Galveston & W. Ry Co. v. City of Galveston

155 S.W. 273, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 358
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 16, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 155 S.W. 273 (Galveston & W. Ry Co. v. City of Galveston) 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
Galveston & W. Ry Co. v. City of Galveston, 155 S.W. 273, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 358 (Tex. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

REESE, J.

In this suit the Galveston & Western Railway Company seeks by injunction to restrain the city of Galveston and its governing body from interfering with the laying of track to form a connection between its track on Ninth Street and its track on Avenue N north of the sea wall and its right of way in the city of Galveston. The trial court sustained a general demurrer and certain special exceptions to plaintiff’s petition. Plaintiff declined to amend, whereupon judgment was -rendered dismissing the cause, from which judgment this appeal is prosecuted. The case was before this court upon a former appeal from an order of the district judge refusing a temporary injunction, which order was affirmed on grounds which did not dispose of the merits of the case.

As preliminary to the decision upon the questions of law presented by this appeal, the following material allegations of the petition are set out, to be followed by such further reference to the particular allegations involved in the several assignments of error as may be necessary. As the court sustained a general demurrer to the petition, appellant is compelled to endeavor to support, in its assignments of error and brief, every ground urged for the' right contended for, and to combat every objection urged by appellee. The special exceptions urged by appellee, all of which appear to have been sustained by the trial court, are in legal effect general demurrers based upon particular allegations of the petition; that is, the petition bases the right claimed upon several distinct grounds, and the special demurrers except to the sufficiency of each of the several grounds to support the claim set up.

The Galveston, Brazos & Colorado Narrow Gauge Railway Company was chartered by special act of the Legislature February 2, 1875. Sp. Laws 1875, e. 12. By the charter the company was authorized to construct and operate a continuous line of railroad, commencing at any point within the corporate limits of the city of Galveston; thence west-wardly on Galveston Island on the most practicable route to cross West Bay; thence across the Brazos river, in Brazoria county; thence up Colorado valley, on either side of the Colorado river, passing through Mata-gorda, Wharton, Colorado, Fayette, and Bas-trop counties near or to the city of Austin, said railroad to be of three feet gauge. Under this charter this company located and built in 1875 a narrow gauge railroad beginning on Avenue A near Tenth street; thence curving into Ninth street, and thence on Ninth street to a point near Avenue N; thence into and along Avenue N westwardly to a point near Thirty-Seventh street; thence into and southwardly along Thirty-Seventh street to a point near Avenue T; thence into and westwardly along Avenue T to Fifty-Seventh street; thence south and west, to and across Fifty-Seventh street, to the western limits of the city; thence southwardly and westwardly to Lafitte’s Grove, on Galveston Island, about 12 miles from the city limits. This road was operated by the company until about April, 1881, about which time it was sold under deed of trust to one Henchman, by whom it was sold and conveyed, about July 1, 1881, to the Texas & Mexican Railway Company, which was chartered under the general laws of the state March 12, 1881, with power to own and op *275 erate said ■ railroad, and by which company said road was operated until 1888.

The city of Galveston, by ordinance adopted in 1881, granted to this last company the-right to occupy, among other streets mentioned in the ordinance, Ninth street and Avenue N with the railroad theretofore constructed by the Galveston, Brazos & Colorado Narrow Gauge Railway. In February, 1888, the properties, rights, and franchises of the Tesas & Mesican Railway Company were acquired by sale under judgment and eseeution by the Galveston & Western Railway Company (the present plaintiff), which company was created under general laws on December 9, 1887, and was empowered by its charter “to build and acquire, or partly build and partly acquire, a railroad, commencing at a point on Galveston Bay in Galveston city, Galveston county, Tesas; thence through the streets and public highways of said city to a point in said city of Galveston at or near Carankaway Reef westward of the city, with the right to provide for other estensions and branches, or other branches in the manner provided by law.” It was alleged that under and by virtue of the aforesaid purchases and transfers plaintiff acquired and succeeded to all and singular the railroad rights, properties, and franchises belonging to its said predecessors.

In November or December, 1888, the rail.road, then a narrow gauge, by transfers of. plaintiff’s capital stock, passed from the original corporation into the control of certain Galveston parties, when it was determined to broaden the gauge to standard and to rearrange its tracks in the city of Galveston. In order to be able to further the purpose of holding an exhibition at Centennial Park, in the western part of the city, as well as for furnishing terminal facilities for another road then contemplated, plaintiff, before March 8, 1889, broadened the gauge to standard, by adding a third rail along Ninth street, thence crossing into and extending along Avenue N to a point where it crossed into Avenue N. The connection from Ninth street into Avenue N as originally located in 1875 by the Galveston, Brazos & Colorado Narrow Gauge Railway Company was north of the sand hills and several hundred feet from the Gulf of Mexico; but, by gradual erosion, the Gulf waters encroached upon this connection, and in 1886, while the road was being operated by the Texas & Mexican Company, the same was damaged by storm, but was immediately rebuilt upon a trestle. In 1889, as the result of further erosion, the trestle was extended by plaintiff along the gulf shore near the water’s edge. This trestle was again damaged in 1896, and by erosion, and as the result of the great storm of 1900, was entirely washed away, and the land upon and near which it was built became, and has been continuously since, submerged by the waters of the gulf. The gulf waters encroached upon the shore line opposite the intersection of Ninth street and Avenue N' about 400 feet from 1875 to 1889. There was a further slight encroachment from 1889 to 1899, and a further encroachment of more than 175 feet from 1899 until September, 1900' (the date of the storm aforesaid).

By act of the Legislature March 30, 1887 (Sp. Laws 1887, e. 6), the charter of the city of Galveston was amended for the purpose of authorizing the construction of a sea wall or breakwater, and the issuance of bonds and levying a tax to pay for the same. This act, as shown by the emergency clause, was predicated upon the necessity of a speedy construction of such sea wall for the protection of the city.

Plaintiff was constructing and had in contemplation a three-rail combination narrow gauge and standard gauge railroad in the city of Galveston, and the curves in the original lines from Ninth street into Avenue N, from Avenue N into Thirty-Seventh street, and from Thirty-Seventh street into Avenue T, and particularly the last two, were upon sharp curvatures intended for narrow gauge equipment.

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155 S.W. 273, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 358, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/galveston-w-ry-co-v-city-of-galveston-texapp-1913.