Cox v. City & County of Dallas Levee Improvement Dist.

258 S.W.2d 851, 1953 Tex. App. LEXIS 1814
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 27, 1953
Docket14648
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 258 S.W.2d 851 (Cox v. City & County of Dallas Levee Improvement Dist.) 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
Cox v. City & County of Dallas Levee Improvement Dist., 258 S.W.2d 851, 1953 Tex. App. LEXIS 1814 (Tex. Ct. App. 1953).

Opinions

YOUNG, Justice.

The suit as instituted was one for mandatory and prohibitory injunction by City and County of Dallas Levee Improvement District and Dallas County Flood Control District, in which the State of Texas intervened by action in trespass.to try title; the property ■ involved being shown in red on plaintiffs’ exhibit 31, consisting of a map to which reference will be made hereinafter. Parties defendant were W. T. Cox, individually and as guardian of the person and estate of Jane Ellen Cox, a minor, William Bond Cox, and Cadiz Corporation. Plaintiffs alleged that defendants were the, owners of Lots 1 through 9, Block 69, Industrial Improvement Project, Units 1 and 2, an addition to the City of Dallas, and had encroached upon the old channel of the Trinity River contiguous thereto by the deposit of fill, erection of buildings and other improvements; praying that defendants be required to remove said encroachments; in-tervenor, ■ the 'State, asserting title to the disputed area subject to the rights of the Levee District under its Plan of Reclamation theretofore undertaken. The answer of defendants was inclusive of general denial, pleas of limitation, laches, and estop-pel.

The. trial was to a jury; however, at conclusion of testimony and motions for instructed verdict, the case was withdrawn from the jury with rendition of judgment [853]*853for appellees; adjudging the State of Texas to be owner of the disputed strip, subject to the right of use and possession by Levee authorities under aforesaid Plan of Reclamation, defendants being given until April 1, 1953 to remove all structures encroaching upon the property set off in red * on attached map. Proper appeal has been perfected by defendants from this adverse ruling.

[854]*854Material to the present controversy is the following background of facts as chronologically stated in reply brief of plaintiffs: City and County of Dallas Levee Improvement District and Dallas County Flood Control District are bodies politic and corporate pursuant to Acts of the Legislature and Sec. 59(a), Art. 16, State Constitution, Vernon’s Ann. St.; and were created as such for purpose of constructing and maintaining levees and other improvements necessary for reclamation of lowlands subject to periodic overflow of the Trinity River adjacent to the City. In accordance with provisions of the Constitution and Statutes1 a Plan of Reclamation was approved, adopted, and filed for record Nov. 6, 1926 covering some 10,500 acres of land lying within Levee District boundaries and under which Plan the course of the Trinity was changed, straightened, and placed between levees; and the old channel set aside for drainage and conduit purposes and the storage of storm waters. At the same time a survey of the old channel was ordered by the Levee District and its Commissioners of Appraisement; and an “on the ground” survey descriptive of the old channel so set apart under the Plan was incorporated in the report of the Commissioners of Ap-praisement and filed for record in office of County Clerk, Nov. 28, 1926.

The survey was undertaken under direction of T. C. Forrest, engineer for the Levee District, whose testimony on this trial was that the 1926 operation accurately surveyed the high or cut banks of the old channel, Trinity River, and meander lines established being monumented by iron, pipes and witness trees.2

The following conveyances inclusive of the area in dispute, will be listed in order of their execution and filing for record: Warranty deed dated March 15, 1928, by Royal C. Miller et al. covering 326.5 acres, a part of the William S. Beaty Survey in Dallas County, to E. P. Cravens and J. T. Bowman, a provision thereof being: “The [855]*855lands herein described are located in and constitute a part of the City and County of Dallas Levee Improvement District and the Grantees expressly assume all obligations to said City and County of Dallas Levee Improvement District.” Warranty deed dated July 10, 1928, from E. P. Cravens et al. to Industrial Properties Corporation, 24 acres out of aforesaid 326.5 acres of land; Warranty deed of June 1, 1938, from Industrial Properties Corporation to W. T. Cox, covering 40,851.5 sq. feet out of said 24-acre tract. All of these deeds in description followed the line of the old Trinity River channel as surveyed in 1926 and as set forth in report of the before-mentioned District Commissioners of Ap-praisement.

On July 22, 1938 Industrial Properties Corporation platted the 24-acre tract into lots and blocks, describing it as Industrial Improvement Project Addition, Units 1 and 2. This plat was filed in office of County Clerk July 25, 1938 and recorded in Vol. 5, pp. 415-23, Map and Plat Records of Dallas County, Texas; and in identifying the lands as platted, and old river channel, said dedicators made use of the following: The survey of 1926, the descriptions theretofore recited in report of' Commissioners of Ap-praisement, in deed from Miller et al. to Bowman and Cravens and from the latter parties , to Industrial Properties Corporation; describing the property earlier conveyed to W. T. Cox (June 1, 1938) as Lot 1, Block 69.

By warranty deed of August 4, 1938 Industrial Properties Corporation conveyed to William T. Cox, Lots 2 through 9, Block 69, of Industrial Improvement Project Addition; such grantee on April 29, 1940 by similar deed conveying to Cadiz Corporation Lots 1 through 9 in said Block 69, same Addition, the instrument carrying the recital : “according to the map or plat thereof recorded in Vol. 5, p. 415, Map Records of Dallas County, Texas.” And by warranty deed of June. 13, 1942 Cadiz Corporation conveyed to William Bond Cox and Jane Ellen Cox, a, minor, a tract of land not only embracing the lots just above described, but likewise inclusive of land to the middle of the old channel, Trinity River.

Appellants admit that the Trinity River is a navigable stream, nor do they contend that the old river bed (after shift of channel one-half mile further west) did not remain the property of the State of Texas. The former channel through its entire length contained 183.47 acres according to the 1926 field notes of Engineer Forrest; and reference may be here made to Ray v. State, Tex.Civ.App., 153 S.W.2d 660, for further facts covering the whole project of diversion of at least historical interest. In this connection the District Court transcript on trial of Ray v. State, 1941, was placed in evidence over defendants’ objection; appellees claiming that all questions of boundary had been finally adjudicated in such prior suit.

Appellants advance in substance three points of appeal: The court’s error, (1) in grant of injunction to Levee District plaintiffs because under undisputed evidence -“plaintiff had assessed, levied and collected taxes on the very land involved, as the property of the defendants, and had failed to do equity to the defendants, and thus is not entitled to relief in its equitable action”; (2) (a) in admitting in evidence as stare decisis “the case of State v. Ray, Tex.Civ.App., 153 S.W.2d 660, because it appears therefrom that such proceedings were in trespass to try title and could only bind the partiés to the suit and their privies”; (b) it similarly appearing that the Court of Civil Appeals decision in Ray v.

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Cox v. City & County of Dallas Levee Improvement Dist.
258 S.W.2d 851 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1953)

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Bluebook (online)
258 S.W.2d 851, 1953 Tex. App. LEXIS 1814, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cox-v-city-county-of-dallas-levee-improvement-dist-texapp-1953.