Gillespie v. Fuller Const. Co.

61 S.W.2d 977, 122 Tex. 506, 1933 Tex. LEXIS 118
CourtTexas Commission of Appeals
DecidedJune 23, 1933
DocketNo. 1651—6101
StatusPublished

This text of 61 S.W.2d 977 (Gillespie v. Fuller Const. Co.) 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
Gillespie v. Fuller Const. Co., 61 S.W.2d 977, 122 Tex. 506, 1933 Tex. LEXIS 118 (Tex. Super. Ct. 1933).

Opinion

HARVEY, Presiding Judge.

In this case, the Court of Civil Appeals for the Fifth District has, of its own motion, submitted the following certificate containing certified questions:

"With a paving certificate, issued by the City of Dallas, as a basis, appellee, Fuller Construction Company, recovered judgment in a district court of Dallas County in the sum of $2,012.58, with interest thereon from October 25, 1926, at the rate of seven per cent, per annum, and the additional sum of $250 attorney fee against appellant, A. O. Gillespie, together with the foreclosure of a paving lien on appellant’s real property abutting on the street paved. An appeal was duly perfected, the cause regularly submitted and is pending for decision in this court.
“Statement.
“On February 9, 1926, the City of Dallas, a municipal corporation, by resolution duly passed and approved by the mayor, ordered the improvement of Live Oak Street, a public street in said City, in the following manner: (a) that said street should be cut or filled so as to bring same to grade, and (b) that thq street should be paved from curb to curb with one of three designated materials, and with concrete curbs or gutters installed on each side of the street, where adequate curbs and gutters were not then installed.
“After the passage of the resolution all of . the necessary steps to carry into effect the order for paving Live Oak Street, and to fix a debt against the property owners whose property abutted on said street, as well as a lien against the property to pay the cost of the paving, was taken by the city in accordance with the provisions of the city charter. One of the materials, designated in the resolution that could be used for the paving of the street, was Uvalde rock asphalt, on a six inch concrete base. The bid of appellee to construct the pavement out of such material was accepted and the pavement was laid on Live Oak Street by appellee, under the supervision of the Oity Engineer, and in accordance with the specifications and requirements of the paving contract entered into with the Oity of Dallas.
“At the proper time in the proceedings for the improvement of said street, assessments were duly levied against the abutting property owners, in the manner provided by the Dallas city charter, and each property owner, including appellant, was duly notified in writing, and through advertisement in a daily newspaper, of such assessment, and also of the time and place for hearing protests by property owners. After this hearing, which closed May 12, 1926, an ordinance was duly passed fixing a personal debt against appellant in the sum of $2,012.58 for the paving of the 186 feet abutting on his property, and fixing a lien against such property to secure payment of same.
“The paving certificate, issued by the City to appellee, conforms to the provisions of the city charter authorizing the issuance of such certificates, and contains all of the necessary recitals to make it, prima facie, a valid and subsisting claim against appellant and in favor of appellee. The certificate, among other things, provided for the discharge of the indebtedness by payment in six equal annual installments, but further provided that if default be made in any of the installments the holder of the certificate could declare all unpaid installments due. The indebtedness bore interest at the rate of seven per cent, per annum. Appellant defaulted in the payment of the first and second installments and appellee declared all installments due and instituted this suit before limitation had run on any installment.
“Appellant became the owner of his property on Live Oak Street in 1910. The City of Dallas duly caused a portion of said street to be improved with bitulithic pavement in 1912, levied an assessment against appellant for his proportionate costs of such paving, and fixed the same character of lien on the same property as that which appellee now claims for the amount assessed against appellant. Appel[978]*978lant paid this indebtedness • and the lien against the property was released. This paving was in good repair in February, 1926, at the time the paving in question was ordered, was adequate for any use of said street, and was in such condition of repair when appel-lee destroyed it for the purpose of laying the new pavement. There were only two city blocks, or relatively a small part of that portion of Uive Oak Street paved in 1926, that had been paved in 1912.
“In 1925 the Oity of Dallas, in the exercise of its charter powers, widened Live Oak Street by taking, through condemnation proceedings, from the property owners on the opposite side of the street from 'appellant’s property, a strip of land ten feet wide. Appellant was not a party to the condemnation proceedings, for no part of his land was taken for such purpose, but he was assessed, on the ground of benefit to his property, the sum of $2,549.25 as his .proportionate share in payment to the property owners whose property was actually taken, and this assessment was duly paid by appellant. The pavement of 1912 in front of appellant’s property was 35 -feet wide and the crown of the street was fixed at said time along the center of this 35 feet. When the street was widened in 1925, there was left ten feet on the opposite or North side of the street from appellant’s property unpaved. The specifications prepared by the Engineer for the 1926 pavement required pavement, 45 feet wide in front of appellant’s property, so as to include the ten feet unpaved. The concrete gutter placed in front of appellant’s property by the 1912 pavement was in good condition and adequate for its purpose.
“The grade of the street was unchanged ■ from the grade established in 1912, by the * 1926 paving. The City Engineer directed the tearing up and destruction of the 1912 pavement and gutter in front of appellant’s property and the laying of new pavement on the same grade of the street, and a new gutter in the same place of the old gutter. The grounds on which the City, through its Engineer, seeks to justify the act of destroying the 1912 pavement and taxing appellant in the form of a special assessment for the new pavement, are that, unless such repaving was done, the crown of the pavement, as fixed in 1912, would not be in the center of the widened street, would not conform to the crown of the new pavement as same had to be established on other portions of Live Oak Street, and would thereby destroy the equal drainage on the sides of the street. No reason appears for the destruction of the old gutter. The destruction of the pavement and gutter in front of appellant’s property was done over his protest.
“Appellant, both in his pleading filed in his answer to appellee’s suit and by assignments of error and propositions of law in his brief, contends that, by reason of the above existing facts, he had such a property interest in the pavement of 1912 that it could not be taken or destroyed, except through the proper exercise of the powers of Eminent Domain resting in the City, and as the City did not exercise such powers, but took and destroyed his property under its police or taxing powers, all of the proceedings as against him, from the adoption of the resolution to the attempted fixing of the debt and lien against him and his property, were void, and that he was not required to take any notice thereof.
“Section 1 of Art.

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Bluebook (online)
61 S.W.2d 977, 122 Tex. 506, 1933 Tex. LEXIS 118, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gillespie-v-fuller-const-co-texcommnapp-1933.