Houston Electric Co. v. Glen Park Co.

155 S.W. 965, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 889
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 11, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 155 S.W. 965 (Houston Electric Co. v. Glen Park Co.) 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
Houston Electric Co. v. Glen Park Co., 155 S.W. 965, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 889 (Tex. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

McMEANS, J.

On the petition of the ap-pellee, Glen Park Company, the judge of the Fifty-Fifth judicial district of Harris county, *966 in chambers, granted a temporary injunction, the nature and purpose of which will hereinafter more fully appear.

Plaintiff in its petition alleged, in substance:

“(1) That about 1906 the Houston Electric Company was desirous of extending its Montgomery Avenue line westwardly across a branch of White Oak bayou to connect with another of its lines known as the Houston Avenue line. That for a space of about a mile between the termini of th^se lines there were no cross streets or roads.
“(2) That at the time the Houston Electric Company by its officials agreed to and contracted with H. E. McGregor, who then owned the land, or the greater portion thereof, lying between said streets through and across which said electric company desired to project its line, as aforesaid, that if the said H. E. McGregor would dedicate streets to the public use of the citizens of Houston and to it, so that said Houston Electric Company could, under its franchise from the city of Houston, project and extend its line of street railway fr.om Montgomery avenue westwardly to Houston avenue, that in consideration of the convenience and advantage accruing to said Houston Electric Company it would continuously maintain and operate thereafter a line of railway as proposed and agreed through the cross streets and over the streets which were to be dedicated by the said H. F. McGregor for this purpose, the prime consideration being the benefit to the Houston Electric Company for the easement over said street or streets under its franchise from the city of Houston, and the consideration moving to the said H. E. McGregor to make said dedication of streets being the increased value that would accrue to his said property adjacent to said streets to be dedicated and the increased salable value of the same for subdivision purposes into lots and blocks for the purpose of sale because of the car service.
“(3) That in pursuance of the agreement so made, McGregor, then the owner of the property through which the line was to be projected, executed a dedication deed which is set out in full in plaintiff’s pleading, dedicating a certain strip of land described in the deed as a street. The following portions of the deed are material in the present inquiry: ‘Know all men by these presents: That I, H. E. McGregor, of Harris county, Texas, for and in consideration of the benefits to be derived from the extension of the street railway through my property, hereby dedicate to the public and the city of Houston a street fifty feet wide across what is known as the Puls Homestead in the John Austin grant, Harris ' county, Texas. The purpose of this deed is to furnish a right of way to the Houston Electric Company, its successors and assigns, subject to the terms and conditions of its franchise from the city of Houston, and ^.subject also to said street or strip being used as a street for street purposes. (Then follows a detailed description of the strip of land dedicated.) All of which is shown by the maps and plats attached hereto, to which reference is made as a part of this dedication. From the above-described street the following described portion is reserved by the grantor for use for decorative purposes and as a street railway waiting site which site is more particularly described as follows: (Then follows description of the site referred to.) In case such reservation above described shall not be used for street railway waiting station, or maintained as grounds for decorative purposes, then such reservation shall revert to the grantor.’ This deed was formally executed and filed for record in the deeds records of Harris county,. Tex., in April, 1906.
“(4) That thereafterwards, in pursuance of said understanding and agreement, the company did construct a line of street railway along the street described in the foregoing deed, and has continued to operate same until this date.
“(5) That is was agreed between the parties, namely, Houston Electric Company and H. E. McGregor, at the time said agreement was entered into, that said company would operate a loop line running out Montgomery avenue, thence through and along the property dedicated by the said H. F. McGregor, thence northwardly along Montgomery avenue, or road, and down Houston avenue to Washington street, and on and into the heart of the business district of the city of Houston, sending cars completely around said loop. That said Houston Electric Company has not for some time observed this agreement made with said H. F. McGregor, but has been operating a shuttle line or connecting line from Montgomery avenue across to Houston Avenue road or street, making it necessary for passengers to transfer twice in getting from points on and adjacent to Montgomery avenue to points on and adjacent to Houston Avenue street and Houston avenue.
“(6) That on or about the 1st of March, 1911, H. F. McGregor, by deed, a portion of which is set out in plaintiff’s petition, conveyed the lands owned by him in this vicinity, and affected by this agreement, to the plaintiff, Glen Park Company. The deed copied is an ordinary deed of conveyance, with covenants of warranty, except as to the portion of same used as streets, which are excepted from the warranty. That part of the deed which recites the consideration is not copied.
“(7) Plaintiff alleges that a part of the consideration actuating it to purchase and acquire the land in the aforesaid deed from H. F. McGregor was the agreement and contract made and substantially pet out between the company and McGregor, with respect to the construction, maintenance, and operation continuously of a line of street railway as hereinbefore described.
*967 ■ “(8) Plaintiff alleges that it is advised that the Houston Electric Company has applied to the city of Houston for permission to discontinue the operation of cars between the Montgomery Avenue and Houston Avenue lines, and across the McGregor property, and the city of Houston has granted the company the permissive right to so discontinue operation along this line, and to remove the track from the street dedicated by McGregor, and that the company is about to remove said track.
“(9) That the contract between the company and McGregor was and is a property right of the plaintiff company, which succeeded to the property theretofore owned by McGregor in the purchase of the same, and is the successor in interest to the terms and conditions and obligations of Houston Electric Company to .said H. F. McGregor by virtue of said contract made between them as aforesaid.
“(10) Petitioner avers that, aside from the contract obligations of the Houston Electric Company to maintain this line, if the company is permitted to discontinue same, the residents contiguous thereto will be greatly inconvenienced by virtue of its discontinuance.
“(11) That in pursuance of its rights under said contract made between the said H. F. McGregor and the said Houston Electric Company, whereby the said Houston Electric Company agreed continuously to operate a street railway line westwardly connecting the Fifth, First and Sixth wards as aforesaid, to which rights of the said H. F.

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Bluebook (online)
155 S.W. 965, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 889, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/houston-electric-co-v-glen-park-co-texapp-1913.