City of Seymour v. Montgomery

209 S.W. 237, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 241
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 22, 1919
DocketNo. 1485.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 209 S.W. 237 (City of Seymour v. Montgomery) 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 Seymour v. Montgomery, 209 S.W. 237, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 241 (Tex. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

HUPP, C. J.

W. Y. Montgomery and some 16 other resident citizens of Baylor county, Tex., as plaintiffs, brought this action against the city of Seymour, in which they allege that they were owners of certain designated and described property, and that the city of Seymour had established on block 8, in an addition to said city, a sewerage disposal plant, in which petition for an injunction they allege that the disposal plant was a nuisance, and seek to abate the same as a nuisance, alleging that it polluted Seymour creek, which runs through the lands of the plaintiffs, and also created and emitted offensive odors, creating mosquitoes and flies, and endangering the health of plaintiffs and that of their families, and destroying their homes situated near the plant, praying as follows:

“Wherefore plaintiff prays the court that said nuisance be abated; that a preliminary writ of injunction issue immediately from this court, restraining the defendant, its officers, servants, and employes, from further operating the sewer in the manner above set forth, from further use of said receptacle to receive the contents of said sewer, from in any manner dumping and discharging the matter and substance carried by said sewer, so that the same may pollute and poison the waters of said Seymour creek, from permitting the noxious vapors, effluvia, and fumes and noisome smells to arise and escape and permeate the air that will be diffused over the premises of plaintiffs, and from allowing refuse matter, filth, and offal to accumulate, so as to provide a breeding ground for flies and mosquitoes, on the grounds of defendants above mentioned, and that the order of the court shall completely abate said nuisance; that upon trial hereof said injunction be by the court made in all things perpetual, for costs, and for such other and further relief, general and special, either in law or equity, as to the court it may be shown the plaintiffs are entitled, as plaintiffs will ever pray,” etc.

This petition appears to have been filed on the 11th day of April, 1918. The -district judge, Hon. J. H. Milam, after receiving the plaintiff’s original petition, which appears to have been presented to him, notified the defendant city thereof, and that he would hear the same in chambers at the courthouse in Seymour on the 19th day of April, 1918, and the defendant agreed to appear at said time. On the 19th day of April, A. D., 1918, the d&-fendant filed1 its original answer to the ap-pellees’ said petition with the said district judge, in which it pleaded,'in addition to general demurrer and special exceptions, as follows : (

“If required to answer said petition of plaintiff, comes now the defendant and, without waiving- its general and special exceptions, but insisting on the same, and says that it denies each and every Allegation in said petition contained' and demands strict proof of the same and of this, it puts itself upon the country. Wherefore defendant prays that the relief asked for in plain tiff’s petition be- denied and the court decree that plaintiff take nothing by their said suit. That defendant recover of plaintiff its costs, and for-such other and further relief in law and equity as it may be entitled to, for which it will ever pray. Comes now the defendant, by its attorney and denies under oath the allegations of -plaintiff’s original petition, wherein they set out facts and conclusions that defendant’s sewerage is operated so as to constitute a nuisance-. Signed and sworn to by J. A. Wheat, on the 18th day of April, 1918.”

On the issues joined in said pleadings the-district judge, on the 19th day of April, 1918, proceeded with the hearing of the evidence in said cause at length and thereafter rendered' ■ and entered the following judgment:

“In chambers, at Seymour, Texas, April 22,. 1918. Now, on this day, came on to be heard-the above entitled and numbered cause, upon plaintiff’s application for a writ of temporary injunction; plaintiffs appearing in person and-' tho defendant, the city of Seymour, appearing by counsel, and its mayor and aldermen. Whereupon the court, having heard the pleadings, the evidence, and the argument of counsel, is of the-opinion that the law and facts are against the plaintiff, and it is therefore ordered, adjudged, and decreed by the court that the plaintiff’s said application for temporary writ of injunction be-denied, and that the costs of this hearing be taxed against the plaintiffs, and their bondsmen for costs, for which let execution issue.”'

After entering of the above judgment by the judge, he filed his findings of fact and conclusions of law at the request of the plaintiffs’ counsel in the above cause. The-effect of his findings is that about August, 1918, the city established a sewerage disposal plant; that it was properly- constructed by the latest engineering science and methods, having in view that there would be 300- *239 or more connections, and thereafter began the use of same in connection with the sewer system; that some complaints began to be made on or about March, 1918, by W. Y. Montgomery and others, and about the latter part of March, 1918, the defendant, through its city council, requested Henry E. Elrod, its consulting engineer in the building of said plant, to come to Seymour and investigate the situation; that he came and, finding that there had been only about 150 connections, that it was necessary to reduce the capacity of the dosing chamber in said plant, and at once had put in some baffle walls, so that the automatic tripping valve would operate on time as contemplated by the original plans, but after the said improvements were made the consulting engineer wired to the civil engineer of the state board of health to come to Seymour and inspect the plant. The said civil engineer for the state board of health came and inspected the plant and found it to be properly constructed, and made certain recommendations to the city council as to the manner in which it should be kept and cared for; and the city council at once employed a man to put these instructions into effect, and to visit the plant daily, and to continue to keep the plant clean and see that it was operated properly, which had been done and was then being done. He found at the time of the hearing that a sulphuric odor emits from said sewerage plant, which is distinguished 50 or 75 feet away; that the odor was not offensive, and not injurious to health; that one of the plaintiffs, G. L. McOlusky, was the nearest resident to defendant’s sewerage disposal plant, situated about 400 feet west therefrom. He found that the waters of Seymour creek were not polluted from the flow of said sewerage disposal plant, and that the plant, as then operated, was not conducive to the breeding of flies and mosquitoes, and concluded as a matter of fact from the evidence in the case that said sewerage disposal plant of the defendant, as operated and kept, was not a nuisance. At the regular term of court, which convened in July, 1918, the ease was tried upon the pleadings as set out; but upon the call of the case at that term the city of Seymour presented to the court its plea in abatement, filed in the cause on August 1, 1918, which plea was by the court overruled.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
209 S.W. 237, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 241, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-seymour-v-montgomery-texapp-1919.