Ellis v. Houston & T. C. Ry. Co.

203 S.W. 172, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 437
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 20, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 203 S.W. 172 (Ellis v. Houston & T. C. Ry. 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
Ellis v. Houston & T. C. Ry. Co., 203 S.W. 172, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 437 (Tex. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

DUNKLIN, J.

The Houston & Texas Central Railway Company filed with the county judge of Tarrant county a petition in writing seeking to condemn for the uses of the company a strip of land of 12.48 acres running across a part of a larger tract situated in said county and owned by James M. Ellis, a resident citizen of that county. That petition contained the following allegations:

“That the complainant herein desires to condemn said land and property for the purposes of constructing thereon its railway lines and tracks, depots, both freight and passenger, station buildings, machine shops, repair shops, side tracks, and connecting lines and tracks with other railway tracks, and for switches, turntables, toolhouses, reservoirs, for water supply, water tanks, and for additional terminal facilities of every kind and character, and for other lawful purposes necessary and incident to the building, operating, and maintaining of its said railroad and carrying out the purposes of its said corporation.”

[1] The right of a railway company to condemn land for those uses is given by arti.cle 6504, V. S. Tex. Sts., hereinafter quoted. By article 6506 of the Statutes the company was authorized to institute condemnation proceedings in the county court by filing with the county judge of the county a petition for such condemnation, if the company and the owner of the property were unable to agree upon the resulting damages. That article also prescribes the allegations which must be made in such a petition. The petition so filed by the company contained the specific allegation of inability of the parties to agree on the amount of such damages, also all other allegations required by that statute. Upon the filing of that petition the county judge appointed three disinterested freeholders of the county as special commissioners to assess the damages which the owner of the land might sustain by reason of such condemnation. The commissioners, after being duly sworn as required by article 6509, appointed a day and place for the purpose of determining the amount of such damages, and at the same time issued notices to the parties interested, notifying them of the time and place so selected for such hearing, which notices were duly served, all in compliance with article 6509 to 6513, inclusive, of the Statutes.

Before the date set for such hearing, J. M. Ellis instituted this suit in the district court of Tarrant county to enjoin the commissioners from proceeding with said hear-; ing to assess damages and also against the railway company to enjoin it from taking any farther steps seeking to condemn said property for the purposes sought. Upon the filing of that petition the district judge ordered the issuance of notices and service thereof upon the commissioners and railway company commanding them to appear before him at a time fixed in the order, then and there to show cause why the temporary writ of injunction prayed for in the petition • should not be issued. Later the petition was heard and considered together with evidence introduced by all the parties, and upon such hearing plaintiff’s application for the writ was refused. From that order Ellis has appealed.

The grounds upon which Ellis based his prayer for relief may be briefly stated as follows:

First. That the county court had not acquired jurisdiction to assess such damages and decree the condemnation proposed in view of the fact that the railway company' and Ellis had not failed to agree upon the damages which might occur by reason of the taking of the strip of land sought to be condemned ; the contention being made that in the absence of such inability of the parties to agree upon the damages the county court could not acquire such jurisdiction, in view of the provisions of article 6506 of our Statutes.

Second. That prior to the filing of said application for condemnation of the property in controversy Ellis had dedicated the strip sought and the land adjacent thereto *174 as a cemetery for use by the public for cemetery purposes and to be known as the South-side' Cemetery; that he had platted said land into burial lots and blocks, streets, and pass-ways and that said plat had been duly filed for record in the deed records of Tarrant county. Plaintiff further alleged that after filing said plat he proceeded to improve said property for cemetery purposes, and that bodies of deceased persons had been interred in some of the lots shown in said plat, one of which bodies was buried on the particular strip of land sought to be condemned in a lot which plaintiff had conveyed by regular deed of conveyance. It was further alleged that to use the strip of land sought to be condemned for the purposes alleged in the petition for condemnation will entirely destroy and render useless all the property so dedicated for cemetery purposes. He further alleged, in substance, that by reason of such prior dedication of the property as a cemetery it was not subject to condemnation, and for that additional reason the county court had no jurisdiction of the proposed condemnation proceedings.

Article 6504 is as follows:

“If any railroad corporation shall at any timé be unable to agree with the owner for the purchase of any real estate, or the material thereon, required for the purposes of its incorporation or the transaction of its business for its depots, station buildings, machine and repair shops, for the construction of reservoirs for the water supply, or for the right of way, or for new right of way for change or relocation of roadbed to shorten the line, or any part thereof or to reduce its grades, or any of them, which is hereby authorized and permitted, or for any other lawful puz-pose connected with or necessary to the building, operating, or running its road, such corporation may acquire such property in the manner provided in this chapter; provided, that the limitation in width prescribed in article 6484, shall not apply to real estate, or any interest therein, required for the purposes herein mentioned, other than right of way, and that real estate, or any interest therein, to be acquired for such other purposes or any of them need not adjoin or 'abut on the right of way; provided, further, that no change of the line through any city or town, or which will result in the abandonment of any station or depot, shall be made, except upon written order of the railroad commission of Texas, authorizing such change; and provided, further, that no railroad corporation shall have the right under this act to condemn any land for the purposes mentioned in this article situated more than two miles from the right of way of such railroad corporation.”

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Bluebook (online)
203 S.W. 172, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 437, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ellis-v-houston-t-c-ry-co-texapp-1918.