City of Ft. Worth v. Zane Cetti

85 S.W. 826, 38 Tex. Civ. App. 117, 1905 Tex. App. LEXIS 421
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 28, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 85 S.W. 826 (City of Ft. Worth v. Zane Cetti) 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. Zane Cetti, 85 S.W. 826, 38 Tex. Civ. App. 117, 1905 Tex. App. LEXIS 421 (Tex. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

*119 CONNER, Chief Justice.

Mrs. Harriet E. Cetti, appellee’s testatrix and mother, owned six and one-fourth acres of land situated in the city of Fort Worth, Texas, which she, acting by appellee, on January 2, 1890, sold to E. E. McAnulty, Thomas Soche and A. M. Carter for $30,000, one-fourth of which was paid in cash, and notes were given for the balance payable in one, two and three years with the vendor’s lien on the premises sold to secure their payment. By mesne conveyance Drew Pruit, on March 14, 1890, purchased the land, as part of the consideration, assuming the payment of the first two notes to Mrs. Cetti. On March 19, 1890, Pruitt, having acquired other lands adjoining said six and one-fourth acres, joined with others owning adjacent lands, and laid out what was designated as the Grandview Addition to the city of Fort Worth, platting and subdividing the whole into blocks and lots, streets and alleys. A strip of sixty feet wide by 1026 feet long was designated as Seventh Avenue. This avenue covers 43 feet off of the east end of said Cetti tract. On January 10, 1894, default having been made in the payment of one or more of the promissory notes given to Mrs. Cetti, she brought suit in the District Court of Tarrant County against the makers of the notes and against Pruitt,'who had assumed payment, as stated, and against J. P. Woods who had purchased one of the lots into which said six and one-fourth acres had been divided, abutting upon said Seventh Avenue, for the amount due on said notes and for a foreclosure of the vendor’s lien on said six and one-fourth acres. Judgment was rendered in Cetti’s favor March 14, 1894, for the balance due, with foreclosure of the vendor’s lien as prayed for, and on May 4, 1894, an order of sale having issued, said land was sold and duly conveyed to Mrs. Cetti. In the petition for foreclosure and in the judgment in her favor, and in the sheriff’s sale to her, the subdivisions made by Pruit, as stated, were disregarded, and the suit now before us was instituted by appellee, his mother having died in the meantime, on February 7,1903, against the city of Fort Worth and the Northern Texas Traction Company, a private corporation, to recover that portion of Seventh Avenue taken from said six and one-fourth acres. Appellee’s petition was in two counts, the first of which was in the ordinary form of trespass to try title. The second was in the nature of special pleadings in which rvere alleged the facts already stated, and it was also averred that the city of Fort Worth had never accepted the dedication, or attempted dedication, of Pruit, or if so, that such acceptance had afterwards been Avaived and abandoned, and that the dedication by Pruit was "obliterated and become void” by reason of the foreclosure judgment and sale stated. In March, 1903, and in January, 1904, numerous parties who had purchased lands out of the Grandview Addition, some of Avhich abutted upon said Seventh Avenue, intervened and answered in substance that the land in question was a public highway, and by the dedication of Pruit had been set apart to public use as a street; that said dedication had been recognized and ratified by appellee and his testatrix; that the city of Fort Worth had recognized the strip of land in question as a public street, and that it was in fact such by its long continued use, interveners pleading the statutes of limitation of five and ten years. The city of Fort Worth adopted the pleadings of the interveners, setting up in substance the same defense. The trial Avas before a jury, and the court, *120 after the introduction of the evidence, gave a peremptory instruction to find for appellee, which was done, and judgment in appellee’s favor accordingly rendered, hence this appeal.

Numerous assignments of error are presented, and the degree of learning and research manifested by counsel for the respective parties is not only commendable, but has also been of great assistance to us; but in our disposition of the case we shall devote ourselves principally to those assignments under which it is insisted on the one hand and denied on the other that the court was in error in giving a peremptory instruction, because the evidence was sufficient to raise the issues, (1) of an implied dedication on the part of appellee and his testatrix of the land in controversy as a street or highway of the city of Fort Worth. (3) That appellee and his testatrix have ratified the dedication made by Pruit; and (3) that the land-in controversy has become a public highway, by reason of its continued and public use, under the státutes of limitation of five and ten years.

That streets, roads and highways may be established in any one or more of these ways has been so thoroughly settled that we need not stop to cite authorities. So that the duty devolved upon us is to determine from the evidence before us whether, as he insists, it conclusively appears that appellee’s right or that of his testatrix to the land in controversy has not been lost, or whether on the contrary, as appellants insist, the evidence tends to establish their contention in any of the particulars indicated. The rule for our guidance in such determination is thus stated: “To authorize the court to take the question (in that case one of negligence) from the jury, the evidence must be of such character that there is no room for ordinary minds -to differ as to the conclusion to be drawn from it.” (Lee v. International & G. N. Ry. Co., 89 Texas, 588.) Or, in different terms: “If there is any slight evidence tending to establish an issue, or bearing upon a controverted question in the case, it is the duty of the trial court to submit the issue thus raised to the jury.” (Heatherly v. Little, 40 S. W. Rep., 445.) With such rule in mind we conclude that the court was in error, as assigned, in giving the peremptory instruction. Appellee testified: “1 have been in Fort Worth constantly about thirty years. ... In the sale of this property to Carter, McAnulty and Roche I represented my mother. All negotiations that led up to and ultimated in the sale of the property were conducted by me. I don’t think any of them ever approached my mother. She gave me full authority to act for her in any matter connected with this sale and with the handling of these notes. She placed full reliance on her son, for which I feel grateful.

“At the time Drew Pruit made his dedication I was in the city. I don’t think he talked with me at the time he made his purchase, but he did afterwards. He often addressed to me the inquiry whether I would not take the proceeds of his sales and release the liens, or cause Mrs. Cetti to release liens. On such occasions he may or may not have exhibited to .me the map he made of these lots. I don’t remember about the time he laid it off; I had general knowledge of it. I knew of it. . . . I expect he told me of the sale to Woods and the proposed sale to Tomlinson. ... I don’t remember when Mr. Pruit graded Pruit *121 Street. Possibly I saw it a mouth or two after it was graded. . . . I remember the street car track was on Seventh Avenue. I traveled the car out to Mistletoe Heights. . . . Pruit Street was a good street. That street has been open for travel ever since I first saw it. . . From 1890 up to this time I have never placed on Pruit or Cooper Streets or Seventh Avenue any sign-board to the effect that these streets have been closed. Sor have I built a panel of fence, or any other obstruction, across these streets.

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Bluebook (online)
85 S.W. 826, 38 Tex. Civ. App. 117, 1905 Tex. App. LEXIS 421, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-ft-worth-v-zane-cetti-texapp-1905.