City of San Antonio v. San Antonio Street Railway Co.

39 S.W. 136, 15 Tex. Civ. App. 1, 1896 Tex. App. LEXIS 420
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 11, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 39 S.W. 136 (City of San Antonio v. San Antonio Street Railway Co.) 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. San Antonio Street Railway Co., 39 S.W. 136, 15 Tex. Civ. App. 1, 1896 Tex. App. LEXIS 420 (Tex. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

NEILL, Associate Justice.

This is a suit for injunction, brought by the San Antonio Street Railway Company, appellee, against the City of San Antonio and its engineer, A. P. Pancoast, appellants, and Wilding, Marshall, Bacus, and Hines, sewer contractors, who have not appealed, to restrain all defendants from constructing sewers in gnd along the centres of portions of certain streets in said city, whereon plaintiff is alleged to have double tracks over which its lines of railway are constructed and operated.

Plaintiff alleged in its petition that it was incorporated by an act of the Legislature which empowered it to build, equip and operate street railways in the city of San Antonio, and to build such railroads on any street within its corporate limits as might thereafter be agreed upon by the mayor and aldermen of said city and itself; that the city council, by an ordinance passed on October 5, 1875, granted plaintiff the privilege of constructing a line of first class horse railroad, etc., upon certain streets, avenues, alleys and bridges of said city. That in exercise of the franchises conferred by its charter and said ordinance, it constructed a large system of street railway in the City of San Antonio, and by agreement with the council changed its motive power from animal to that of electricity; that among other streets it constructed its line upon Avenue C in said city, it being one of the principal streets; that its road on said street was a double track and is operated between the two principal railway depots in said city.

That after the complete construction of said line on Avenue C, to-wit, on January 14, 1895, the city of San Antonio entered into a contract with one Hendry to construct a complete system of sewers in said city, with sewers to be laid in its streets in accordance with certain plans and specifications prepared for the construction and completion of the systern, which plans and specifications provide that all sewer pipes and conducts shall be laid in the centres of the streets, and constructed and completed under the' direction and control of the city engineer; that among other things in said plans and specifications it was provided that a portion of said system should be constructed by laying an eight inch *4 pipe along the centre #f Avenue C, and along said street from Ninth to Tenth street a twenty-four inch main; that said contract was thereafter, by agreement of both parties thereto, assigned by Hendry to defendants Wilding, Marshall, Bacus and Hines, who have agreed to construct the system as Hendry bound himself to do.

That said assignees of the contract are proceeding to and are constructing said system of sewers, and have notified the city engineer to immediately begin the construction and laying an eight-inch sewer pipe between the two parallel tracks of plaintiff’s railway on Avenue C, from Ninth to Tenth streets thereon and that said contractors have served notice on plaintiff that they will proceed to work on November 5, 1895; that for the purpose of laying such pipe it will be necessary to make an excavation about two feet wide ranging from eight to fifteen feet deep; that such excavation will be made within a few inches of the rails of plaintiff’s track on each side, and will necessarily destroy the lateral support of its tracks, cars, motors, etc., and render it dangerous in case of rains to operate its cars on said tracks, and necesssarily destroy its road-bed, and that therefore it will probably become necessary for plaintiff to remove its track until such sewer can be constructed, thereby interrupting travel and depriving plaintiff of its revenues, etc.

That there is no necessity for constructing the sewer in the centre of said street, because the distance between the track and curbstone on either side is about seventeen feet, where the sewer could be conveniently laid without injuring or damaging any property, and there will be no necessity to injure or damage any person’s property in the cause of repairing said sewers thereafter; that said system of sewers will be as efficient and can be as efficiently operated when placed on the sides of the street as if laid in its centre.

That the said tracks and franchises are plaintiff’s private property, and it is entitled to be protected by the Constitution and laws of this State against the taking and damage or injury to its said property by the city of San Antonio, without just compensation being first made therefor, and that defendant city is now attempting to destroy plaintiff’s property without making any compensation therefor whatever.

By a supplemental petition like allegations are made in reference to plaintiff’s railway on Austin street, between Duval and Crosby streets, and the injunction prayed for in the original petition is asked to be so enlarged as to include that part of Austin street.

The defendants excepted to the original and supplemental petitions on the following grounds:

(1) Because it appears therefrom that plaintiffs property rights in the streets mentioned are such as were acquired and held subject to the right of defendant city to do that which is complained of by plaintiff.

(2) Because the question of necessity, expediency and propriety of locating said sewers in the centre of said streets is one to be determined *5 exclusively by the city council, who, as it appears from said petitions, have determined upon the location of the same.

The defendants then answered, by pleading the city’s charter powers giving it exclusive control of its public streets, to regulate the location and construction of street railways, water mains, electric wires, sewers, drains, etc., and that in exercise of such powers its council had determined upon and adopted a system of sewers in the centres of its streets, and that such determination as to the plan of the sewer system is conclusive. They also specially denied the allegations to the effect that there is no necessity for constructing the sewers on Avenue C and Austin street in the center of said streets, and at great length, plead facts showing it is necessary, etc,

The exceptions of defendants to plaintiff’s petition were overruled, and the issue as to whether or not under the system of sewers adopted by the city, it was necessary for the sewers to be laid along the centers of Avenue C and Austin street was submitted to the jury—they being instructed to find for defendants if it was necessary, and for plaintiff if it was not. The verdict was for plaintiff, and judgment rendered on it perpetuating the injunction. This appeal is from such judgment.

The City of San Antonio is given by its charter the following powers:—

“Sec. 57. To have exclusive control and power over the streets * * * of the city * * * to put sewers and drains therein.
“Sec. 60. To establish, erect, construct, regulate and keep in repair * * * sewers * * * and to regulate the construction and use of same.”
“Sec. 49. To make regulations to secure the general health of the city, etc.”

These provisions date back to the original enactment of the present charter, August 13, 1870.

“Sec. 203b. .(Amendment of 1895).

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39 S.W. 136, 15 Tex. Civ. App. 1, 1896 Tex. App. LEXIS 420, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-san-antonio-v-san-antonio-street-railway-co-texapp-1896.