J. M. Radford Grocery Co. v. City of Abilene

20 S.W.2d 255
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 13, 1929
DocketNo. 562.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 20 S.W.2d 255 (J. M. Radford Grocery Co. v. City of Abilene) 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
J. M. Radford Grocery Co. v. City of Abilene, 20 S.W.2d 255 (Tex. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

LESLIE, J.

On October 15,1928, the plaintiff, Radford Grocery Company, presented to the district judge of the Forty-Second judicial district its petition for a temporary writ of injunction against the city of Abilene, its mayor and board of commissioners, seeking to restrain them from removing a structure or platform maintained by it over the sidewalk on Oak street of the said city. A temporary restraining order was granted until the cause could be heard upon its merits, which hearing *256 was had in open court the following October 26th. At this time the plaintiff filed an amended petition, amplifying allegations pre-' viously made, and setting forth additional reasons why the injunction should be continued and perpetuated. The defendants answered by general demurrer, special exception, general denial, and affirmatively alleged such facts as deemed by them a sufficient basis for the removal of the structure, and prayed the court for an order to that effect. The defendants contended that the platform or structure was an obstruction in a public highway and a nuisance per se. Upon a very full hearing the trial court dissolved the temporary restraining order and refused relief by injunction. To this order and judgment the plaintiff excepted, and prosecutes this appeal.

In testing the correctness of the trial court’s judgment upon the testimony adduced, certain conclusively established facts must be borne in mind. In the first place, plaintiff is not a public service corporation, operating under and by virtue of a franchise incident to such organizations. It is a private corporation, operated for private gain, being a wholesale grocery establishment. Further, the city of Abilene is a municipal corporation, administered by chosen officials, and governed, under the provisions of a special charter, the general laws, and the Constitution of the state.

As applied to the subject-matter of this controversy, certain provisions of that charter and the general laws are material. For instance, section 9, art. 2, of the charter provides :

“The city of Abilene shall have power to enact and enforce ordinances for the protection of the health, life and property of its citizens, and to prevent and summarily abate and remove nuisances: * * * Provided, further, that the specification of particular powers herein granted shall not be construed as a limitation upon the general' powers herein granted, it being intended by this act to grant to and bestow upon the inhabitants of the city of Abilene full power of self-government, and it shall have and exercise all powers of municipal government not prohibited to it by this charter or by some general law of the state of Texas, or by the provisions of the Constitution of this state.”

Section 58 of said charter, under the heading of “Municipal Powers,” provides:

“The city of Abilene, through its board of commissioners, shall have all the powers that are now or that hereafter may be granted to cities and towns by general law, and in addition thereto shall have such powers as are granted by this act.”

Section 97 of said charter, under the subject of “Streets,” provides:

“The board of commissioners shall have power to lay out, establish, open, alter * * * supervise, maintain and improve streets, alleys, sidewalks, * * * within the city of Abilene, and shall have exclusive power and control over the same; to prevent and summarily abate any obstruction or encroachments thereon. * * * ”

Section 110 of the charter provides that:

“The -term ‘public highway’ as used herein shall be construed to mean and include any street, avenue, alley or highway, dedicated to public use * * * within the city of Abilene.”

Article 1015, Rev. St. 1925, a general law, enumerating other powers granted governing bodies of cities, provides, in section 11, that they shall have authority “to abate and re-' ,move nuisances and to punish the authors thereof '* * * and direct the summary abatement thereof. * * * ”

Section 23 of said article 1015, dealing with obstructions of public ways, 'etc., provides that such bodies may have authority “to prevent the encumbering of the streets, alleys, sidewalks * * * with any vehicle * * * lumber, posts, awnings, * * * or any other substance or material whatever.

Article 1175, Rev. St. 1925, enumerates the . powers granted cities adopting charters under the Home Rule Act: “To control, regulate and remove all obstructions or other encroachments or encumbrances on any public street. * * jfc It

From the foregoing it appears that the city of Abilene has an abundance of authority emanating from more than one statutory enactment empowering it to deal with obstructions in its streets and on its sidewalks. We now pass to the consideration of other elements involved in the case.

The structure which the plaintiff seeks to perpetually maintain, and which the defendant is endeavoring to remove, is a loading platform on the west side of plaintiff’s wholesale grocery building, situated in the northwest comer of block 4, city of Abilene, at the intersection of South First and Oak streets. The building is 110x130 feet in dimension. Its west side runs squarely with the property line, and the platform or structure complained of covers the entire sidewalk, extending from the curb line to the side of the building, a distance of 12 feet. In length the platform is substantially that of the building, and must be mounted at each end thereof by a flight of steps, which, according to the testimony, act as a deterrent to pedestrians de-' sirous of passing along the sidewalk at that place. The platform is not and was not constructed or elevated in accordance with the city’s sidewalk regulations, as determined by ordinance. A regulation sidewalk at this point of Oak street would extend from the top of the curb to the property line, and the coping would incline slightly upward until it reached the property line, or the west wall of plaintiff’s building. The platform in question does not join the curb, but is 3½ to 4 feet *257 above it, and extending toward tbe building as indicated. It is not a sidewalk, nor was it so designated in tbe testimony.

Tbe platform is used by tbe plaintiff for loading and unloading merchandise. For tbis purpose it is practically in constant use, stacks of goods being continuously loaded and unloaded therefrom. In fact, tbe use made of it is such as is incident to a thriving wholesale business of large proportions. Trucks are continuously backed up against tbe plat-, form for' loading and unloading, especially throughout tbe day, and tbe front end of such vehicles are beaded into tbe open street, thus occupying a large portion of tbe paved thoroughfare adjacent to tbe platform; There is testimony to tbe effect that it is not unusual for such trucks to be lined up throughout tbe length of tbe platform.

Plaintiffs building and platform are in a built-up portion of the city and in an important industrial center. The Bankhead Highway, a state and national thoroughfare, passes over and along Oak street, and the route has been beautified and benefited by the city’s having designated it as the White Way through the municipality.

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20 S.W.2d 255, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/j-m-radford-grocery-co-v-city-of-abilene-texapp-1929.