Kansas City, Mexico & Orient Railway Co. v. City of Sweetwater

131 S.W. 251, 62 Tex. Civ. App. 242, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 199
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 2, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 131 S.W. 251 (Kansas City, Mexico & Orient Railway Co. v. City of Sweetwater) 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
Kansas City, Mexico & Orient Railway Co. v. City of Sweetwater, 131 S.W. 251, 62 Tex. Civ. App. 242, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 199 (Tex. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

SPEER, Associate Justice.

The city of Sweetwater brought this action against the Kansas City, Mexico & Orient Railway Company of Texas to restrain it by injunction from removing its principal offices, machine shops and roundhouse from the city of Sweetwater, and from a judgment in plaintiff’s favor defendant has appealed.

In the view we take of the case it will be altogether unnecessary to notice in detail the many assignments of error presented by appellant. We will content ourselves with the expression of our conclusions of law upon the few issues presented. Many of .appellant’s assignments become immaterial in view of the restricted issues submitted in the court’s charge. Since nearly every paragraph of that charge is itself made the basis of one or more assignments of error, the charge as a whole is here set out:

"Gentlemen of the Jury: 1st. In this case you will have with you the plaintiff city’s third amended original petition for a statement of its cause of action, and the defendant railway company’s second amended original answer for a statement of its grounds of defense.

"2nd. You wilj not consider, however, the clauses and paragraphs in the plaintiff’s third amended original petition which are embraced within the several marks of parenthesis (), as the matters embraced in *250 parenthesis are by the court stricken out from the'said pleading, and are not to be considered by you for any purpose whatever.

"3rd. You are instructed, as the law of this case, that every railroad company chartered by this State, or owning or operating any line of railway in this State, shall keep and maintain permanently its general offices within this State of Texas, at the place named in its charter for the locating of its general offices; and if no certain place is named in its charter where its general offices shall be located and maintained, then said railroad company shall keep and maintain its general offices at such place within this State where it shall have contracted or agreed or shall hereafter contract or agree to locate its general offices for a valuable consideration; and if said railroad company has not contracted or agreed for a valuable consideration to maintain its general office at any certain place within this State, then such general offices shall be located and maintained at such place on its line in this State as said railroad company may designate to be its line of railway. And such railroads shall keep and maintain their machine shops and roundhouses, or either, at such place or places as they may have contracted to keep them for a valuable consideration received; and if said general offices and shops and roundhouses, or either of them, are located on the line of a railroad in a county which has aided said railroad by an issue of bonds in consideration of such location being made, then said location shall not be changed; and this shall apply as well to a railroad that may have been consolidated with another as to those which have maintained their original organization.

"4th. If you believe from a preponderance of the evidence in this case that the Panhandle & Gulf Railway Company, either in its original charter and amendment thereto, designated Sweetwater, the plaintiff, as the place where its general offices were to be located, and that said Panhandle & Gulf Ry. Co. is now the same railway company under the name of the Kansas City, Mexico & Orient Railway Company of Texas, the defendant herein, then in paragraph one of your verdict yon will find that the defendant designated in its charter the plaintiff city as the location of its general offices.

"5th. If you believe from a preponderance of the evidence in this case that the defendant, the Kansas City, Mexico & Orient Ry. Co. of Texas, either under that name or under the name of the Panhandle & Gulf Ry. Co., made and entered into a contract, either in writing or verbal, express or implied, with the city of Sweetwater for a valuable consideration received by said railway company; and that, based upon said consideration so received by said defendant, if any, the said defendant agreed to locate or keep and maintain their general offices, machine shops and roundhouse, or their general offices or machine shops or roundhouse, at said city of Sweetwater, you will find in the second paragraph of your verdict that the defendant, for a valuable consideration received by it, contracted with the city of Sweetwater to locate or keep and maintain its general offices, or its roundhouse, or its machine *251 shops, or all or any part of them that you may so find from a preponderance of the evidence that it did contract to locate or keep and maintain there, if any.

“6th. Implied contracts come within the definition of the term contract, as the word contract is used in this charge, and if established by evidence is as binding as any kind of contract. Law and equity would imply a contract between parties when their acts and transactions reasonably show or would authorize a finding that the minds of the parties met upon an agreement for a valuable consideration.

“7th. Implied contracts, like expressed contracts, when sought to be enforced must be enforced by and between the parties making them, and persons not parties to the contract are not authorized to enforce them by a suit or otherwise; and if in this case you find that the defendant railway company, by its agents did represent to any person or persons in the city of Sweetwater that it would establish its roundhouse and machine shops or either of them at Sweetwater, but that said representations were not made by the defendant through its agents to the city itself through the agents of the said city, towit: the mayor and the city council or some of them, then the city would have no cause of action against the defendant' by reason of such representations; and if you so believe, in the second paragraph of your verdict you will find that the defendant did not make a contract with the plaintiff city to locate, keep or maintain its roundhouse and machine shops in said city. But if you find from a preponderance of the evidence in this case that the defendant through its officers publicly represented to the citizens of Sweetwater that it would locate, maintain or keep its machine shops, roundhouse and general offices, or either of them, in the ‘city of Sweet-water, and that the city of Sweetwater through its mayor or city council learned of such representations made by the defendant’s officers, and that relying upon such representations made by the defendant’s officers, if you believe that they were so made, the said city of Sweetwater, for and in consideration of the promise of the location of said general offices, machine shops and roundhouse or either of them at Sweetwater, and for no other consideration made a concession of a part of South First Street and other street crossings, and such concessions were made at the instance and request of the defendant through its officers, and that the officers of the defendant knew that such concessions were made in consideration of the location of any part or all of said railway improvements, then you will find a verdict for the plaintiff, stating what part of the said improvements the defendant agreed to locate, keep, or maintain in Sweetwater.

“8th.

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Bluebook (online)
131 S.W. 251, 62 Tex. Civ. App. 242, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 199, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kansas-city-mexico-orient-railway-co-v-city-of-sweetwater-texapp-1910.