Haverbekken v. Coryell County

290 S.W. 573, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 1509
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 18, 1926
DocketNo. 433. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 290 S.W. 573 (Haverbekken v. Coryell County) 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
Haverbekken v. Coryell County, 290 S.W. 573, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 1509 (Tex. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

GALLAGHER, C. J.

Appellant,' Ole O. 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. The tract sued for is a strip of land 40 feet wide, extending from the western side of appellant’s premises to the eastern side thereof on a line running in the main approximately north 60 degrees east. Appellant alleged that appellees had taken forcible possession of the strip of land sued for, and opened the same through his premises to the public as a road, and that it was being so used.' He alleged that appellees claimed said land under certain condemnation proceedings, 'and further alleged that such proceedings were void, and conferred no right upon appellees to enter and take said land and no title thereto. This is the second appeal in this case. The former appeal was by this appellant from a judgment against him in favor of these appellees on an instructed verdict. Said appeal was heard by the Court of Civil Appeals for the Third District. That court being in doubt about the sufficiency of the petition presented to the commissioners’ court of Coryell county for the opening of that part of said road situated in said county, to invoke the jurisdiction of said court, certified that issue to the Supreme Court. The Supreme Court held the petition sufficient. Haverbekken v. Coryell County et al., 112 Tex. 422, 247 S. W. 1086. The honorable Court of Civil Appeals, on receipt of the answers of the Supreme Court to its certified questions, overruled all of appellant’s assignments of error, and affirmed the judgment of the trial court. Subsequently, the court concluded that the evidence in the record* at that time with reference to the jurisdictional fact of the posting of notices, as required by article 6875, R. S. 1911, was not sufficient to justify an instructed verdict. On that ground alone the case was reversed and remanded. The opinion of that court was by that distinguished jurist, the late Chief Justice W. M. Key. Said opinion does not appear to have been published 1 , but a certified copy of the same has been filed with appellees’ brief in this cause. Appellant applied to the Supreme Court for a writ of error to review the decision of said Court of Civil Appeals, and his application was dismissed for lack of jurisdiction.

The trial which resulted in the judgment *575 here appealed from was before the court. Said judgment was that appellant take nothing by his suit, and such judgment is here presented for review.

Opinion.

The major propositions presented by appellant as ground for reversal on this appeal are the same.as those presented on the former appeal and determined against him. We have considered the same, and see no reason for reversing the prior holdings of said courts thereon.

Appellant by his ninth proposition contends that the field notes of the land condemned by Bosque county do not coincide with the field notes of the road actually claimed by said county and used by the traveling public, and that for such reason the condemnation proceedings were null and void, and were not available to appellees as a defense, and that he should have had judgment for the entire strip of land sued for herein. The evidence discloses that the road in controversy ran for a considerable part of its length in Bosque county on unfenced lands; that said road as traveled by the public varied slightly from the roa'd laid out by the jury of view in one or two places; that said place or places were in the brakes of Neil creek; that such deviation was trivial both in width and in length. The gist of appellant’s claim is that such trivial deviation at such point or points avoided the whole condemnation proceedings, and entitled him to recover as though no such proceedings had been had. We do not think so and overrule said contention. We do not understand appellant to contend that either his pleadings or his evidence so described the land covered by such deviation as to enable the court to award him a recovery (thereof as distinguished from the land actually condemned. Neither do we understand him to present the failure of the court to render such judgment as ground for reversal.

Appellant by his eleventh proposition contends'that the whole statutory procedure prescribed by articles 6875 to 6883, inclusive, of the Revised Statutes -of 1911, for establishing. and opening public roads by petition, is in conflict with the provisions of the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution of the United States, and with the' provisions of section 19 of article 1 of the Constitution of the state of Texas. The specific claim is that such procedure does not constitute that “due process of law” without which private property cannot be taken for public use. This claim is based on the fact that said article 6876 authorized eight or more individual freeholders in their personal and private capacity to originate a petition for such a public road, to designate its beginning point, its course and distance, and its" terminal point, and to give the only public notice required or authorized by law that the jurisdiction of the commissioners’ court over the subject-matter of- said petition will be invoked by the presentation thereof to said court. Said claim is further based on the fact that said particular articles nowhere authorize the commissioners’ court in its official capacity to do any of said things. Appellant’s contention is apparently predicated upon the case of Browning v. Hooper, 269 U. S. 396, 46 S. C. 141, 70 L. Ed. 330, which he cites in support thereof. We- do not think said case sustains appellant’s contention-. It involved the validity of a road district created by a commissioners’ court on petition; the boundaries thereof being selected and determined solely by the wiR of the petitioners. There is little, if any, analogy between the creation of a road district by petition under articles of the statute relating thereto and the opening of a public road by petition in the manner provided by the articles under consideration. The Supreme Court, in its opinion in that case, after stating that the duties of the commissioners’ court in the premises were purely ministerial, further said:

“There is nothing in the law to guide or to limit the action of the signers of the petition in selecting property to be assessed. Subject to the vote of a district of their own choice, the petitioners’ designation is absolute. The commissioners’ court has no power to modify or deny; it is bound to grant the petition.”

The articles of our statutes under consideration do not in terms at least require the commissioners’ court to appoint a' jury of view on every petition presented. If the court does appoint a jury of view, after such jury has discharged its duties and filed its report, said articles contemplate a consideration of such report by the court, and the approval or rejection thereof as it may deem to the best interest o.f the public. ' If in the judgment of the court such road is of sufficient importance to justify the opening thereof, it may revise the damages allowed by the jury of view, pay or secure the payment of the same in the manner prescribed, and order the road opened.

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Bluebook (online)
290 S.W. 573, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 1509, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haverbekken-v-coryell-county-texapp-1926.