Industrial Co. v. Tompkins

27 S.W.2d 343, 1930 Tex. App. LEXIS 327
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 2, 1930
DocketNo. 3387.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 27 S.W.2d 343 (Industrial Co. v. Tompkins) 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
Industrial Co. v. Tompkins, 27 S.W.2d 343, 1930 Tex. App. LEXIS 327 (Tex. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

RANDOLPH, J.,

This suit was originally instituted by appellant against R. Y. Tomgpkins, auditor of the city of Dallas, J. Waddy Tate, mayor, and Earl Goforth, secretary of said city, in which a writ of mandamus was sought to compel said Tompkins, as such auditor, to countersign and officially approve a warrant in favor of appellant for the sum of $68,-298, alleged to have been ordered drawn in its favor under a board order passed by the board of commissioners of the said city on April 5, 1929, under the terms of which order the Industrial Company was awarded the above-named sum as a settlement of a controversy growing out of the opening, widening, and extension of South Lamar street in said city. The city of Dallas was not made a party to the said suit'by the plaintiff, but was permitted to intervene on the ground that it was the real party at interest in the litigation.

On hearing by the district court the application for mandamus was< refused, and, from such refusal to grant same, this appeal has been taken.

The plat for the addition into which South Lamar street was extended, the intersection of that street with other streets i-n said addition, etc., are sufficiently stated in the case of Dallas Cotton Mills v. Industrial Co. (Tex. Com. App.) 296 S. W. 503, and will not be repeated here. However, the controversy betwaen the Industrial Company and the defendants in the case at bar requires that a brief statement be made of the facts and circumstances surrounding the contract between the Industrial Company and the city of Dallas, upon which the company bases its right to the issuance of the warrant.

The change in the direction and location and the widening of ¡South Lamar street had been contemplated by the city for a number of years, in order to accommodate the increased traffic between the south portion of the city and the business section. Efforts to that effect finally culminated in the transactions alleged by the company to have occurred between it and the city, which transactions we will now briefly state.

It is alleged in the appellant’s petition that the parties interested in the change, extension, and widening of South Lamar street,, having been unable to make satisfactory arrangement with the owner of the particular tracts of land herein involved, for the routing of South Lamar street and' the widening and extension of same, it was suggested by them that the Industrial Company should acquire the said tracts of land, and, as an inducement to it to do so, it was represented by those promoting the improvement and officers of the city of Dallas representing said city and having authority to represent it in connection with said inducement that if the-plaintiff would buy the plats of ground and would convey the necessary right of way for the extension of South Lamar street, as widened, extended, and connected with Cockrell avenue, the city of Dallas would close certain streets and alley intersecting the tracts of land to be acquired by the appellant, and that appellant would thereby acquire, as a result of the closing of said streets- and alley, a valuable piece of industrial property situated in a busy and settled portion of' the city of Dallas, in a solid block, without being cut up by its intersecting streets and alley; that, induced by all representations, and promises, the appellant purchased and acquired title to all of the land situated in. the city of Dallas, lying between Cockrell avenue, Burnett street, Austin street, and Alexander street — the said property being *345 shown on the exhibit to the petition; that it was agreed that said streets and alley were to be physically closed upon the ground so as to give appellant a solid block of land not to be intersected or cut or divided by any street or alley.

The appellant’s petition further alleges as follows:

“That contemporaneously with or shortly following the purchase of the said property by the plaintiff and in pursuance of the promises and understanding which had induced the plaintiff to purchase the said property, the City of Dallas entered into formal agreement with the plaintiff, as evidenced by ordinances duly passed and other action of the governing authority of the City of Dallas, that the said streets and alley intersecting the land so purchased by plaintiff would be physically closed so that the plaintiff would have a solid block of land, lying between and bounded by the four said streets above named, uninterfered with or cut up by its intersecting streets and alley and the plaintiff in pursuance of the understanding and agreement had between the plaintiff and the City of Dallas conveyed to the City of Dallas and vested title in it to the tract of land 'necessary for the extension of the widened South Lamar Street into and connected with Cockrell Avenue.
“That the plaintiff fully complied with the terms of the agreement and performed all of the obligations undertaken by him to the City of Dallas in connection with the proposition. That in consideration of the undertaking, covenants and agreements of the plaintiff, all of which were fully performed by the plaintiff, the City of Dallas covenanted and agreed that South Lamar Street between Alexander Street and Burnett Street (as the same had existed prior to the opening of the connection in its widened condition over the land conveyed by plaintiff of South Lamar Street with Cockrell Avenue), and Dexter Street, as the same existed between Blocks B-1092 and C-1095 and D-1093 and D-1096, and of the alley as it existed between Block B-1092 and D-1093 and C-1095 and D-1096, be physically closed, all of which said agreement and covenant the City of Dallas has wholly failed to comply with and perform. That the said streets and the alley, which the City failed to close as it covenanted to do, were the streets and alley intersecting the said tract of land purchased by the plaintiff bounded by Cockrell Avenue, Burnett - Street, Austin Street and Alexander Street, as shown by the plat attached to this petition, marked Exhibit ‘A,’ and made a part of this petition to the same extent as though expressly written herein.
“That the City of Dallas was entitled to a reasonable time in which to comply with its contract, undertaking and obligation to close the said intersecting streets and alley in the said tract of land which had been purchased by the plaintiff, which said reasonable time for performance of its said contract on the part of the City expired on or about June 22nd, 1927, but the City of Dallas, notwithstanding the expiration of the said reasonable period of time for performance on its part, has wholly failed and refused to perform the same.
“That as a result of the failure of the City of Dallas to comply with the said contract and on account of its breach of the same, the ■plaintiff shows to the Court that the plaintiff was damaged in the amount of the value of the land contained in the said intersecting streets and alley which the City of Dallas failed to close and to deliver to the plaintiff in a closed condition, as. the City of Dallas had agreed and bound itself to the plaintiff to do, and also in the amount of the depreciation in value of the balance of the tract of land of the plaintiff not contained in the said intersecting streets and alley on account of the failure of the City of Dallas to close and deliver to the plaintiff in a closed condition the said intersecting streets and alley, as the City of Dallas had agreed to do.

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Bluebook (online)
27 S.W.2d 343, 1930 Tex. App. LEXIS 327, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/industrial-co-v-tompkins-texapp-1930.