Hayden v. City of Houston

305 S.W.2d 798, 1957 Tex. App. LEXIS 2054
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 14, 1957
Docket15821
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 305 S.W.2d 798 (Hayden v. City of Houston) 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
Hayden v. City of Houston, 305 S.W.2d 798, 1957 Tex. App. LEXIS 2054 (Tex. Ct. App. 1957).

Opinions

MASSEY, Chief Justice.

The City of Houston is possessed of ■certain parcels of real estate operated as automobile parking lots. One of the parcels ■operated for such purposes is adjacent to the municipal airport. It will be termed as the “Airport Lot”.

As a means of operating these various lots, including the Airport Lot, the City has for some years resorted to a form of independent contract with firms or individuals who actually operate parking lot businesses. Pursuant to such plan of operation, the City periodically calls for bids on the basis of individual lots, the compensation to be on the basis of percentage of income a bidder offers the City as to each individual lot bid on.

For example, in years previous to the time giving rise to the controversy presented to us, the highest bidder on the Airport Lot had been Fred Hayden, plaintiff in the trial court and the appellant here. He had operated this lot in the manner of an individual who owns or leases such type premises, paying the City of Houston ‘73% of the gross receipts from his parking patrons. The gross receipts on the lot operation were not varying greatly from a $5,000 per month average just before Mr. Hayden’s contract period expired.

Pursuant to public advertisement the City Council of the City of Houston received sealed bids on its parking lots, including the Airport Lot, and Peter G. Dervas and Sam F. Bellesiotis submitted a bid of 80% of the gross receipts on said lot. Hayden submitted a bid of 79%. Dervas and Bell-esiotis obtained the contract. By instrument executed pursuant to ordinance directing such, the City contracted with Dervas and Bellesiotis, by way of an instrument denominated "Lease”, for the period October 1, 1956, to September 30, 1958, inclusive. The premises were merely described as “the parking area at or to the north of the City’s new Administration and Terminal Building at the City’s Municipal Airport”. Dervas and Bellesiotis agreed to use said premises “solely for the purpose of operating thereupon of motor vehicle parking lots in substantially the manner in which such parking lots are at this time being operated for general public parking through the downtown Houston area”. Further provisions included the following: “No other use shall be made by Lessee or permitted by Lessee to be made of the demised premises than the use and purpose just stated”.

The “Lease” provided further, as follows: “The City reserves the right, however, from time to time to change the designations as between areas designated for free parking, areas designated for metered parking and areas to be operated by the Lessee under this lease; but if by change in such designations there is a material reduction in the area covered by this lease, or the area covered by this lease becomes divided into two separate parts thereby increasing the necessary number of attendants, the Lessee shall have the option upon thirty (30) days’ notice to the City of terminating this lease. The Lessee * * * must [801]*801so operate it that there are both east and west opening's for easier access to and departure from the parking lot.” It is to be noted that the area covered by the instrument was most general and indefinite, but the lease further provided with reference thereto: “There are excluded from this lease, however, those portions of such parking area as are designated for metered parking and those portions * * * as are designated for free parking.”

On the matter of parking rates that the “Lessee” should charge, the following appears : “Unless otherwise authorized or required by the City, Lessee will observe the same schedule of parking charges as the schedule in effect on the date of the commencement by the City of advertisement for bids looking to the making of this lease. Any changes in such schedule which Lessee desires to put into effect shall be subject to prior approval by the City Council, and the City Council may, on the other hand, require increases therein * * *.”

At the time the foregoing transaction was consummated between the City of Houston and Dervas and Bellesiotis, there was in effect as a part of the City charter a provision setting limitations on the powers of the City to lease its real estate. The material part thereof as applied to this case was the provision that “in all sales or leases in which the price or money rental is in excess of Five Thousand ($5,000.00) Dollars the property shall be first appraised by two qualified appraisers appointed by the Council, their report in writing to be filed with the Council for its consideration.” It was made plain by further language that the City Council should not have the power to lease such property except in compliance with the provision. Section 1, Article IX of the charter of the City of Houston provides that “Any citizen who is a property taxpayer of the City of Houston may maintain an action in the proper court to restrain the execution of any illegal, unauthorized or fraudulent contract or agreement on behalf of said city.”

Hayden was most unhappy that he did not obtain the “Lease” on the Airport Lot for the period in question, and he decided to proceed as a “citizen who is a property taxpayer” to seek an injunction prohibiting the City and Dervas and Bellesiotis from executing or attempting to execute the terms of the foregoing contract, and to have the same declared null and void.

Upon hearing and considering the petition for temporary injunction the trial court denied the relief prayed for. Plaintiff Hayden has perfected an appeal.

Hayden correctly points out that while ordinarily an appeal from an order granting or denying an interlocutory injunction is to be determined on the proper exercise by the trial court of judicial discretion, however, when the situation is such that by an application of the law to the undisputed and uncontradicted facts the plaintiff s right or lack of right to temporary relief is apparent, the matter of relief may be considered as though the appeal was presented after a hearing on the merits. In the present instance such is the case.

We are of the opinion that Hayden’s suit must fail because he is in error in believing that the contract denominated as a “Lease” is in fact a lease of the City’s real estate. Its character is to be determined as a matter of law. In our opinion the instrument is no more than a license or franchise with reference to a certain use of the City’s real estate, and directed to a means of having the Airport Lot adjacent to the publicly visited municipal airport operated for a desired public purpose by an independent contractor rather than by the City.

In the case of City of Cleveland v. Ruple, 1936, 130 Ohio St. 465, 200 N.E. 507, 103 A.L.R. 853, a distinction was made between municipal provision of off-street parking facilities for the general public and municipal provision for parking facilities as a convenience for that portion of the [802]*802public desiring to visit a municipal building or establishment, such as a city hall, police station, or municipal hospital or auditorium. The annotations in 8 A.L.R.2d 374, et seq., deal primarily with the power of a municipality to establish, maintain, or operate off-street parking facilities, and supersedes the annotation in 103 A.L.R.

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Hayden v. City of Houston
305 S.W.2d 798 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1957)

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Bluebook (online)
305 S.W.2d 798, 1957 Tex. App. LEXIS 2054, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hayden-v-city-of-houston-texapp-1957.