City of Snyder v. Bass

360 S.W.2d 426, 1962 Tex. App. LEXIS 2716
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 7, 1962
Docket3745
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 360 S.W.2d 426 (City of Snyder v. Bass) 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 Snyder v. Bass, 360 S.W.2d 426, 1962 Tex. App. LEXIS 2716 (Tex. Ct. App. 1962).

Opinion

COLLINGS, Justice.

W. Prentis Bass brought suit against the City of Snyder seeking to recover the value of street pavement and sewer lines placed in a subdivision while it was outside the city limits. Plaintiff was the developer of the subdivision and brought this suit after *427 the area had been annexed by the city. He also sought a mandatory injunction to require the city to extend certain water lines within the subdivision and to have the court hold void an ordinance of the city.

The court denied plaintiff any injunctive relief but granted him judgment against the city for the sum of $14,329.00, the value of the street paving and sewer lines as found by the jury. The court found, as a matter of law, that the annexing of said subdivision by the city constituted a taking of plaintiff’s property which required compensation to be paid him under Section 17, Article I, of the Texas Constitution, Vernon’s Ann.St. The city of Snyder has appealed from the judgment against it and W. Pren-tis Bass has appealed from that portion of the judgment adverse to him.

In several points City of Snyder contends that the court erred in entering a judgment for the plaintiff and in not entering judgment for appellant city because, as a matter of law, there is no liability on the part of a city for the value of improvements placed upon public streets or alleys by a developer at a time when said streets or alleys were a part of the public thoroughfare of the county and that the annexation of such a subdivision at a later date does not amount to a taking of property belonging to such subdivider.

In this connection the evidence showed that in 1955, appellee W. Prentis Bass owned certain undeveloped real property near the city limits of the City of Snyder. He made application to the City for his property to be annexed but the city declined because it was not adjacent to the city limits, that is, a 60 foot roadway owned by another developer separated appellee’s land and the city, and the city at that time had a policy against involuntary annexation. In 1956, while said property was outside the city limits, Bass filed the plat of said addition with the County Clerk. On June 4, 1956, the subdivision was re-platted and the re-plat was approved. At the time this plat was filed appellee dedicated to the public the streets and alleys shown thereon. In 1958 or 1959, Bass installed in said addition the sewer line in question. Although it was outside the city limits, the line was constructed according to the city’s specifications and was permitted to be tied to the city’s main. The sewer lines are still being used for the purpose for which they were installed, that is, for the convenience and use of the people within said subdivision. The evidence further shows, that after the addition was platted and while it was outside of the city, Bass installed approximately 1600 feet of paving and that such paving was done at his expense, and was not required to be done by the city. At the time of the refusal by the city to annex the Bassridge Addition in 1955, the city had a policy of reimbursement of developers for sewer lines laid out in new additions. This policy was changed on October 1, 1956, by an ordinance of the city.

Appellee Bass testified that in 1959, he made demand to the City Council that they either pay him for the improvements he had installed in his subdivision or not annex his territory. He stated that the City Council refused his request for payment and that they thereafter annexed the subdivision on December 28, 1959. Appellee testified that the subdivision was originally platted into 43 lots; that he sold 19 lots and had 24 left in addition to 2 blocks which could be platted into 9 more lots. Appellee stated that he purchased the approximately 30 acres which he platted as the Bassridge Addition in 1955, and paid $1,000.00 per acre for the property; that at the time it was purchased and at the time the subdivision was platted it was not within the City limits of Snyder. He further stated that as a part of the dedication, when he filed the plat of said subdivision, he dedicated the streets, alleys and easements as shown on the plat and that such dedication was voluntarily made by him so that the City of Snyder would supply water to his subdivision. At the time of the dedication of said streets and alleys the property involved was situated in the county but was not within the City of *428 Snyder. No dedication was made to the city. Appellee testified that he was merely making a dedication to the public as shown on the plat of dedication. He further testified that after he made the dedication he elected to pave some streets in the subdivision and did this in order to make them nicer to travel on for the convenience and benefit of his customers. Appellee stated that he sold lots in his addition for various amounts; that one lot sold for $3,250.00, one for $3,500.00, and when he sold such lots he obligated himself to put in utilities, which included either a septic tank or a sewer system and further obligated himself to pave the streets in said subdivision; that he sold 19 lots and, as to the lots sold, he was obligated to pave the streets, furnish water and sewer, and that the water, sewer lines and street paving were put in by him for the benefit of people who were buying lots in his subdivision. Appellee testified that in determining the price at which he would sell his lots he considered how much he had paid for street paving and the amount spent for sewer lines; that each ■of these factors was considered by him together with the cost of the land and the profit he desired to make in determining the price he would ask for any particular lot. Appellee stated that in selling the lots he was recouping his investment which included the cost of his land, paving, water and sewer lines and profit. He stated that he had sold 19 lots in the subdivision for $48,800.00, and that such lots cost $44,650.-00, thereby showing a profit of $4,150.00 on the 19 lots. Appellee stated that at the time he paved the streets in 1957 or ’58, he did so with the idea that it would help sell the lots, and that his idea or intention was the same when he put in the sewer lines; that it was his intention to prorate the cost of such paving and sewer lines in the sale price of the lots. Appellee testified that at the time he installed the street paving and sewer lines, he knew that the City of Snyder had no reimbursement policy for the expense incurred by a developer in such an improvement; that prior to the time the area was annexed by the city he had paved the streets and they were being used by the public generally and that after the area was annexed to the city, the streets continued to be used for the same purpose and that the city had never tried to interfere with the use of such public streets after annexation; that the sewer lines which had been installed by him prior to the annexation were likewise used by the public generally both before and after the area was annexed to the city. In the sale of the 19 lots out of said subdivision appellee Bass did not make any reservation of title to the sewer mains in the deeds of conveyance, nor did he reserve any title to any portion of the streets, alleys or sewer system.

Appellee urges that the court properly enter judgment against the City of Snyder for the value of the street paving and sewer lines; that the annexation of the area by the city and its subsequent use and control of the improvements installed by him amounted to a taking of appellee’s property for public use without compensation.

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Bluebook (online)
360 S.W.2d 426, 1962 Tex. App. LEXIS 2716, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-snyder-v-bass-texapp-1962.