City of San Antonio v. Camp Warnecke, Inc.

267 S.W.2d 468, 1954 Tex. App. LEXIS 2488
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 14, 1954
Docket10217
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 267 S.W.2d 468 (City of San Antonio v. Camp Warnecke, Inc.) 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 San Antonio v. Camp Warnecke, Inc., 267 S.W.2d 468, 1954 Tex. App. LEXIS 2488 (Tex. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

ARCHER, Chief Justice.

This is an appeal from an order of the District Court granting a temporary injunction restraining the defendants, appellants herein, in part as follows:

“That during the early part of the month of May, 1952, the defendants, by the discharge of heated water into the Comal River, so changed the natural characteristics of said river and its waters as to raise the temperature of said water from its normal temperature of seventy-four (74) degrees Fahrenheit in its natural state, to temperature ranging from eighty (80) to ninety-five (95) degrees Fahrenheit, where the *469 same passes the plaintiffs' properties; that such heating- continued through the months of May, June, July and August of 1952, and was again resumed and continued without intermission through the months of May, June, July and August and September of 1953, and throughout the period of this hearing; that as a result of said heating, the water of the Comal River has emitted and does now emit foul and noxious odors, and has produced, and does now produce, great quantities of scum and other vegetable matter; that it changed the water from a clear and transparent nature to a dirty and opaque nature, and that it created a potential health hazard; that it has had and now has the effect of rendering plaintiffs’ bathing beaches insanitary and unclean, and that it caused plaintiffs great inconvenience and substantial injury and damage; that plaintiffs in May, 1952, promptly after such heating first occurred, protested against such heating to the defendants, and to each of them; that plaintiffs again, in May, 1953, protested to each of the defendants against the future heating of the waters of the Comal River where same pass plaintiffs’ properties; that since such time the defendants have asserted and do now claim the right to continue discharging heated water into the Comal River; that such claim of right together with the acts and conduct on the part of the defendants constitute probable cause for plaintiffs’ allegations in their First Amended Original Petition to the effect that such claims and the acts and conduct of the defendants cast a cloud upon the rights and title to plaintiffs’ property and riparian rights. ******
“That the defendant, Lower Colorado River Authority, has declared it to be its intention to continue discharging heated water into the -Comal River; that both the other defendants have continued to accept the benefits accruing to them as a result of such operation; that none of the defendants have any plans for the discontinuance of such practices; that they have filed a joint answer and joined in a common defense, asserting and claiming the right to heat the waters of the Comal River without regard to the effect same may have in polluting the Comal River or upon the rights of plaintiffs as lower riparian owners; that the discharge of heated water into the Comal River is an unreasonable use of said waters and results in the pollution thereof, and constitutes a nuisance and should be abated.
“The court has determined and found from the evidence that the acts and conduct of the defendants in discharging heated water into the Comal River in the manner and under the circumstances heretofore determined by the Court, and the threat to continue such acts in the future, is a trespass upon and an unlawful invasion of the property rights of plaintiffs and will result in a continuing injury to plaintiffs, the extent of which cannot be measured, but which, from the evidence, appears to be substantial and irreparable, unless and until plaintiffs are granted the in-junctive relief hereinafter provided.
“It is therefore.accordingly ordered, adjudged and decreed that the defendant, Lower Colorado River Authority, be and said defendant is hereby prohibited, enjoined and restrained, pending a trial of this cause on its merits, from polluting and altering the physical characteristics of the Comal River by discharging heated water into the same and from doing any act which would prevent the waters of said river from reaching plaintiffs’ lands in their natural state and purity.
“ * * * it is therefore accordingly ordered, adjudged and decreed by the -Court that the enforcement of the order granting the temporary injunction be and the same is hereby suspended until midnight of May 31, 1954, * *

*470 This suit was instituted by appellees against appellants seeking an injunction and for a judgment quieting the title to their water rights and privileges and removing cloud cast thereon by the continuous invasions and trespasses of the defendants by discharging heated water into the Comal River.

The appellees allege ownership of certain lands adjacent to the Comal River on which there is located certain buildings and improvements used as living quarters and recreational purposes for a long period of time, and that the water of the Comal River is used as a swimming place for the use of which a fee is charged. Allegation, was made of the location of Comal Plant, and in the operation of the plant the water is heated to such an extent that it has a temperature as high as 95 degrees Fahrenheit, instead of the natural and normal temperature of approximately 74 degrees, and thereby have diminished the attractiveness of the Comal River to plaintiffs’ customers and the úse thereof interfered with. That the heating of the water has greatly increased the growth of plant and organic material, thereby making the water foul, polluted and unhealthy, and large amount of scum to be cast into the water opposite plaintiffs’ land and on the land itself, and that such actions have injured and will; if continued, destroy the natural flow of the river and create a health hazard, and constitute a nuisance in fact. That plaintiffs as owners of, the land and the riparian rights, and their long prior .use, have acquired, own and are entitled to have the water come down to them, to their land and into and through their swimming pools and past their bathing beaches in, its natural condition, etc.

Appellants as defendants answered in part that the operation of the Comal Plant in no manner pollutes the waters of the Comal River, .and plaintiffs are guilty of pollution of the river themselves as well as. other conditions, such as street sewers, out of door privies, cesspools over which defendants have no control and are not responsible for. That plaintiffs in the operation of their Camp do not comply with the minimum standards of the law pertaining to health and sanitation, etc. and therefore do not ■come into court with clean hands.

Further answer was made that the operation of the Comal Plant enabled all users of electricity to receive same, and the plant was operated in the same manner as it had been for the last twenty-five years, and that such right was recognized by the plaintiffs; that the severe drouth was responsible for the drastic reduction of water coming down the Comal River; that the use of the waters at the Comal Plant in no manner pollutes the river, and that there is located private and public parks upstream from the plant, and are used by great numbers' of persons as swimming, boating, picnic, and other purposes, as well as factories located upstream.

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Bluebook (online)
267 S.W.2d 468, 1954 Tex. App. LEXIS 2488, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-san-antonio-v-camp-warnecke-inc-texapp-1954.