City of Weslaco v. Turner

237 S.W.2d 635, 1951 Tex. App. LEXIS 1540
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 6, 1951
Docket2933
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 237 S.W.2d 635 (City of Weslaco v. Turner) 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 Weslaco v. Turner, 237 S.W.2d 635, 1951 Tex. App. LEXIS 1540 (Tex. Ct. App. 1951).

Opinion

TIREY, Justice.

This is an injunction suit. Fred W. Turner and other land owners whose property bordered on Llano Grande Lake brought this suit against the cities of Weslaco, Donna,' Alamo, San Juan, Pharr, McAllen and Mission for the purpose of permanently, enjoining each of them from discharging organic substances derived from the process of canning citrus fruits into the waters of said lake. At the conclusion of plaintiffs’ testimony, on motion, the court rendered judgment that plaintiffs take nothing against the cities of Pharr, San Juan, Alamo and Donna, and overruled similar motions on behalf of the cities of Weslaco, McAllen and Mission. At the conclusion of the testimony offered by the remaining defendants the court rendered judgment in favor of the cities of Mission and McAllen and against the city of Weslaco. The decree as modified under date of March 8, 1950, perpetually enjoined the city of Wes-laco, after June 1, 1950, from “receiving, collecting and discharging into the waters of Llano Grande Lake any organic substance or other matter in solid form derived from the processes of canning, dejuicing, or dehydrating, any citrus fruits, or parts thereof, or any products and substances derived therefrom, which are physically susceptible of being screened and separated from the liquid waste derived from such processes; and from,mediately or immediately receiving, collecting and discharging into the waters of said lake any liquid waste derived from such processes, which ■has not been so aerated, filtered, oxidized or chemically treated as to have been rendered inert and harmless, and incapable of polluting and contaminating the waters of said lake.” The City of Weslaco appealed from the judgment against it and the ap-pellees, who were the plaintiffs 'below, appealed from the judgment in favor of the remaining defendants..

This record is voluminous. The testimony tendered exceeds 1000 pages, exclusive of exhibits. (A portion of the facts are stipulated. These stipulations cover pages 48 to 87, inclusive,' in the transcript.) We shall later quote those that we think are pertinent. The court, on request, made and filed findings of fact and conclusions of law. .These requests and the court’s findings and orders thereon cover pages 173 to 230, inclusive, of the transcript. These will be'quoted where pertinent.

Plaintiffs grounded their cause of action on the basis that the City of Weslaco and the six other cities herein named are polluting Llano Grande Lake, a public body of water adjacent to the property owned by *637 the plaintiffs, and that such pollution is in violation of certain statutes of our state, thereby creating a public nuisance, and that the plaintiffs are entitled to maintain this action in the public interest as well as for themselves on account of the special injuries they have suffered from such nuisance, and that they are entitled to have such nuisance abated by injunctive relief. Alternatively, plaintiffs sought damages.

The City of Weslaco, among other things, asserted the following affirmative defenses: (1) that the sewage drain used by it had been in operation for more than fifteen years, and any damages resulting therefrom was of a permanent nature and arose prior to the year 1936; (2) the two and four year statutes of limitation were pleaded, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St. arts. 5526, 5529; (3) the damages suffered, if any, accrued to plaintiffs’ predecessors in title; (4) that the waters of Llano Grande Lake are not public, but private; (5) that the lands of the plaintiffs are all subject to easements for drainage purposes; (6) the doctrine of estoppel; (7) that the sewage system used is the best obtainable and the use thereof in accordance with the best known methods; (8) the doctrine of necessity and the balancing of equities.

Stipulations state in part that all the land lying underneath the levees between which the floodway and drainage ditch involved herein is situated and the entire bed of Llano Grande Lake and all land lying between said levees from a point more than a mile west of Mission, Texas to the Cameron County line, are encumbered with easements originally purchased from the then owners of the land by Hidalgo County, Texas, or Hidalgo County Drainage Dist. No. 1, for a valuable consideration paid to the then owners of the property covered by such easements. These easements gave the grantee the right of ingress and egress upon the land and the right to construct, operate and maintain-“(1) a suitable flood-way for handling, flowing, carrying,- diverting, impounding and controlling flood and drainage water or waters, together with the right to maintain the same free of underbrush, and the right to construct, operate and maintain thereon suitable - drainage ditches, spoil banks, bridges, telephone lines, drainage structures, or other structures, in connection with the operation and maintenance of said floodway, as grantee, and its assigns, may from time to time deem necessary, on the tract or tracts hereinafter described and designated: ‘Flood-way’ ; and (2) suitable levees, together with the right to use- so much of said land for borrow in connection therewith, and the right to -construct and maintain thereon suitable roadways, fences, gates, cattle guards, telephone lines, ramps and road crossings, irrigation and drainage structures, bridges, drainage ditches, irrigation canals, siphons, or other structures in connection with the operation and maintenance of said levees, or floodway adjacent thereto, as grantee and its assigns may from time to time deem necessary on the tract or tracts hereinafter described and designated: ‘Levee’.”

These easements executed by the owners of the land covered the levees, bed of Llano Grande Lake and land lying between such levees and were executed prior to the institution of this suit, some of such instruments having been executed as early as 1912. The easements were acquired either from the American Rio Grande Land and Irrigation Company, a private corporation, or from owners deraigning their title from such corporation. For the acquisition of such rights granted by such instruments as well as for construction of floodway and drainage ditch lying between such levees and for the construction of the levees themselves and other appurtenances, Hidalgo County and Hidalgo County Drainage Dist. No. 1 has expended more than two and a half million dollars, which does - not include any of the amounts expended by the International Boundary and Water Commission. Ever since the floodway and drainage ditch above mentioned has been in existence, it has been used by the cities herein named with the knowledge and acquiesence of Hidalgo County and Hidalgo County Drainage Dist. No. 1-.

-We quote a part of the.findings of fact made by the trial court:

*638 “2. Said Llano Grande Lake is a ‘public body of surface water of this State’, and is fed by a stream which flows through and is in part the property of Hidalgo County, a subdivision of the State of Texas, and discharges through the stream called Arroyo Colorado into a bay or 'salt water lagoon of the State of Texas called La-guna Madre, which is an arm of the Gulf of Mexico, in which the tide ebbs and flows. It was originally one of a series or chains of.

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Bluebook (online)
237 S.W.2d 635, 1951 Tex. App. LEXIS 1540, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-weslaco-v-turner-texapp-1951.