Haverbekken v. Coryell County

247 S.W. 1086, 112 Tex. 422, 1923 Tex. LEXIS 111
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 14, 1923
DocketNo. 3572.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 247 S.W. 1086 (Haverbekken v. Coryell County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Haverbekken v. Coryell County, 247 S.W. 1086, 112 Tex. 422, 1923 Tex. LEXIS 111 (Tex. 1923).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Judge GALLAGHER

delivered the opinion of the Commission of Appeals, Section A.

This is a certificate from the Honorable Court of Civil Appeals for the Third District presenting for answer certain questions hereinafter set out. The facts shown by the certificate are substantially as follows:—

Plaintiff, Ole 0. Haverbekken, brought this suit in the District Court of Coryell County, against the counties of Coryell and Bosque their commissioners’ courts and road officers, seeking to recover title and possession of a tract of land situated partly in each of said counties, and for damages.

Plaintiff charged in his petition that defendants had cut his fences, taken possession of the land sued for, graded the same and opened the same to the public as a road. He alleged that the defendants claimed said land under certain condemnation proceedings, and further - alleged that such proceedings were void and conferred no right upon defendants to enter and take said land, and no title thereto. Among the reasons why said proceedings were claimed to be void, he alleged that the petition upon which the proceedings to lay out and establish said road were based contained no legal description of the proposed road and that the commissioners’ court of Coryell County, after having received the report of the jury of freeholders appointed to lay out said road and to assess the damages incident to the opening of the same, and after having entered an order discharging them, had no power to reappoint the same jury and to require them to make another report to a subsequent term of said court.

The plaintiff owned a tract of 946 acres of land situated partly in Coryell and partly in Bosque Counties. It was fenced for farming and grazing purposes. There was a public road around his enclosure but certain persons desired a new road across his land. To secure this road condemnation proceedings were, in October, 1914, instituted simultaneously in both counties. The jury of freeholders appointed by the Commissioners’ Court of Bosque County laid out so much of the proposed road as lay in said county on January 8, 1915, and their report was confirmed and said road established by said court on February 10, 1915. The opening of said road in Bosque *425 County was enjoined’ by plaintiff on the ground that the petition therefor was not signed by the requisite number of freeholders and such road had not been opened at the time of the proceedings in the Commissioners’ Court of Coryell County, complained of by plaintiff in this suit.

A jury of freeholders was appointed by the Commissioners’ Court of Coryell County to lay out the new road in that county and'to assess the damages resulting from the opening of the same on March 8, 1915, and directed- to report at the next regular term of the court. They submitted a report at the regular May term of the court. The certificate does not show what specific action was taken by the court at the time further than that the jury was discharged. Afterwards, at the same term, the court made an order reciting that there was some question as to whether or not the land owners were properly and legally notified to meet said jury and that, therefore, their report was rejected and they were reappointed as such jury. They made their final report to the regular August term of the court, and this report was made the basis of the condemnation attacked by plaintiff in this case.

The application for that portion of the new road situated in Bosque County is not set out in the certificate, but said certificate states that the clear, undisputed testimony showed that it was to connect with that part of said proposed road situated in Coryell County. There was, however, no actual road in Bosque County at or along the dividing line between said counties at the time the petition was filed to be met or intersected at said dividing line by the proposed new road in Coryell- County. The validity of the proceedings to condemn said road in Coryell County is the only issue involved in the questions certified.

There was a trial in the District Court and instructed verdict for the defendants and judgment thereon in their favor. Plaintiff appealed. Pending the consideration of his appeal, the Court of Civil Appeals certified to the Supreme Court the following questions:—

“1. Was the description of the proposed new road contained in the application filed theretofore, and reading: — ‘Commencing on a road on the east line of the H. Mailard and the west line of the John Furnash surveys and at a point about 100 yards south of the north Coryell county line, thence going in an easterly direction about 300 yards to intersect a road in Bosque county, Texas,’ a sufficient description of the proposed new road to confer jurisdiction upon the Commissioners’ Court of Coryell county to appoint a jury of view, and perform the other acts necessary to establish a new road?”

‘‘2. After the jury of view had made its report and been discharged, had the Commissioners’ Court of Coryell County power, without the inauguration of any other proceedings, to reappoint the *426 same jury ■ and to require them to make another 'report, at a subsequent term of that court?”

Commissioners’ courts are created by the constitution and are given by its express terms such powers and jurisdiction over all county business as are conferred by the provisions thereof, or by the laws of the State. The statutes confer upon such courts full power and jurisdiction to locate, establish and open public roads and to condemn the land necessary therefor. In the exercise of these powers they are courts of general jurisdiction and the validity of their proceedings is to be determined by the rules applicable to such courts. Having acquired jurisdiction of the subject-matter and of the party or parties they may, except as restrained or prohibited by law, exercise such powers according to their discretion. Texas Constitution, Art. 5, Sec. 18; Rev. Stats. Arts. 6859-6900; Bourgeois v. Mills, 60 Texas, 76, 77; Bradford v. Moseley, (Com. Apps.), 223 S. W., 171, 173; Sneed v. Falls County, 91 Texas, 168, 171.

The jurisdiction of the court to locate, establish and open a road b3r condemnation proceedings at the instance of petitioning freeholders must be invoked by presenting a proper and sufficient petition therefor. Haverbekken v. Hale, County Judge, 109 Texas, 106. One of the statutory requisites for such petition is that it shall specify the beginning and termination of the proposed road. The description in the petition presented to the Commissioners ’ Court of Coryell County in this case is set out in the first question certified. The only attack made by plaintiff upon the sufficiency of such description is that it does not designate the termination of that part of the proposed road situated in Coryell County, because there was no road in Bosque County at the time such petition was filed which could form a terminus of such proposed road. While in jurisdictional matters the provisions of the statute must be complied with, substantial compliance is all that is required. 1st Lawson on Eminent Domain, p. 707; Elliott on Roads and Streets, p. 253. Technical precision is not required in designating the termination of a proposed road.

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Bluebook (online)
247 S.W. 1086, 112 Tex. 422, 1923 Tex. LEXIS 111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haverbekken-v-coryell-county-tex-1923.