Hill v. Taylor County

294 S.W. 868, 1927 Tex. App. LEXIS 303
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 8, 1927
DocketNo. 345.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 294 S.W. 868 (Hill v. Taylor 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
Hill v. Taylor County, 294 S.W. 868, 1927 Tex. App. LEXIS 303 (Tex. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

HICKMAN, J.

Suit was brought by appellants C. P. Hill and wife, Jennie Hill, against Taylor county, the county judge, the county commissioners, and a road contractor, seeking to enjoin them from entering upon a certain tract of land belonging to Jennie Hill and constructing, operating, and maintaining a public road thereon. The proceedings of the appellees were based upon the authority conferred by articles 6705 to 6710 of the Revised Civil Statutes 1925. Upon a hearing in the district court, judgment was entered denying appellants the relief prayed for in so far as it applied to a certain road 60 feet in width, but granting the injunction in so far as appellees were seeking to take additional land to the 60-foot roadway across appellants’ premises. A proceeding to condemn the land of an individual and appropriate same for public road purposes is a statutory proceeding, and consists only in following the plain mandates of the statute. The power thus to appropriate the lands of an individual for- the use of the public is absolute, but in order to do so the statutes with relation thereto must he complied with. A landowner cannot prevent the exercise of this power, but he can demand that the exercise thereof be in strict conformity with the-provisions made by the Legislature. Since, by the Constitution and statutes of our state, the district court has supervisory control over the commissioners’ court, an equitable suit for injunction brought in the district court is a direct attack upon all the proceedings of the commissioners’ court with reference to establishing a public road and taking land for that purpose. Crawford v. McDonald, 88 Tex. 626, 33 S. W. 325; Haverbekken v. Hale, 109 Tex. 106, 204 S. W. 1162.

In reviewing this proceeding, therefore, no presumptions will be indulged in favor of the judgments of the commissioners’ court, but it becomes our rather limited duty to determine whether or not the record of the proceedings in the commissioners’ court, together with such evidence as was properly admitted upon the trial of the injunction suit in the district court, discloses a substantial compliance with the requirements of the statute.

Fifteen separate and distinct assignments of error are presented in the brief of appellants, complaining of an equal number of errors of omissions and commission claimed to have been committed by the commissioners’ court and the jury of view in their manner and method of opening this highway. Since we have come to the conclusion that not all the necessary steps for establishing this highway were taken, and that it is our duty to reverse the judgment of the trial court, it becomes unnecessary to discuss each and every assignment of error, because some of the alleged errors will likely not occur upon the next proceeding. We shall therefore discuss only such alleged errors as we think necessary for a proper understanding of our views upon the fundamental questions presented.

One of the reasons assigned as showing that the statutory requirements were not complied with is that the report of the jury of view was insufficient in that it did not describe, the road with sufficient certainty. By article 6706 it is provided, in substance, that the jury of view shall make a written report of their proceedings to the next term of the court, and the field notes of such survey or description of the road shall be included therein, and, if adopted, shall be recorded in the minutes of the court. In the trial of the ‘instant ease, the appellants introduced in evidence an order of the commissioners’ court, made and entered at the January term, 1927, of said court, ordering the opening of the road. The report of the jury of view is embodied in this order. This report describes the road as “highway No. 1-A, Taylor county, Tex.” NO' other description of the road is contained in the report, and no reference is made therein to any other instrument disclosing the description. This report of the jury of view was not in compliance with the statute requiring that a description of the road shall be included therein.

But appellees insist that this omission was cured by a nunc pro tunc judgment of the commissioners’ court entered on February 17th, 1927, the day on which the trial *871 of the injunction suit was ended. The record discloses that the injunction suit went to trial on the 15th day of February, and was concluded on the 17th day of February, 1927; that before the conclusion of the testimony on February 17th, the appellees introduced in evidence an order of the commissioners’ court of Taylor county, entered on that day, amending the order of the January term of the commissioners’ court which approved the report of the jury of view and ordered the opening of the highway. This nunc pro tune order of February 17th sets out in much detail the correct field notes of the highway to be constructed ; such field notes having been prepared by L. C. McCanlies, resident engineer. The order recited, in substance, that the appellants had attacked the former order of the court upon the ground that same was uncertain and did not contain a sufficient description of the road, and then recites that the report of the jury of view find the original order did, in fact, contain=true field notes; that said field notes were a part of said report, and the jury of view considered and attached the field notes as a part of their report, but that by oversight and mistake such field notes were not recorded in the minutes of the court as a part of the report and order. This nunc pro tunc order then proceeds to amend the original order by including the field notes of the proposed road therein. Appellees insist that the effect óf this so-called amending order was to correct a clerical error in the entry of the original order and supply that wherein the original order and report were deficient. If, as a matter of fact, the report contained the true field notes and-an error was made by the clerk in recording the report and order, and, by oversight, these field notes, which were contained in the report, were not recorded, we think that omission could have been supplied by entry of the nunc pro tune order on February 17th, but the question presented to us is whether or not there was any evidence that the report of the jury of view did contain correct field notes. The appellants introduced in evidence a certified copy of the original order of January 12th, which contained a report of the jury of view, which, as we have stated, in no wise describes or refers to the proper source of description of the proposed road. If there was, in fact, a report which did include or properly refer to a description of the proposed road, it was the duty of appellees to introduce such report in evidence. As noted above, this proceeding was a direct attack upon the proceedings of the commissioners’ court, and, when a report of the jury of view was offered by the appellants which wholly failed to comply with the statute, appellees could not meet that proof by an ex parte order of the commissioners’ court stating that there was a report -which did include a description. The requirement that the report contain a description of the road is not met by a recital in an order of the commissioners’ court that it did contain such description. No presumption can be indulged in support of that judgment. The statute does not make it even prime facie evidence of the. correctness of its recitals. The very report itself was the subject of attack, and if il should be held that, when a proceeding is directly attacked, such attack could be met by recitals in a judgment, then no judgment of a court regular on its 'face could ever be attacked.

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Bluebook (online)
294 S.W. 868, 1927 Tex. App. LEXIS 303, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hill-v-taylor-county-texapp-1927.