City of Pelly v. Harris County Water Control & Improvement Dist. No. 7

195 S.W.2d 241, 1946 Tex. App. LEXIS 904
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 23, 1946
DocketNos. 11776, 11777.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 195 S.W.2d 241 (City of Pelly v. Harris County Water Control & Improvement Dist. No. 7) 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 Pelly v. Harris County Water Control & Improvement Dist. No. 7, 195 S.W.2d 241, 1946 Tex. App. LEXIS 904 (Tex. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinion

GRAVES, Justice.

This general statement — conceded by the appellees to be correct as such — is substantially quoted from the appellants’ brief, to-wit:

“These were suits for injunction by named individuals as taxpayers, and a named individual as a bondholder, and Harris County Water .Control and Improvement District No. 7 and two named Fresh Water Supply Districts against the City of Pelly, a Home Rule City, and the Mayor and the commissioners thereof, and the City of Goose Creek, a Home Rule City, and the mayor and the commissioners thereof, to enjoin and restrain such cities from extending their boundaries by ordinance so as to include in whole or in part the territory embraced in the aforesaid districts, which territory was adjacent to each of such cities. The suits were filed as separate suits, but were jointly tried in a trial to the Court, and judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiffs, and a permanent injunction granted restraining and enjoining the appellant, City of Goose Creek, and 'the Mayor and Commissioners thereof, and the City of Pelly, and the Mayor and Commissioners thereof, from so extending the respective boundaries of said cities. From the judgment these appeals have been regularly perfected, *242 and are now properly before this Court for review.
“By joint motion the suits have been consolidated on the docket of this Court.”

All three appellee districts were public bodies corporate — organized under Title 128, Chapters 3A and 4, Vernon’s Ann.Civ. St. arts. 7880 — 1 et seq., 7881 et seq., of the “Water Control and Improvement Districts” statutes of the State of Texas, No. 7, otherwise being known as the “Baytown District,” No. 2 as the “Leger District,” and No. 10 as the “Busch Terrace District.”

The trial court first overruled the pleas-in-abatement, described in appellants’ points of error, hereinafter quoted, then heard the suits on their merits, and based the injunctions granted on a holding — upon the law and the facts — that neither appellant-city had authority of law for undertaking to so annex any part of*the territory embraced in the appellee-districts, and that the efforts of each to do so by a proposed ordinance like that already passed by the City of Pelly were and would be void.

So that, stripped of unnecessary recitations, two cities challenge on 'appeal such determination of the court below against them, urging that it legally aggrieved them: (1) Because appellees’ suit for injunction could only have properly been prosecuted through a proceeding in quo warranto, with the State of Texas a party thereto; (2) that the annexation-ordinance passed on first reading by appellarit-City of Pelly (in defense of which the City of Goose Creek made common cause) was in all respects a legal and binding one and entitled that city, in pursuance thereof, to annex the territory it sought; and finally (3) that, as concerns appellant-City of Goose Creek alone, appellees’ injunction suit against it had been prematurely brought, in that its pleadings and the evidence both showed that it had not threatened, nor did it then intend, “to annex to the City of Goose Creek any of the lands or property described in plaintiffs’ petition for any purpose whatsoever.”

The trial court filed no findings of fact or law, other than those recited in its judgments, the controlling substance of which • — as already given in the general statement —is thus more fully quoted from its judgment in the City of Pelly case:

“ * * * the annexation ordinance, which the City Commission of the City of Pelly, Texas, has passed on first reading, insofar as it attempts and purports to extend the boundaries of the City of Pelly to include all or any part of the territory within Harris County Water Control and Improvement District No. 7, Tri-City Fresh Water Supply District No. 2 of Harris County, Texas, and Harris County Fresh Water Supply District No. 10, is without authority of law, and a permanent injunction should be granted.”

A like judgment, upon the same conclusion as to the law, was entered in the City of Goose Creek case, although it had not then passed on first reading such an annexation-ordinance as the City of Pelly had so done, the court’s judgment against the City of Goose Creek having been rested upon its presumed and implied finding, on both the facts and the law, that it was in essentially the same position with reference to annexing the appellee-Districts, and that it was at least threatening to make the same effort by ordinance to accomplish that purpose the City of Pelly had so done.

Appellants’ first point of error, contending that these challenged suits against them could only be prosecuted through a proceeding in the nature of a quo warranto, with the State of Texas a party thereto, which they raised below by their pleas in abatement setting up the fact that the State had not been a party, are overruled upon the conclusion. — -which may as well be stated in limine — that the inchoate annexation ordinance passed by the City of Pelly (as would have been any such like action upon the part of the City of Goose Creek) was wholly void, being clearly without authority of law, as the trial court properly held; wherefore, in such circumstances, by well settled authority, both suits were maintainable by the appellees, without the presence of the State of Texas, or its representatives. R.S. Article 126S, Vernon’s Ann. Civ. St. art. 1265; Charter of City of Pelly, Art. II, Sec. 2; Town of Griffing Park v. City of Port Arthur, Tex.Civ.App., 36 S.W.2d 593; *243 Grisham v. Tate, Tex.Civ.App., 35 S.W.2d 264; City of Houston v. City of Magnolia Park, Tex.Cotn.App., 276 S.W. 685; Hunt v. Atkinson, Tex.Com.App., 12 S.W .2d 142; City of Port Arthur v. Gaskin, Tex.Civ. App., 107 S.W.2d 610.

The gist of the whole law on that subject is thus quoted from the cited Grisham case [35 S.W.2d 265], to-wit:

“Where there is no law authorizing the creation of such a corporation, or where the law under which it purports to exist is unconstitutional, or where the attempt to comply with the provisions of the law authorizing such creation is so utterly lacking or. defective as to render the attempt to create such a corporation void, the right of such corporation to exist may be challenged by any party whose interest is directly affected thereby. * * * ”

The conclusion stated obviates any consideration of whether or not the attack these suits constituted against the efforts of the appellant-Cilies to so annex the territory were collateral attacks upon the boundaries of those Cities as existent and going concerns — this for the reason that, if the efforts by such an ordinance were void to the extent of being “without any authority of law” to support them, by all the authorities, they were subject to collateral attack. Hunt v. Atkinson, supra.

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Bluebook (online)
195 S.W.2d 241, 1946 Tex. App. LEXIS 904, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-pelly-v-harris-county-water-control-improvement-dist-no-7-texapp-1946.