City of Houston v. Scanlan

164 S.W.2d 760, 1942 Tex. App. LEXIS 496
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 23, 1942
DocketNo. 11407.
StatusPublished

This text of 164 S.W.2d 760 (City of Houston v. Scanlan) 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. Scanlan, 164 S.W.2d 760, 1942 Tex. App. LEXIS 496 (Tex. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

MONTEITH, Chief Justice.

This action was originally brought by Lillian Scanlan and Stella Scanlan against appellee, Texas Pacific Coal & Oil Company, and appellant, the City of Houston, to cancel certain paving certificates issued against them on numerous grounds, including an allegation that the paving did not substantially comply with the plans and specifications therefor.

*761 The Texas Pacific Coal & Oil Company filed a cross-action against the Scanlans seeking to collect the paving certificates from them and an alternative cross-action against the City of Houston, in which it alleged that, if it was not entitled to recover on said paving certificates from the Scanlans, the City of Houston was liable to them, on the theory that the' City of Houston had impliedly contracted with their assignor to furnish it the necessary right of way for a 52-foot street and that it had failed to do so, thus making it impossible for it to comply with the plans and specifications. The Texas Pacific Coal & Oil Company in their cross-action against the City of Houston filed on May 27, 1938, also contended that the city should have accepted the paving in question in 1928, and that in failing to do so the city had deprived it of interest which would have accrued to it on said paving certificates from 1928 to December 9, 1936.

The City of Houston answered the cross-action of the Texas Pacific Coal & Oil Company by general demurrer, general denial, and a sworn plea that Texas Pacific Coal & Oil Company never acquired any valid assignment of a cause of action against it from the San Jacinto Construction Company; a plea that any cause of action asserted against the City of Houston was barred by the two and four year statutes of limitations, and a plea that under the specific provisions of the contract between the City of Houston and the San Jacinto Construction Company and under the specific provisions of the ordinance authorizing the issuance of the paving certificates in question, the paving contractor had no claim against the City of Houston, but was required to look alone to the paving certificates for payment.

By trial amendment the City of Houston also pleaded res adjudicata to the cross-action of Texas Pacific Coal & Oil Company, on the ground that all questions involved in such cross-action were either raised and adjudicated in the Scanlans’ injunction suit above referred to, or could and should have been there raised and adjudicated.

At the conclusion of the evidence, the court dismissed the jury and rendered judgment in favor of Lillian Scanlan and Stella Scanlan, setting aside said paving certificates, and in favor of the Texas Pacific Coal & Oil Company on its cross-action against the City of Houston in the sum of $5711.69. The City of Houston appeals from this action of the trial court.

This suit involves the paving laid on the south side of Calhoun Avenue, between Main and Fannin Streets, in the City of Houston, adjacent to the property of Lillian and Stella Scanlan. The paving in question was put down by the San Jacinto Construction Company in 1927. The plans and specifications therefor called for a 52-foot paved street, with curbs and gutters. After the contract for such pavement had been let, and after work had started thereon, the Scanlan sisters, in 1927, brought suit for a temporary and permanent injunction to restrain the City of Houston and the paving contractor from laying pavement on the south 10 feet of the proposed right of way, on the ground that such land was not a part of the street but was instead the property of the Scanlan sisters. This injunction suit was styled Kate Scanlan et al. v. San Jacinto Construction Company et al., No. 135962 on the docket of the district court of Harris County. The Scanlan sisters were successful in their suit and a temporary injunction issued on July 16, 1927. On July 19, 1928, judgment was rendered in the trial court awarding the Scanlan sisters a permanent injunction as prayed for, and the case was affirmed by the Supreme Court, 120 Tex. 264, 37 S.W.2d 718, and a mandate was issued thereon in 1931. Under the terms of this injunction, the contractor did not pave Calhoun Avenue between Main and Fannin Streets to a width of 52 feet, but did pave it to a width of 42 feet, leaving unpaved the strip on the south which the injunction restrained them from paving.

The Calhoun Avenue paving, with the exception of the block between Main and Fannin Streets, was accepted and paving certificates issued in May, 1928. On December 3, 1936, more than nine years after the paving was put down, the Texas Pacific Coal & Oil Company, claiming to be the assignee of the San Jacinto Construction Company, filed its petition with the City of Houston, requesting the city council to accept the pavement between Main and Fannin Streets on Calhoun Avenue and to issue paving certificates against the adjacent property owners. The petition was granted, and the City of Houston accepted the paving, held the required hearing, and over the objections of the Scanlan sisters issued paving certificates against the Scan-lan sisters aggregating $1515.58. There *762 after, this suit was filed by the Scanlan sisters.

Under its first and second propositions, the City of Houston contends that since the contract between the paving contractor and the City of Houston and the ordinances authorizing the issuance of said paving certificates both specifically provided that there should be no liability on the part of the City of Houston, in the event the paving certificates were for any reason uncol-lectible, and that in no event should the City of Houston be liable to the contractor for any sums designated to be paid by abutting owners, and that the contractor should look to the abutting owners for payment thereof, the court should have rendered judgment against the Texas Pacific Coal & Oil Company's cross-action.

The contract between the City of Houston and the San Jacinto Construction Company for the paving of Calhoun Avenue, including plans and specifications, were introduced in evidence. Sections 5 and 6 of the contract, in so far as they are here material, read:

“(c) That the owners of property abutting upon said street named shall pay to the contractor the whole cost of installing concrete curbs in front of their respective property, where satisfactory curbs are not already in place, and all of the remainder of said costs of said improvements, after deducting the amounts herein specified to be paid by the City and said railroad and street railway companies. * * * It is expressly agreed that said City shall not in any manner be liable to the said contractor for any part of the cost of said improvement herein designated to be paid by the owners of abutting property, but for such portion the contractor shall look alone to the said owners and their property, and that the said City does not in any manner giiarantee ihe collection thereof, nor shall it become in any manner liable for the cost of collecting the same, nor in enforcing the lien thereon, but the City agrees to do all acts, and pass all ordinances and resolutions required and permitted by law, for*, the purpose of assisting said contractor or assigns in collecting or enforcing the payment of the said costs against said owners and of said lien against said property. * * *»
“6.

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Bluebook (online)
164 S.W.2d 760, 1942 Tex. App. LEXIS 496, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-houston-v-scanlan-texapp-1942.