City of Oak Cliff v. State Ex Rel. Gill

79 S.W. 1, 97 Tex. 383, 1904 Tex. LEXIS 162
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 7, 1904
DocketNo. 1296.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 79 S.W. 1 (City of Oak Cliff v. State Ex Rel. Gill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Oak Cliff v. State Ex Rel. Gill, 79 S.W. 1, 97 Tex. 383, 1904 Tex. LEXIS 162 (Tex. 1904).

Opinion

BBOWH, Associate Justice.

From the opinion of the honorable Court of Civil Appeals we extract the following pleadings in this case: “On July 1, 1903, appellee filed in the District Court of the Forty-fourth Judicial District of the State of Texas, its information in the nature of a quo warranto on the relation of C. A. Gill individually, and as acting mayor of the city of Dallas, against the city of Oak Cliff and the various officers thereof, and against the trustees of the independent school district of Oak Cliff, seeking a judicial determination to the effect that the said city of ■ Oak Cliff became disincorporated on July 1, 1903, and that its territory became annexed to the city of Dallas, and that the officials of Oak Cliff and the trustees of the *386 said independent school district, in continuing thereafter to perform their respective official duties, became usurpers, and praying judgment of ouster". The petition recites that the city of Dallas was and is a municipal corporation of more than ten thousand inhabitants, duly incorporated as such by a special act of the Legislature of Texas; that by amendment to the charter of the city of Dallas as then existing the corporation of the former city of Oak Cliff was' abolished and the corporate limits of the city of Dallas extended by the terms of the said act of the Legislature to include the territory comprised within the limits of the former city of Oak Cliff and some intervening territory; that by virtue of the provision of the said act of the Legislature the public affairs of the city of Oak Cliff under the new arrangement were adjusted and its corporate property, including the property of the public schools situated in the city of Oak Cliff, disposed of, and the future rights and relations of the two towns after the consolidation determined as explicitly shown by the allegations of the petition. That the act was duly passed by the Legislature of the State .of Texas and approved by the Governor of Texas and became effective on the 1st day of July, 1903. That all of the officers of Oak Cliff and the trustees in charge of the public schools refused to recognize the validity of the said act or in any respect to yield obedience to the same, but continued to exercise their former prerogatives and authority without regard to the said law.

“The defendants interposed general and special exceptions, challenging the validity of the act amending the charter of Dallas so as to include Oak Cliff. The exceptions were overruled and exception taken." The cause was submitted to the court on an agreed statement of facts and from a judgment in favor of the-plaintiff the defendants appealed.”

The case was tried before the district judge upon an agreed statement of facts from which we make the following condensed statement sufficient for the purposes of this opinion:

Prior to April 3, 1903, the city of Dallas was a municipal corporation, containing more than ten thousand population, organized under a special act of the Legislature of the State of Texas, and Oak Cliff was a municipal corporation, containing less than ten thousand population, organized under the general laws of the State. The persons named as defendants were the officers of Oak Cliff, except that William Charlton, R. E. Clark, S. H. Chiles, John M. George, E. F. Allen, R. L. Erwin and John E. Wharton were trustees of the independent school district of Oak Cliff, which school district was duly organized under the general laws of the State and embraced only the city of Oak Cliff. All of the property that belonged to the free schools of that district was located within the limits of the city of Oak Cliff. Between the city of Dallas and the city of Oak Cliff there was an intervening territory not incorporated and which was by the act in question included within the territory added to Dallas. A majority of the citizens of Oak Cliff had their offices and places of business in the city of Dallas and transacted their *387 business there. The greater part of the shopping was done by the people of Oak Cliff in the city of Dallas, except in the purchase of groceries,, which were supplied by local grocers. There was an electric street car line running between the two .cities which carried passengers, making the trip every fifteen minutes; between the two cities there were two macadamized public highways.

The defendants refused to obey the special law of the Legislature, which added this territory to the city of Dallas, whereupon this suit was instituted for the purpose of ousting the said corporation and its officers from the exercise of corporate authority within that territory.

The following agreement is embraced in the statement of facts: “It is agreed that if said act, marked exhibit A and made a part of the information, is a valid law, judgment shall go for the plaintiffs; and it the same shall not be considered a valid law, then judgment shall go for the defendants.”

The district judge overruled the general and special exceptions filed by the defendants, and, upon consideration of the facts, entered judgment in favor of the State of Texas, which judgment was affirmed by the Court of Civil Appeals.

On May 9, 1899, the Legislature of the State of Texas passed a special law by which a new charter was granted to the city of Dallas, the second section of which gave the boundaries of said city, from which we quote in part as follows: “Beginning on the east bank of the Trinity River

at low water mark midway between Commerce Street and Main Street; thence southerly with the meanders of the river to the southeast boundary line of the A. C. McDaniels survey; thence in a course about forty-five degrees east with said southeast boundary line to the A. C. McDaniels survey,” etc., continuing with the various calls until it reaches the river. This call closes the survey: “thence southerly with the meanders of said river to the place of beginning.” The charter was amended by the Twenty-sixth Legislature, in matters having no connection with this litigation. The Twenty-seventh Legislature, at its regular session, passed a sjiecial law amending the charter by adding thereto thirty sections numbered from la to 30a inclusive, but none of them embrace any of the matters which are involved in this controversy. The regular session of the Twenty-eighth Legislature enacted a special law, the caption of which is as follows: “An Act to amend section two (2) of the charter of the city of Dallas, relating to the boundary lines of said city, and adding thereto section 2a, changing said boundary and limits of the said city of Dallas and thereby including within and attaching to said city of Dallas the corporation and city of Oak Cliff, and certain other adjacent territory, and abolishing the corporation of the city of Oak Cliff, and declaring an emergency.” The section of the act reads thus: “Section 1. Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Texas: That section 2 of the charter of the city of Dallas be amended by adding section 2a.” From sections 2a and 2al, we copy: “That the bounds and *388

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Bluebook (online)
79 S.W. 1, 97 Tex. 383, 1904 Tex. LEXIS 162, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-oak-cliff-v-state-ex-rel-gill-tex-1904.