Dunlap v. Hardin

223 S.W. 711, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 801
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 19, 1920
DocketNo. 9359.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 223 S.W. 711 (Dunlap v. Hardin) 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
Dunlap v. Hardin, 223 S.W. 711, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 801 (Tex. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

CONNER, C. J.

This action was brought by J. M. Dunlap and 17 other citizens of Stonewall county against T. B. Hardin, county judge of Stonewall county, the several members of the commissioners’ court, and Mrs. Sophia Caldwell and her husband, N. 'K. Caldwell, seeking a mandatory injunction requiring the said county judge, commissioners’ court, and the Caldwells to remove alleged obstructions from a public road which the plaintiffs alleged had been legally established. It was further alleged that the road referred to and described in the petition had been established in accordance with a petition therefor duly presented to the commissioners’ court by the proper, number of qualified citizens of Stonewall county; that said petition had been granted and a qualified jury of view appointed, which, after due examination, made a report of their action, and that said report had been' duly approved and the road established. It was further alleged that all of the necessary steps, as provided in the statutes, leading up to the approval of the report of the jury of view and order establishing the road, had been taken in strict accordance with the laws relating to that subject.

The defendants, answering the petition, admitted the allegations of the same and the adoption of the orders of the commissioners’ *712 court as set out in the petition, except that it was alleged in effect that after the report of the jury of view had been received and before its approval the commissioners’ court, pursuant to the terms of an agreement between the commissioners’ court and said Sophia Caldwell and her husband, N. K. Caldwell, changed the field notes and route of the road, as viewed by the jury, so as to run along the north and west sides of the lands owned by the Caldwells instead of traversing said lands diagonally.

The trial court heard the pleadings of the parties and oral evidence was submitted and considered, after which the court denied the application for the injunction, and the plaintiffs have duly appealed.

There seems to be .but little, if any, dispute in the facts. It appears without dispute that in due order and form the requisite number of qualified freeholders in Stonewall county presented their petition to the commissioners’ court of that county for a public road of the second class, beginning at a point on the Stonewall and Kent counties lines; thence in a northeasterly direction, “crossing Mrs. Spphia Caldwell’s ranch,” and on to a designated point. Notice of the petition was duly made, as provided by law, and the commissioners’ court on the 13th day of March, 1916, appointed a jury of view to lay out the road. Thereafter on April 10, 1916, the jury made a report of their action, giving the field notes of the road as laid out by them, which shows that it traversed the lands of the Caldwells. On the 12th day of May, 1916, the following order was made by the commissioners’ court:

“It is ordered by the court that the foregoing report of the jury in the matter of the above-described road he and the same is hereby ap-, proved, and said road established as a second class road as therein described.
“The foregoing minutes, from page 284 to page 285 hereof, were read, approved, and signed in open court, and there being no further business before the court it then adjourned until the next regular term.
“This 12th day of May, A. D. 1916. R. S. Tillotson, County Judge, Presiding.”

Thus far the proceedings seem to have been regular and not subject to any objection, and the road as thus viewed out and established is the road which the plaintiffs in this proceeding seek to enjoin the Cald-wells from obstructing.

The defendant, however, offered in evidence and relied upon the following proceedings:

(1) An entry made upon the docket of the commissioners’ court on May 9, 1916, identifying the application for the road and the report of the jury of view, already mentioned, and reading:

“Passed pending settlement under contract ■on file. May 9, 1916.” '
(2) The following order of the commissioners’ court:
“July 11, 1916.
“The State of Texas, County of Stonewall: In the Commissioners’ Court, Stonewall County, Texas, July Term, 1916. On this day came on for consideration the matter of the final approval and adoption of the report of the jury of view upon a petition for a public road of the second class 40 feet in width, signed by J. Renfroe et als., said report being recorded, at page 284, volume 2, of the road minutes of this court, and in accordance with an agreement with this court and Mrs. Sophia L. Caldwell, and her husband, N. K. Caldwell, which said agreement was filed in this court on the 9th day of May, 1916, said road has been adopted and ordered established as a road of the second class 40 feet in width, with the following change in the field notes as recorded as above referred to, to wit: Beginning at a point where the road is located and recorded as above mentioned, on the east line of section No. 394, block ‘D,’ of the H. & T. C. Ry. Co. lands in said county; thence a little east of southwest to a point on the south line of said section No. 394, said point being 1,590 varas east of the southwest corner thereof; thence west along the north lines of sections Nos. 393 and 400 to the northwest corner of said section No. 400; thence south along the west line of said section No. 400 to the southwest corner thereof; thence west along the north line of section No. 428 to the west line of Stonewall county, Tex.
“It is therefore ordered, adjudged, and decreed that the original report of the jury of view, as recorded at page 284 of volume 2 of the road minutes of this court, be and the same are adopted with the changes therein as herein set forth, and in accordance with the contract referred to, and that the said agreement made by the said Sophia L. Caldwell and her husband, ' N. K. Caldwell, as to the payment of $235 as a donation for the road fund of this county, has been 'carried out and said sum be and is hereby accepted as agreed upon; said road shall be known as the Salt Lake & Jay-ton road.”

The change in the field notes indicated inx the above order leads the road in question along the north and west sides of the Caldwell lands instead of through their lands as originally surveyed by the jury of view.

The plaintiff offered a number of witnesses whose testimony was to the effect that the road as laid out by the jury of view was along and over high and comparatively level lands, while that as described in the order of July 11, 1916, along the north and west sides of the Caldwell ranch, was longer, very rough and hilly, and traversed by gulches or small canyons that could scarcely be negotiated with teams and wagons of ordinary loaded capacity. The record further shows that the road as described in the order of the commissioners’ court of July 11, 1916, has been since that time traveled as a public road; that overseers have been appointed *713

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640 S.W.2d 73 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1982)

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Bluebook (online)
223 S.W. 711, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 801, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dunlap-v-hardin-texapp-1920.