Ground Water Conservation Dist. No. 2 v. Hawley

304 S.W.2d 764, 1957 Tex. App. LEXIS 2011
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 3, 1957
Docket6681
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 304 S.W.2d 764 (Ground Water Conservation Dist. No. 2 v. Hawley) 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
Ground Water Conservation Dist. No. 2 v. Hawley, 304 S.W.2d 764, 1957 Tex. App. LEXIS 2011 (Tex. Ct. App. 1957).

Opinion

PITTS, Chief Justice.

Plaintiff, J. M. Hawley, independent executor and trustee of the estate of W. H. Taylor, deceased, filed suit as provided for in Section F of Article 7880-3c, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St., against defendant, Ground Water Conservation District No. 2, North of the Canadian River, with Gaston Wells, Harlan Hawk, R. V. Converse, Luther Browder and Robert Thompson, directors of the said conservation district, seeking to have a contiguous body of land consisting of about 12,105 acres, owned by the said Taylor estate, excluded from the said water district after the said Board of Directors for the district had denied plaintiff’s application for exclusion thereof as a result of a hearing duly had before the said Board. After the institution of the suit and before the trial, L. R. Conner, acting for himself and all others situated as he was, intervened in the suit claiming an interest in the matters to be litigated because he owned a 300 acre tract of grazing land within the said district, which had been denied exclusion therefrom by the said Board for the sole reason that his said tract of land contained less than 640 acres. The parties will be here referred to as they were in the *766 trial court, that is, appellee as plaintiff, and appellants as defendant and intervenor.

Upon hearing all parties without a jury the trial court granted the relief sought by plaintiff and rendered judgment excluding all of plaintiff’s land from the said district, enjoining the district and its Board of Directors from asserting any jurisdiction whatsoever in and over the said land and denying intervenor any relief, from which judgment defendant and intervenor both appealed and both perfected appeals to this Court and have filed separate briefs. Inter-venor, joined by defendant, contends that Section A(9) of Article 7880-3c, upon which plaintiff relies for recovery and upon which such recovery was granted plaintiff by the trial court, is unconstitutional. Defendant further contends that the trial court erred when it enjoined the district and its Board, contrary to the provisions of the statute, from asserting any jurisdiction over plaintiff’s land and plaintiff agrees that the trial court’s judgment should be reformed and modified so as to enjoin the district and Board thereof from asserting any jurisdiction over the land except to exercise such control as that given the district and its Board by the provisions of the statute but the trial court’s judgment should be' otherwise affirmed. Defendant charges further that the trial court erred in excluding plaintiff’s land from the district as grazing land because such land is not being used exclusively for grazing land as provided for and required under the provisions of Section A(9) of Article 7880-3c as amended.

. We shall first consider the constitutional question. Section A(9) of Article 7880-3c as' amended provides that grazing land in tracts of not less than 640 acres shall be excluded from the water conservation district upon petition filed with the proper authority and a proper showing made, in which event such a tract of land “shall not be liable for the bonded indebtedness of such District,” which has levied a property tax to retire its bonds. No provision is made by the Act for excluding grazing land in tracts smaller than 640 acres within the district, making such Act apply only to larger tracts of grazing land. It is conceded that plaintiff is seeking to have his tract of land excluded from the district on the grounds that it is one contiguous body of grazing land containing more than 640 acres. Intervenor and defendant contend that the said section of said Article is unconstitutional because it in effect constitutes class legislation favoring large land owners as against small land owners and is therefore arbitrary, unjust and unreasonable.

The said Conservation District is composed of all or portions of the Texas counties of Dallam, Hansford, Hartley, Hutchinson, Lipscomb, Moore, Ochiltree and Sherman. The evidence in the case is presented by exhibits introduced, by agreed stipulation of facts and in some instances by agreed stipulation as to what testimony certain witnesses would give if they were present and gave testimony. It was stipulated by agreement that plaintiff was the fee simple owner of the said contiguous tract of land consisting of approximately 12,105 acres, subject to any outstanding valid oil and gas leases and pipeline easements; that there are 14 producing gas wells located at various places on the said tract of land as shown by a map introduced in evidence with such wells being connected with pipelines crossing the said land, which is all unbroken sod land that has never been cultivated but is grass ranch land used for pasture in grazing cattle and horses thereon; that part of the land is fenced and no water is produced thereon except for domestic and stock raising purposes. It was likewise stipulated by agreement that intervenor, L. R. Conner, is the fee simple owner of his 300 acres of land included within the district; that such is ranch land which has never been cultivated but is unbroken sod land with native grass thereon and being used for pasture in grazing cattle and horses thereon; that the said land has no improvements thereon except a fence around it and a small windmill and no water is being produced on it except for domestic *767 and stock raising purposes; that the land has no oil, gas or other mineral production on it and there has never been any such production on it; that the said water district has assessed an ad valorem tax against intervenor’s said land in the amount of 5‡ per $100 valuation and such taxes have been paid; that there are numerous other land owners situated similarly to intervenor in that they also own tracts of land consisting of less than 640 acres located within the district subject to the tax levied and their land is also unbroken ranch land that has never been cultivated but used for grazing purposes and that no water has been produced on the said land except for domestic and stock raising purposes and there is no oil, gas or other mineral production on such lands. The record reveals by exhibits introduced that intervenor had previously sought by petition duly filed to have the Board of Directors of the said district to exclude his said 300 acres of grass land from the said district but such petition was denied by the Board for the sole and only reason that intervenor’s tract of land contained less than 640 acres.

According to the agreed stipulations there is no difference in the topography or the use being made of plaintiff’s large tract of land and intervenor’s smaller tract of land except that plaintiff’s large tract of, land has 14 producing gas wells with connected pipelines on it and intervenor’s smaller tract of land has no mineral production on it. Yet a careful examination of that section of the Article being protested reveals that the same authorizes the exclusion of grazing land in tracts of not less than 640 acres and exempts the owner thereof from “liability for the bonded indebtedness of the district” while no provision is made for excluding a smaller land owner of the same kind of grazing land from the district or exempting him from liability of the bonded indebtedness.

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641 S.W.2d 210 (Texas Supreme Court, 1982)
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371 S.W.2d 570 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1963)
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Bluebook (online)
304 S.W.2d 764, 1957 Tex. App. LEXIS 2011, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ground-water-conservation-dist-no-2-v-hawley-texapp-1957.