City of Livingston v. Wilson

310 S.W.2d 569, 1958 Tex. App. LEXIS 1790
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 20, 1958
Docket6128
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 310 S.W.2d 569 (City of Livingston v. Wilson) 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 Livingston v. Wilson, 310 S.W.2d 569, 1958 Tex. App. LEXIS 1790 (Tex. Ct. App. 1958).

Opinion

ANDERSON, Justice.

The appeal is from a judgment of the district court of Polk 'County making a temporary injunction permanent and containing other allied provisions. In its most comprehensive sense, the question involved is perhaps that of whether, and if so, upon what conditions, appellees, who live outside the city’s limits, are legally entitled to have the City of Livingston, which owns and operates its water system, supply them with water for domestic use. In the sense in which it is primarily and dominantly presented by the record, however, the question is that of whether, and if so, upon what conditions, appellees are legally entitled to have the city supply them water through particular mains or feeder lines. A summary of the facts is essential to a proper understanding of the issues involved and the trial court’s judgment, and will be first supplied. It is sufficient at this point to say that the city was ordered to supply ap-pellees with water.

Appellees live along highway No. 146, which, because it connects Livingston and Liberty, Texas, is also known in and around Livingston as the Liberty road. Appellees H. S. Denham and wife, R. S. Denham, live approximately a thousand feet, and appellee Ruby Wilson lives approximately a half mile, from where the highway intersects Livingston’s south boundary. The city is selling water to a number of customers along the highway, and has been doing so continuously since 1944. Appellee Wilson became a customer in 1948, and the Den-hams became customers in 1953. They remained customers until use of the water main through which water had been theretofore supplied them was discontinued by the city in 1954. A new water main was installed along the highway and put into use in 1954, but the city refused to make service connections to it for appellees or to authorize appellees to make connections for themselves, without the consent of the officers or representatives of Liberty Road Water District, an organization or association which the city recognizes as being owner of the main.

The city having refused to make connections for them, appellees acted for themselves, making connections to the new main. The city disconnected the Denhams’ service lines and was threatening to disconnect Mrs. Wilson’s. Appellees brought suit against the city, its mayor, councilmen, and water superintendent to restrain them from disconnecting Mrs. Wilson’s lines, to compel them to re-connect the Denhams’ lines *571 to either the old or the new main, and to compel the city to continue supplying them water, upon their paying therefor at the same rates at which the city supplies water to domestic users within its corporate limits. Liberty Road Water District and its officers and directors, the officers and directors acting both officially and individually, intervened in the suit as defendants. They filed both an answer and a cross-action. By the latter, they sought to enjoin the city from making service connections for appellees to the new main, the ap-pellees from themselves making connections, and the city from supplying appel-lees water through the main, until appellees have paid Liberty Road Water District .'$250 for each connection that is to be made for them.

Liberty Road Water District, as may have been surmised, is not a conventional or statutory water district. In fact, it is not a water district at all. It is but an association of individuals who live along highway No. 146, outside the city limits of Livingston, and who, for limited purposes, have banded together by common consent, under an assumed name, have reduced their compact to the form of by-laws, and have •delegated the management of their mutual affairs to directors and other officers. Those constituting the association contributed the money with which the pipe and ancillary equipment that make up the out-city portion of the distribution system that was put into use along the highway in 1954 were purchased, an aggregate sum in excess •of $23,000. Each member contributed a minimum of $250, and some contributed considerably more. The association or so-called water district was formed merely as ■a medium through which its members could effectively and conveniently act in purchasing the pipe and ancillary equipment, in exercising acts of ownership over the distribution system once it had been installed, and in providing for the system’s upkeep. It neither buys nor sells water and is not otherwise engaged in business for profit. Assessments against its members aside, it has no source of revenue except payments made by new members for the privilege of having service connections made to the distribution system. Pending installation of additional fire hydrants and repayment of $5,000 that some of the members individually borrowed for the benefit of the group, each new member is being charged the sum of $250 for the aforesaid privilege — the same amount, it will be noted, as the minimum that was contributed by each of the original members. However, in the improbable event a surplus accrues from this source, it is to be distributed among the members of the association on a pro rata basis.

The association was formed, and it or its members purchased the component elements of the new distribution system, in these circumstances: In June, 1953, the mayor of Livingston notified the city’s water customers along highway No. 146 that, due to the aged and defective condition of the water main then in use and to the resultant wastage of water, the city was going to cease supplying anyone water through the main. He also advised them that the city was not financially able to replace the main and would not undertake to do so. Meetings were thereupon held between interested persons and the city’s officials, and the latter agreed that if those desiring water would purchase all’pipe and ancillary equipment for a new and adequate distribution system, and would pay for the upkeep of the system after installation, the city would itself install the new system, make service connections to it and install individual meters for eligible persons (at no cost to those having service connections to the old main), and would supply such persons water, upon their paying therefor at the prevailing rates in effect for others similarly situated. Liberty Road Water District was then formed and negotiations between its officers or representatives and the city’s officials took place. In addition to again agreeing to the matters above mentioned, the city officials agreed that title to the new system would be in Liberty *572 Road Water District or its members; that the city would not make service connections to the new system except when authorized to do so by the officers of the so-called district; and that, allowance being made at an agreed annual rate for depreciation of the system, the city would reimburse Liberty Road Water District or its members the cost of the component elements of the system if the area served by the system should become a part of the city.

Pursuant to the agreement of its officials, the city did install the new distribution system, made service connections to it and installed individual meters for all members of Liberty Road Water District (charging therefor only those who had had no connections to the old main), and has since supplied the members water. Furthermore, its employees operate the system, look after it, repair it when necessary (but at the expense of the association), and in general perform with reference to it essentially the same functions they would if it were city owned.

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Bluebook (online)
310 S.W.2d 569, 1958 Tex. App. LEXIS 1790, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-livingston-v-wilson-texapp-1958.