City of Houston v. Anderson

115 S.W.2d 732, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 1039
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 24, 1938
DocketNo. 10550.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 115 S.W.2d 732 (City of Houston v. Anderson) 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 Houston v. Anderson, 115 S.W.2d 732, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 1039 (Tex. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

GRAVES, Justice.

This appeal is from a $7,500 judgment in favor of the appellees, John E. Anderson and wife, and against the appellant, city of Houston, entered by the Sixty-First district court of Harris county upon a jury’s verdict in response to special issues, as for permanent damage to their 807-foot strip of property abutting the west line of Scott street in that city, caused by the city’s having greatly widened and deepened a small ditch theretofore running along such property line. The special issues and the jury’s answers thereto were these:

“No. 1. Do you find from a preponderance of the evidence that the Anderson property was damaged by reason of the widening and deepening of the ditch between the Fall of 1933 and the Spring of 1934?” Answer: “We do.”
“No. 2. If you have answered Special Issue No. 1 ‘we do,’ and only in that event, then answer the following Special Issue:
“From a preponderance of the evidence, what do you find was the reasonable cash market value of the Anderson property immediately before said ditch was deepened and widened?” Answer: “$26,000.00.”
“No. 3. From a preponderance of the evidence, what do you find was the reasonable cash market value of the Anderson property immediately after the ditch was deepened and widened?” Answer: “$18,500.00.”

In this court the appellant, city assails the áction thus taken below, under some nine propositions of law, which may be summarized in this way:

Nos. 1 and 3 complain, respectively, of the court’s refusal to sustain appellant’s ad interim motions for judgment in its favor, the one for a peremptory instruction, interposed at the close of appellees’ testimony in advance of any having been offered by itself; the other, made after the return of the jury’s findings, asking an acquittal non obstante veredicto, both grounded^ upon the claim of insufficient evidence to support the adverse award to the appellees.

No. 2 urges error in the receipt in evidence, over appellant’s objection, of two applications, purportedly signed by its mayor and his executive secretary, to the Federal Civil Works Administration of Texas, requesting an appropriation of money for ditch digging and street cleaning, on the alleged ground that neither such may- or nor secretary had been thereunto duly authorized by the city council of Houston by any, ordinance, motion, or resolution passed by it, wherefore such application had not been binding upon it.

No. 4 presents that there was error in the refusal of appellant’s requested special issue, which sought to elicit from the jury a finding as to whether or not the damage to their land so declared upon by the appellees Was of a permanent or temporary nature; it being asserted that appellant’s evidence on that feature tended to show that whatever damage there may have been was susceptible of being repaired, hence had been of. a temporary nature only.

No. 5 being to the effect that appellant’s motion to strike from the record the witness A. D. Foreman’s testimony as to the “reasonable value” of the appellees’ property just prior to the enlargement of the ditch should have been granted, he having therein testified that such property had no market value at all in 1933; the ap-pellees having sued for an alleged difference of $20,000 in the market value of the property immediately before and immediately after the widening of the ditch, and not having alleged that it had no market value at the time in question.

Nos. 6 to 9, inclusive, 'assail the admission in evidence, over appellant’s objec *734 tion, of four certain motions passed by the city council of Houston, Nos. 8004, 8005, 7769, and 7770, on the alleged ground that no evidence was otherwise adduced showing either that the subject-matter of any of these motions, or what was done under any of them, related to -or had anything to do with the declared-upon deepening and widening of the Scott Street ditch, which formed the basis of the ap-pellees’ cause of action, it being presented in this connection, first, that motion No. 8004 merely purported to authorize the city of Houston to co-operate in every way with the federal government, through the Civil Works Administration, in securing work for men to he furnished the city by the CWA; second, that No. 8005 likewise purportedly authorized City Commissioner Starkey and its acting director of public works, J. M. Nagle, to purchase necessary tools and equipment for use in its street, bridge, and park division for use by labor to be furnished by the federal government through . the CWA; third, that No. 7769 simply authorized the mayor’s certifying that an appropriation would be made to defray the cost of necessary supervision of the work to be done by the city’s street and bridge department, for which the Federal Relief Commission was to furnish the labor, etc.; fourth, that No. 7770 only purported to authorize like certificates from the mayor of the city to cover the cost of all tools and equipment necessary for such work.

None of these contentions, it is thought, should be sustained. The count for the peremptory instruction' — in the circumstances under which it was requested —is clearly untenable, since, as against the motion therefor, it was unnecessary for appellees to fully prove that the city had ever expressly authorized the lowering and widening of the ditch by ordinance, resolution, or motion, or that it had in fact ratified that work as its own after being done; but, if their proof raised issues of fact over whether the city had sponsored such work in either of these ways, they were entitled to go to the jury on such showing. Donaldson v. Oak Park Cemetery, Tex.Civ.App., 110 S.W.2d 119.

Upon like considerations, the move for an acquittal from liability, after and notwithstanding the verdict by the jury, was not well grounded, if the evidence was sufficient to sustain the jury’s quoted answers to the special issues, as well as the further finding necessarily implied therein, to the effect that the ditch had been by the city so deepened and widened over its preexisting condition as to actually inflict a permanent damage upon the appellees to the extent of $7,500, when measured in money; indeed, these findings of the jury —inclusive of such necessary implication —are not specifically attacked as such, nor, in view of the plain sufficiency of the evidence to substantiate them, could they successfully have been; without going into the evidence, it is sufficient to note that it fully sustained appellees’ averments that the ditch had been an average depth of from 2 to 2½ feet, approximately 3 feet wide at the top, and sloping toward the bottom, before the city so deepened and widened it,' whereas immediately after-wards it had been 4 to 7 feet deep, 3 feet wide -at the bottom, and' from 13 to 16 feet wide at the top, thereby cutting off access along the entire 800-foot line of appellees’ property, as well as causing water to stand in places upon it where that had not before happened.

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Bluebook (online)
115 S.W.2d 732, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 1039, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-houston-v-anderson-texapp-1938.