Harper v. Thompson

280 S.W. 861
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 13, 1926
DocketNo. 1337.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 280 S.W. 861 (Harper v. Thompson) 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
Harper v. Thompson, 280 S.W. 861 (Tex. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

HIGHTOWER, C. J.

This appeal is from an order of Hon. C. A. Hodges, district judge of the Second judicial district of this state, refusing to dissolve a temporary writ of injunction that he had theretofore granted against appellants, enjoining the further performance of a certain contract that Angelina county, acting through its commissioners’ court, had made with A. O. Harper and S. W. Harper, composing the firm of Harper & Harper, two of the appellants here. The following facts underlie this controversy:

On April 15, 1925, Angelina county, acting through its commissioners’ court, entered into a written agreement with A. O. Harper and S. V. Harper, composing the firm of Harper & Harper, to make a plat book or block map of all the lands in Angelina county, Tex., and also a complete survey of all land assessed in that county and unknown and unrendered for purposes of taxation and upon which taxes were delinquent. On June 27, 1925, the appellees J. A. Thompson and R. L. Mayne, alleging that they were, resident taxpayers and citizens and qualified voters of Angelina county, presented to the Hon. O. A. Hodges, judge of the Second judicial district of this state, in chambers, their petition for injunction, and secured from that judge a temporary writ enjoining and restraining appellants from the execution and performance of the contract mentioned. Thereupon appellants filed an answer to the petition, and also'a motion to dissolve the temporary writ of injunction. The answer denied generally and specially all tfie allegations made by appellees attacking the validity of the contract, the performance of which they sought to enjoin, and was duly sworn to by appellants. The motion to dissolve was set down for hearing by Judge Hodges, and at the hearing evidence was heard touching the motion, after which the motion was overruled and the temporary writ continued in force until further ordered by the court.

The contract entered into between Angelina county and Harper & Harper, in the first paragraph thereof, provides that Angelina county “agrees to employ, and does employ, the second party (Harper & Harper) to make and install a complete plat book system, or block map for Angelina county, Tex., showing each *862 and every tract, lot or parcel of land in Angelina county, Tex,, with description thereof; said plat book to have each and every tract, lot or parcel of land numbered and to show the contracts in each and every tract, lot or parcel of land, and record owner of the same on January 1, 1925.” The second party (Harper & Harper) agrees to perform the above work in a skillful manner “for and in consideration of the sum of eighteen thousand ($18,000) dollars paid in and evidenced by legally issued warrants against the collection of delinquent taxes, penalties, and interest of the several funds of said county, except the road and bridge and school funds, * * * the principal of said warrants to be payable from the collection of delinquent taxes, penalties, and interest, exclusive of the road and bridge and school funds, * * * the first collection of said delinquent taxes so collected to be placed in a fund to be denominated plat book warrant fund, class A, until the collection of said delinquent taxes, penalties, and interest shall be sufficient to pay said warrants, and said delinquent tax collections in said account shall be appropriated for said purposes; and in this connection first party (Angelina county) obligates itself to appropriate all delinquent county taxes collected for whatever fund, except such as are pledged to road and bridge and school purposes, to the payment of the above-mentioned warrants.”

In the second paragraph of the contract it is provided:

“First party (Angelina county) agrees to employ, and does employ, the second party (Harper & Harper) to make a complete abstract of property assessed and unknown and unrendered for purposes for taxation and upon which taxes are delinquent.”

It is agreed in the contract that the compensation for the work of making the abstract shall be 10 per cent, of the county’s delinquent taxes collected, “said 10 per cent., however, not to be computed on the $18,000 of delinquent tax collection necessary to pay warrants issued' for services in the making of the plat book system mentioned in paragraph 1.”

The appellees in their petition for injunction made, the commissioners’ court of Angelina county, the county judge, the county attorney, the county tax assessor, the county tax collector, the county treasurer, and also the district attorney parties defendant, as well as the firm of Harper & Harper.

The appellees in their petition base their right to the injunction prayed for upon the fact alone that they are resident taxpaying citizens and qualified voters of Angelina county.

Appellees in their petition challenge the legality of the contract and the authority of the commissioners’ court of Angelina county to make it, upon several different grounds, but they do not allege any fraud on the part of any one in the execution of the contract, nor do they allege that they or either of them would sustain any injury of any character whatsoever by reason of the performance of the contract, and upon oral argument of this cause in this court the able attorney for appellees was frank enough to concede that appellees were not authorized to maintain this suit for injunction upon any of the grounds alleged by them in their petition, unless it be the ground that the contract involved here was unauthorized and void by reason of the failure and refusal of the com-’ missioners’ court of Angelina county to comply with the requirements of article 2368, Revised Civil Statutes of 1925 of this state, which article, in substance, declares that no commissioners’ court in any county in this state shall make a contract calling for or requiring the expenditure or payment of $2,000 or more out of any fund or funds of the county or subdivision thereof without first submitting such purported contract to competitive bids. That article further provides that notice of the time and place when and where the contract will be let shall be published, etc., and further provides that the successful bidder shall make bond, etc., and deposit his certified check, etc., to insure compliance with his contract. The article further provides that any contract to which it applies made by the commissioners’ court without compliance with its provisions shall be null and void, and any citizen and taxpayer of the county shall have the authority to enjoin its performance. Therefore, if article 2368 is applicable to the contract here involved, and the commissioners’ court failed to substantially comply with the provisions of that article, the appellees would, upon the allegation alone that they are resident taxpaying citizens of Angelina county, have the right to maintain this suit for injunction, and to enjoin the performance of the contract, without a showing that its performance would result in any injury to them. On the contrary, if article 2368 has no application to the contract here involved, appellees cannot maintain this suit for injunction to prevent the performance of this contract .without showing that the contract was illegal upon some ground, and that its performance would result in injury to them. We think that this proposition is elementary, and needs the citation of no authorities.

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Related

Gulf Bitulithic Co. v. Nueces County
297 S.W. 747 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1927)
Harper v. Thompson
292 S.W. 263 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1927)

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Bluebook (online)
280 S.W. 861, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harper-v-thompson-texapp-1926.