Jones v. Dallas Ry. Co.

224 S.W. 807, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 947
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 26, 1920
DocketNo. 8455.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 224 S.W. 807 (Jones v. Dallas Ry. 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
Jones v. Dallas Ry. Co., 224 S.W. 807, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 947 (Tex. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

STNNOTT, Special Chief Justice.

The Dallas Railway Company’s Oak Lawn line, running north along Cedar Springs road (street), reaches its furthest point out at Oak Lawn avenue. It then turns eastward, and runs two blocks on Oak Lawn. It then turns back south, and runs two blocks in that direction on Rawlins to Coke. Then it runs an irregular course about two blocks on Coke, Hall, and Dewey, back to Cedar Springs, making a loop, the west side of which is about three blocks long, and the other three sides of which are together about six.blocks long. With the approval of the city, the railway company intends, in case this litigation ends in its favor, to take up the three sides of this loop other than the west side on Cedar Springs, and extend the west side two blocks further on Cedar Springs and north of Oak Lawn avenue to Throckmorton, and then run it east on Throckmorton about four blocks, so that the new track would equal about the removed parts of the loop, and be about two-thirds of a mile'in length. The new track would be double, except the last two blocks on Throckmorton, while the entire loop is single track, and the changes further contemplate a passing track about the middle of the west side of the loop on Cedar Springs.

S. C. Jones and several others, all property and home owners on the streets from *809 which the three sides of the loop are intended to be removed, brought suit to enjoin the company from removing the three sides of the loop or any part thereof, and a temporary restraining order was granted. In due time an answer and motion to dissolve were filed, and before a hearing was had on the motion to dissolve Mrs. Laura X. Chambers and several others, all property owners fronting on the streets north of Oat Lawn, upon which the new track is proposed to be laid, filed another suit for injunction to restrain the placing of the new track on those streets.

These cáses were thereupon consolidated, and the motion to dissolve in the first case was heard along with the prayer for temporary restraining order in the second. The city of Dallas intervened with leave in the consolidated case, so that now we have a ease with four angles; the city and the street railway company, for reasons similar but distinct, seeking to establish the right both to remove the three sides of the loop and make the extensions on north and east, and the property owners on the three sides of the loop seeking to prevent the removal of any existing track, and the property owners on Cedar Springs and Throckmorton north of Oak Lawn seeking to prevent the laying of any other track whether the removal takes place or not. However, as the new track will not be laid unless the old is removed, nor the old removed unless the new is laid, if the contentions of either set of plaintiffs are sustained, it is tantamount to sustaining the contentions of both sets. The contentions of both sets of plaintiffs were denied by the trial court, and they have both regularly appealed to this court.

Prior to 1916 the street railway system of the city of Dallas, comprising about 80 miles of track, was owned and operated by several different independent companies, each owning a few miles of line on certain specified streets which it,was operating under a franchise separate from the franchises under which the other parts of the system were being operated.

At that time there were no ear lines north of Oak Lawn avenue, nor had any franchises been granted to any one of the companies especially authorizing it to operate north of Oak Lawn avenue. At that time the charter of the city of Dallas provided, and still provides, that the city should not have power to grant any street railway company a franchise upon any streets of the city except by ordinance, which ordinance shall not be passed finally until its third reading, and which three readings shall be at three separate regular meetings, the last of which shall, take place not less than SO days from the first, and that no such ordinance should take effect until 60 days after its adoption at its third and final reading, and that if at any time before such ordinance finally takes ef-feet a tertain specified petition should be presented to the board of commissioners they should submit the adoption of the ordinance to a popular vote. The charter also provided, and provides, that the commissioners may submit the ordinance to a popular vote on their own motion. Also at that time subdivision 24 of section 8 of article 2 of the city charter provided that no street railway company should be authorized to lay tracks on or occupy any streets until the owners of a majority of the front feet of property abutting, thereon consented thereto in writing, provided that the entire distance of such proposed line should be considered in determining whether the owners of a majority of the abutting property had consented thereto, and the majority therein required should be a majority of the owners of the entire distance on the continuous line.

At an election held April 4, 1916, there were submitted to the voters of the city of Dallas about nine propositions to amend the said city charter, and the further question whether or not the several street railway companies before referred to should be permitted to sell, lease, or otherwise dispose of their lines, properties and franchises, and whether a franchise should be granted to the existing railways under one ownership, with other provisions not necessary to mention here, and also an electric light ordinance.

The first proposition to amend the charter was whether or not seven certain subsections of section 8 of article 2 of the charter should be amended so as to read as named in the proposition, including that of subsection 7 to read as follows:

“The board of commissioners shall have the power, by ordinance or resolution and without reference to the other franchise provisions. of this charter, to grant the right and to require street railway companies, gas companies, telephone companies and electric light companies, and all other companies or individuals enjoying a franchise now or hereafter from the city, to make and furnish necessary changes in or reasonable extensions of facilities and service in or to any portion of the city (which shall include in the case of the street railway companies, the building of new or additional lines) as in the judgment of the board of commissioners may be necessary, under and subject to the terms and conditions of the franchise then enjoyed by such franchise holder in connection with which the change or extension is to be made, and under such further terms and conditions as the board of commissioners may doom proper, and the board of commissioners shall have power to prevent the making of unnecessary or unprofitable extensions. Railway extensions, double tracks, switches or sidings ordered by the city to be constructed, shall be laid without the necessity of obtaining consents of property owners having property abutting on the streets or alleys to be occupied thereby, and no such consents need be obtained for new franchises for the operation of tracks, switches and sidings already in use at the time of the granting thereof.”

*810 The result oí this election was regularly declared to be in favor of the material propositions referred to and of the street railway ordinances referred to.

In November, 1916, there was regularly submitted to popular vote of the citizens of Dallas a proposed franchise by the city of Dallas to O.

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Bluebook (online)
224 S.W. 807, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 947, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-dallas-ry-co-texapp-1920.