City of River Oaks v. Lake Worth Village

231 S.W.2d 768, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 2225
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 23, 1950
Docket15147
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 231 S.W.2d 768 (City of River Oaks v. Lake Worth Village) 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 River Oaks v. Lake Worth Village, 231 S.W.2d 768, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 2225 (Tex. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

• SPEER, Justice.

On October 26, 1949, appellees, designating themselves as “Lake Worth Village” and “Sansom Park Village” respectively, instituted separate suits against appellant City of River Oaks, an admitted legally incorporated home rule city or municipality, seeking a declaratory judgment holding void an amended ordinance theretofore passed by the Council of the City of River Oaks, which had the effect of enlarging the latter’s corporate boundaries so as to include the area embraced by the two plaintiffs. Plaintiffs, appellees here, sought to enjoin appellant from exercising jurisdiction and dominion over the territory by such attempted inclusion. Nine persons who were residents or property owners in the area intervened as plaintiffs, adopting one or the other of the petitions of appellees, and sought additional relief relative to tax-átion and municipal dominion.

The suits were consolidated and tried as one to the court. The ordinance of annexation or enlargement of the corporate limits of-the City of River Oaks was by the court declared void and the appellant City was enjoined from its enforcement; this appeal followed.

The transcript before us is lengthy, since all pleadings in the two independent suits are necessarily included. The petitions of the two appellees are substantially the same except for names and dates on which each is alleged to have been incorporated into statutory villages.

The pleadings of the City of River Oaks, defendant, and appellant here, are likewise duplicitous, all making for a lengthy transcript.

It was stipulated by the parties at the trial: “That the allegations of fact contained in the pleadings of the respective parties to the cause, as well as all of the exhibits attached to any of such pleadings, should be considered as constituting evidence adduced by said parties on the trial of the cause.” In addition thereto a plat showing the a'rea involved and a copy of appellant’s charter was introduced in evidence. The plat and charter are before us. As would be expected', the allegations of fact by the respective parties are highly contradictory, but as stipulated they constitute the evidence introduced by each in support of their respective contentions as distinguished from agreed facts. They thus present an issue of fact or at least one of mixed fact and law. We shall keep these things in mind.

On and prior to January 25, 1949, appellant City of River Oaks was a home rule city under the Constitution and applicable laws of this state. Appellant’s charter provides for four different means by which its boundaries can be enlarged, each of which is adequately authorized by law. Only one of such means was attempted to be followed in this controversy, namely, section 1, Chapter 8 of the charter, which reads: “The City Council shall have power by ordinance to fix the boundary limits of the City of River Oaks; and to provide for the altera *770 tion and the extension of said boundary lines and the annexation of additional territory lying adjacent to the City, with or without the consent of the territory and the inhabitants annexed. Upon the introduction of any such ordinance in the City Council, it shall be published in the form in which it may be finally passed, in a newspaper published in the City of River Oaks, at least one time, and said ordinance shall not thereafter be finally acted upon until at least thirty days have elapsed after the first publication thereof; * *

Appellant’s pleadings assert substantially that at a regular meeting of the City Council of River Oaks, held on January 25, 1949, there was introduced into said Council an ordinance for the expansion of its boundaries and annexation of territory, designated in the record as “Exhibit A,” being ordinance No. 125, which particularly described the area to be added to appellant City. That in conformity with the charter previously above quoted, the proposed ordinance No. 125 was read before the Council and ordered published on January 28, 1949. This being done, the proceedings were interrupted by a suit which challenged the authority of the individuals purporting to act as City Councilmen of appellant. See Germany et al. v. Pope et al., Tex.Civ.App., 222 S.W.2d 172. That after a final determination of the cited case, on -October 11, 1949, at a regular meeting of the City Council of appellant, “the said ordinance No. 125 was brought before the said City Council for final reading and consideration thereof, following which such ordinance was amended and adopted as amended (Exhibit B herein) which (amendment) in effect eliminated a portion of the area as described in Exhibit A and B of plaintiffs’ petitions * * Appellant further alleged substantially that ordinance No. 125 as amended (our emphasis) became effective when adopted by the Council, shown to be on October 11, 1949, and that the Mayor ordered an entry to be made in the City’s records “That the area described in said ordinance as adopted thereby became a part of the City of River Oaks.”

Ordinance No. 125 as amended, after its introduction on January 25, 1949, and as published on January 28, 1949, and prio'r to its final adoption and passage on October 11, 1949, apparently eliminated a comparatively large area from that contained in the original ordinance introduced and published in and by the Council during the January proceeding. A fair estimate of the area eliminated by the amended ordinance as finally adopted and passed, when calculated by the scale of the plat before us, would be approximately 1,000 acres. In oral arguments before us, it was asserted by appel-lees, and not denied by appellant, that the area eliminated by the amendment embraced what is known as “Indian Oaks” community, a thickly populated and well improved area. The amended ordinance No. 125 as finally adopted on October 11, 1949, and relied upon by all parties, was never published subsequent to its introduction as amended. The amended ordinance contains section 6, tvhich reads and concludes as follows:

“This ordinance shall be published and passed in the manner provided in Chapter 8, section 1 of the charter of the City of River Oaks.
“Adopted this the 11 day of October, A. D. 1949 as amended.
“Approved John H. Boyd, Mayor.”

There was no contention made by appellant in the trial court, nor does it make any contention here, that the suit was prematurely brought before it could publish the amended ordinance No. 125, wait thirty days thereafter and put it into effect under the provisions of the above quoted charter provision. Apparently it relies upon the validity of the amended ordinance and the procedure followed by it as detailed by us to effectively include the area described therein as a part of the City of River Oaks by pleading and thereby proving under the stipulations its Mayor ordered an entry to be made in its records, “That the area described in said ordinance as adopted thereby became á part of the City of River Oaks.”

Going back in point of time after the original ordinance had been introduced into appellant’s Council on January 25, 1949, and published as introduced on January 28, 1949. appellee “Lake Worth Village” alleged that *771

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Bluebook (online)
231 S.W.2d 768, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 2225, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-river-oaks-v-lake-worth-village-texapp-1950.