Dallas Consol. Electric St. Ry. Co. v. City of Dallas

260 S.W. 1034
CourtTexas Commission of Appeals
DecidedApril 23, 1924
DocketNo. 526-3993
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 260 S.W. 1034 (Dallas Consol. Electric St. Ry. Co. v. City of Dallas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Commission of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dallas Consol. Electric St. Ry. Co. v. City of Dallas, 260 S.W. 1034 (Tex. Super. Ct. 1924).

Opinion

CHAPMAN, J.

This suit was instituted in the district court of the Sixty-Eighth judicial district of Dallas county; Tex., by the city of Dallas, in which suit the Texas Bit-ulithic Company intervened. The plaintiff and the intervener in the court below alleged, in substance, that the board of commissioners of the city of Dallas, by resolution passed and adopted, had ordered the improvement of Bryan street in the city of Dallas, from the northeast line of St. Joseph street to the northeast line of Hunger boulevard, by grading, raising, and filling same, and by installing concrete curbs and gutters, and installing and building storm sewers and drains necessary to the proper improvement of said street.

.It was alleged that the board of commissioners assessed against the Dallas Consolidated Electric Street Railway Company the cost of paving, and 56.4 per cent, of the cost of storm sewers; the said per cent, of the cost of storm sewers being alleged to be $6,292.62. The Dallas Consolidated Electric Street Railway Company paid all of the assessment except that for the cost of storm sewers, which it refused to pay and the suit was filed to enforce the collection of the $6,292.62.

The city of Dallas and the Texas Bitu-lithic Company urged that the city of Dallas had the. power to ' make the assessment against the street railway company by virtue of the provisions of article 10, § 1, and of subdivisions (b) and (d) of said article.

Section 1 of article 10 of the Charter of the City of Dallas, which was enacted by the Legislature of the state,'is as follows:

“The term ‘street improvements,’ as embrac» ed in this article, shall include the improvement of any street, alley, highway, public place or square, or any portion thereof, within the city, by filling, grading, raising, macadamizing, re-macadamizing or otherwise improving the same, or of constructing or reconstructing of sidewalks, curbs, gutters or repairing the .same; and shall also include the laying out, opening, narrowing, straightening or otherwise establishing, defining and locating any street, avenue, public alley, square, place or sidewalk, and said terms shall also include any other street improvement of a public nature and for a public benefit.”

By subdivision (b) of section 1, the board of commissioners are given power, to order the improvement of any public highway within the city of Dallas.

By subdivision (d) the board of commissioners of the city of Dallas are given the authority to assess the cost of improving any public highway, against abutting property owners, and providing that the cost of improving such street between and under the rails, tracks, and switches, and two feet on the outside of the rails, may be assessed against the street railway.

Article 11, § 4, of the City Charter of the City of Dallas, is- as follows:

“The board of commissioners shall have power by ordinance, to provide for and construct a general sewer and drainage system to be divided into public and private sewers and drains, and to be constructed, maintained and regulated in such manner, and out of such material as the board of commissioners may prescribe. Sewers may be established as the board of commissioners may direct, and there may be extensions of branches and sewers already constructed, or entirely new throughout, as may be deemed expedient. The board of commissioners may, if necessary, levy a tax on all taxable property in the entire city to pay for the construction and repairs of such public sewers, which shall be called a special sewer tax, and shall be used solely for such purpose.”

The remainder of the subdivision is not material for the purpose of the inquiry herein.

The plaintiffs in error here (the defendants in the trial court), urged in the trial court and in the Court of Civil Appeals that the provisions of article 10 of the City Charter did not give to the board of commissioners of the city of Dallas the authority to' assess against the street railway company any portion of the cost of the construction of a storm sewer, insisting that the definition of “street improvements,” as included in the said provision of the city charter, did not include storm sewers, but, on the contrary, ex-[1036]*1036eluded storm sewers. The trial court sustained the contention of the street railway-company, and entered judgment that the plaintiff and the intervener taire nothing. The city and the paving company carried the case to the Court of Civil Appeals for the Fifth supreme judicial district on writ of error, and the Court of .Civil Appeals entered its opinion and judgment, holding, in effect, that the definition of “street improvements,” as contained in section 1 of article 10 of the Charter of the City of Dallas included storm sewers, and therefore held that the board of commissioners of the city of Dallas had the authority to assess against a street railway company, occupying a- street in the city of Dallas, the cost of the construction of storm sewers, but that in no event could the cost of the construction of storm sewers be assessed against a street railway company occupying a street in the city of Dallas, except such part thereof as was placed under the street car track, or within two feet of our outside rail, and that because of the fact that the trial court had specifically found that 56.4 per cent, of the storm sewer, the cost of which was assessed against the street car company, was not in the prescribed area, but that, on the contrary, a major portion of the storm sewer was without such area, the Court of Civil Appeals remanded the case to the District Court for the purpose of determining the cost of the storm sewer placed under of within two feet of the outside rail of the street car track. This is taken from the statement of the case by attorneys for plaintiffs in error.'

There are two issues before this court:

(1) Do the provisions of article 10 of the Dallas City Charter give to the board of commissioners of the city of Dallas the am-thority to assess against the street railway company any portion of the cost of the construction of a storm sewer.

(2) Was the street railway company es-topped from contesting the payment assessed against it by the city of Dallas for'the construction of the storm sewer for the reason that the railway company did not appear before the board of commissioners for a hearing on the assessment after having been notified to appear.

[1-3] In determining the first issue three seemingly weJl-settled principles of law must be kept in mind:

(a) When any portion of a legislative act is ambiguous, the whole act should be looked to to determine the legislative intent.

(b) “The power to levy assessments for the construction of drains can be exercised only when granted in clear and unmistakable terms, and statutes purporting to grant such power must be strictly construed as against those asserting the right to exercise it.” 19 C. J. 715.

(c) “Where in a statute general words follow a designation of particular subjects or classes of persons the meaning of the general words will be restricted by the particular designation in such statute.” F. & M. Nat. Bank v. Hanks, 104 Tex. 320, 137 S. W 1120, Ann. Cas. 1914B, 368.

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260 S.W. 1034, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dallas-consol-electric-st-ry-co-v-city-of-dallas-texcommnapp-1924.