Commissioners' Court v. Frank Jester Development Co.

199 S.W.2d 1004, 1947 Tex. App. LEXIS 1118
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 17, 1947
DocketNo. 13758.
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 199 S.W.2d 1004 (Commissioners' Court v. Frank Jester Development 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
Commissioners' Court v. Frank Jester Development Co., 199 S.W.2d 1004, 1947 Tex. App. LEXIS 1118 (Tex. Ct. App. 1947).

Opinions

YOUNG, Justice.

This suit was initiated by Frank G. Jester Development Company against the County Judge, County Clerk and Commissioners’ Court of Dallas County, seeking a mandamus compelling the Commissioners’ Court to approve for filing,, a plat subdividing certain lands in Dallas County, in which plat roads and streets were laid out, the boundaries fixed and a dedication thereof made. Plea to jurisdiction of the District Court, interposed by respondents., was overruled; and trial on the merits to the court resulted in judgment in favor of relator, i.e., mandatorily requiring respondents to file such plat in accordance with Art. 6626, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St.

The Article (6626, R.S. 1925), Title “Registration” and previous revisions, had enumerated the instruments of writing in. this State that “are authorized to be recorded”; the 42nd Leg., Acts 1931, amending same as follows: “provided, however, that in cases of subdivision or re-subdivision of real property no map or plat of any such subdivision or re-subdivision shall be filed or recorded unless and until the same has been authorized by the Commissioners’ Court of the county in which the real estate is situated by order duly entered in the minutes of said Court, except in cases of partition or other subdivision through a court of record; provided, that within incorporated cities and towns the governing body thereof in lieu of the Commissioners’ Court shall perform the duties herein-above imposed upon the Commissioners’ Court.”

In Trawalter v. Schaefer, 1944, 142 Tex. 521, 179 S.W.2d 765, 767, the Supreme Court construed Art. 6626 as amended, viz: “To our mind the above-quoted statement of the provisions of the emergency clause to this Act, considered with the provisions of the body of the Act, shows that the Legislature intended that maps and plats of land shall receive authority from commissioners courts to be recorded, if they establish and show the connection of such land with the original survey of which it is a part, and contain sufficient data to locate the land contained therein, and, further, place the land shown by the map or plat in such a condition as makes it practical to tax the same according thereto. Of course, this would require the map or plat to con-táin sufficient data to enable the taxing authorities to correctly carry the land on the tax rolls and avoid duplicate or double renditions of the same land.”

Having reference to the above statute and opinion of the Supreme Court thereon, appellant court took action as follows: “At a regular meeting of the Commissioners’ Court of Dallas County, Texas, held on Monday, April 16, 1945, on motion of Buck Frank, Commissioner of District No. 2, and seconded by Lynn V. Lawther, Commissioner of District No. 1, the following order was unanimously adopted: Whereas, due to recent ruling (- case, decided by the S.C. April 5, 1944, over a year past) of the higher Court of the State, the duty and/or burden of approving Additions to the City of Dallas and/or other cities of Dallas County outside the corporate limits of said cities, has fallen and/or been placed on the Commissioners’ Court; and Whereas, it is the desire and duty of this Court to secure as uniform, co-ordinated and well-planned Additions as possible in order that the growth of the City of Dallas and other cities in Dallas County shall not be delayed or hindered; and Whereas, in the opinion of this Court certain standards should be followed by all developers of Additions in order to promote the proper growth of the City of Dallas and other towns of the County and prevent the growth of slums adjacent to the cities within Dallas County; It Is, Therefore, Ordered, Adjudged and Decreed by the Commissioners’ Court of Dallas County, Texas, that any person de *1006 siring this Court’s approval for the filing of an Addition shall first present a preliminary sketch to the County Engineering Department so that this department may check the location and lay-out of said Addition. After the County Engineering Department has checked and approved the layout, widths of streets, drainage, etc., the person or persons filing the application shall enter into the Court Order for its final approval, an agreement by which the developer or developers of the Addition shall do the grading, drainage structures and gravel, and in some cases, pave the streets that are being dedicated within the Addition. The grading, drainage structures and gravel shall be done according to the specifications on file in the County Engineering Department; however, the following minimum specifications shall be used: Proper grading; drainage structures as recommended by the Engineering Department as to size, location and materials, and a minimum of six (6) inches of gravel, compacted, twenty feet wide. It is further ordered that the act of this Court of Approving the Addition does not in any way obligate Dallas County to perform any work within the Addition. It is further ordered that in the development of Additions the developer must provide entrance culverts to each separate piece of property. It is further ordered by this Court that any through streets or roads shall have a right of way width of not less than sixty (60) feet, and all intermediate streets or roads not less than 50-feet of right of way, and no Addition shall have a “dead end” street. Done In Open Court, all members present and voting. (Signed) AI Templeton, County Judge.”

In October 1945, appellee land company, pursuant to terms of Art. 6626, presented to said Commissioners’ Court an application for authority to file in the office of the County Clerk a map or plat of a rural addition known as “Beckley Acres,” on which were depicted 13 lots of defined size and area, intersected by proposed streets, Lotus Lane and Idlewild Lane. Attached to the plat was a dedication with detailed restrictions and field notes setting forth outer boundaries of the Addition, showing' it as adjacent to Beckley Road (U. S. Highway 77), Dallas County, and more particularly described as “Beginning at the intersection of the East line of Beckley Road and the North line of the South ½ of the Mar-andy Parks Survey, Abstract No. 1120, said point being N 89° 30', 60.0 feet from the Northwest corner of said South of' the Marandy Parks Survey; * * * ”; and containing some 30 acres of land. Aforesaid plat and named Exhibits were at once referred by the Court to its County Engineer, from whom Mr. Jester, President of appellee company, received the following-reply of date November 7: “Gentlemen: Your application to the Commissioners’ Court for the approval of Beckley Acres as submitted to the County Engineer cannot be approved by the Engineering Department because of the location of Lotus Lane and your not agreeing to fulfill the rules and regulations adopted by the Commissioners’ Court for such an addition. That is, Lotus Lane intersects Beckley Road, which is U. S. Highway 77, at a point that creates a traffic hazard, and you do not agree to gravel the dedicated • streets. Yours truly, (s) R. H. Clinger, County Engineer.”

While respondent Court made no formal order concerning the plat and dedication,its consideration thereof was obviously conditioned upon a report of the county engineer, according to testimony of Commissioner Frank; hence above letter of Mr. Clinger must be taken as a refusal on. behalf of the Court to authorize a filing of the instruments in the office of County-Clerk.

We must first observe that all parties appear to be laboring under a misconception, as to the purview of this Article (6626).

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Bluebook (online)
199 S.W.2d 1004, 1947 Tex. App. LEXIS 1118, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commissioners-court-v-frank-jester-development-co-texapp-1947.