted by the city and said assessment became due and payable within 30 days after said acceptance. Defendant answered by general demurrer, by special exceptions, and by general denial, and by various special pleas to the merits. It alleged that William Capps was the president and general manager of defendant corporation, and the only person authorized to transact the business of said defendant; that when approached by a representative of the paving company with a request that he, acting for defendant, sign a petition to- the board of commissioners of the city of Ft. Worth requesting that Jennings avenue between Shaw and Berry streets be paved, said Capps refused to sign said petition, and advised said representative of the paving company that he did not deem it advisable to have the street in front of the lots owned by appellee paved, as said lots were low, and not desirable .for residence purposes; that there were very few houses in that part of the city; that the lots were intersected by a ravine, and abutted in the rear on the railroad right of way; that the lots, because of their location and character, would have to be sold to persons of very moderate means, who would not be able to pay therefor a price sufficient to include the then value of the lots increased by the cost .of paving; and that, generally, the paving would not be beneficial to the owner of said lots, and would not enhance the value of said lots to the extent of the cost of the pavement. It was further alleged that the paving company was the owner of a patented process for paving and that it would not permit other paving companies to use said process or to lay paving of a similar nature to the “bitulithic,” which is a composition similar to asphalt laid on a concrete base; that the commissioners of the city of Ft. Worth knew that by designating and requiring that the paving to be done should be bitulithic it practically excluded from the privilege of bidding on said paving other paving companies doing business in Ft. Worth, which were prepared to lay paving essentially of the same kind and wearing quality, but which were not permitted to lay bitulithic pavement without paying to the Texas Bitulithic Company an exorbitant sum for the privilege of doing so. It was further alleged that in so requiring the paving to be bitulithic, the commissioners were guilty of Collusion and fraud, and that thereby they practically stifled and suppressed competitive, bidding. It was further alleged that the cost and charge for bitulithic pavement was approximately $2.08% per square yard, and that said amount was greatly in excess of the value of said pavement, and that in truth and in fact pavement essentially similar and' durable could be laid for an amount not exceeding $1.50 per square yard. It was further alleged that shortly after the acceptance by the city commissioners of the bid of the Texas Bitulithic Company, the defendant duly and legally filed its protect with said board of city commissioners, protesting against the pavement of said street; that said protest was considered by the said commissioners on or about No-ber 8, 1911, and that proceedings with reference to -the paving of said portion of Jennings avenue were dropped, and nothing further done with reference thereto, and that defendant believed and had reason to believe that the paving thereof had been abandoned and would not be further proceeded with; that on July 9, 1912, some seven months after the protest was filed, and while defendant’s president and general manager was out of the state for an extended stay, the board of commissioners, knowing this, and in order to take advantage thereof, caused the city secretary of the city of Ft. Worth to issue notice to the property owners that a hearing would be given to the said owners on July 23, 1912, and that on said date, while defendant’s general manager and president was out of the state, and with the fraudulent and collusive purpose to deprive the defendant of the right to be heard on said hearing, passed an ordinance levying a special assessment against defendant’s aforesaid property. It was further pleaded that said assessment was greatly excessive and greatly in excess of any enhancement in value by reason of the construction of said pavement, or any benefits to said property by reason thereof. It was further alleged that the levy made and the lien attempted to be fixed against defendant’s property and the charge against defendant itself was invalid for various reasons, among which were: (1) That no judgment was rendered by the board of commissioners after the hearing, as required by section 9 of chapter 14 of the charter of the city of Ft. Worth; (2) that the charter provision providing for an appeal from the order and judgment of the city commissioners overruling the protest of a property owner or property owners affected by the paving was unreasonable, invalid, and unconstitutional, in that said charter provision requires that the appeal be perfected within ten days after the hearing. It was alleged that at the time when the property owner is required to take such an appeal and file such suit in the district court under the penalty of being forever barred from doing so the very thing against which he is required to appeal is not in existence, and the property owner does not *493 and cannot know at the time he is required to file such action whether the paving as it is finally laid will enhance the value of his property to the amount of the cost of the same assessed against said property; that the assessment and the fixing of the lien against the property affected, under the circumstances, would constitute the taking of property of a citizen without due process of law, and therefore he violative of article 1, § 19, of the Constitution of the state of Texas.

[1] The trial was had before a jury, and at the conclusion of the evidence a verdict was rendered for defendant, upon a peremptory instruction, and the plaintiff has appealed. In the briefs of appellant and appellee the question of the constitutionality of the charter provision above noted is not discussed, and there is nothing in the judgment rendered to suggest that the court so instructed the jury upon the theory that the charter provision mentioned was unconstitutional. Therefore we are perhaps justified in concluding that the trial court did not base the peremptory instruction given upon the theory of the uneonstitutionality of this provision, nor are we prepared to hold that the provision referred to is violative of the section and article of the Constitution cited. In 1 Page & Jones, Taxation by Assessment, § 142, it is said:

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Bluebook (online)
205 S.W. 491, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 776, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-ft-worth-v-capps-land-co-texapp-1918.