Kernagan v. City of Ft. Worth

194 S.W. 626, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 397
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 17, 1917
DocketNo. 8275.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 194 S.W. 626 (Kernagan v. City of Ft. Worth) 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
Kernagan v. City of Ft. Worth, 194 S.W. 626, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 397 (Tex. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinions

The city of Ft. Worth, on June 11, 1913, for the benefit of Roach Manigan, a partnership, filed this suit against D. H. Kernagan, and for cause of action alleged that the board of commissioners of said city, acting under the provisions of its charter, had resolved that certain named streets in said city should be paved, and that a certain part of the cost of such paving should be adjudged against the abutting property owners; that thereafter specifications for said work were prepared by the engineer of said city and submitted to the board of commissioners, and by said commissioners were approved and adopted, and bids for said work were duly advertised for, filed, and opened, and the bid of said Roach Manigan, contractors, was by said board accepted as the most beneficial to said city; that said city and said contractors entered into a contract, dated May 23, 1910, for the performance of said work in accordance with the terms of said contract, resolutions, and specifications; that thereafter, by ordinance duly entered, "having first taken all the proceedings and complied with the prerequisites prescribed by law therefor," said city, through said board of commissioners, levied and assessed the cost of said work, as required by law, in favor of said contractors, against said D. H. Kernagan, as owner of certain described property abutting on said streets; that on June 13, 1911, said city of Ft. Worth executed and delivered to said contractors its certain improvement certificate No. 41, describing said indebtedness and property, and stipulating that the said sum so charged and assessed was duly owing to said contractors from said owner and was a lien upon his said property, and that said sum should be paid to said contractors, or their assigns, in three annual installments, the first installment to be due 30 days after the date of such certificate, and the second and third installments due 1 and 2 years, respectively, after said date, the amount and date of maturity of each installment being evidenced by installment coupons attached to said certificate. This certificate provided that, if any installment was paid within 30 days after date of such certificate, it should bear no interest, but, if not so paid, then such as were not paid on or before maturity should bear interest after date at the rate of 6 per cent. per annum; that a failure to pay any installment when due should mature all deferred payments and cause the unpaid installments to bear interest at 8 per cent. per annum. The certificates were made assignable, and included interest as aforesaid, and costs of collection, together with the reasonable attorney's fees when incurred, and that all of such obligations should constitute a personal claim against the owner of such property and be secured by lien on such property superior to all other liens, claims, or titles, except lawful taxes. While several suits were filed, involving the same parties, yet they were consolidated by order of the court and by agreement of the parties, and we will treat the case as if only one suit had been filed.

Defendant filed his plea in abatement, predicated on the contention that plaintiff, as a municipal corporation, had no authority in law to permit Roach Manigan, the real beneficiaries, to file said suit in the city's name, and that any law or ordinance providing for such suit was unconstitutional. The plea in abatement having been overruled, defendant further pleaded by way of general demurrer, special exceptions, which will be hereinafter noted as may become necessary, by general denial, by a plea of the two-year *Page 628 statute of limitation, and by a further plea that the defendant had been given no notice of the purpose of the city of Ft. Worth to have such paving done, and had had no opportunity for a hearing as to the necessity for such paving, or as to whether defendant's property would be enhanced in value by reason of such paving in a sum equal to or in excess of the cost of such paving adjudged against him, or whether or not it would be enhanced in any amount.

By trial amendment, plaintiff pleaded that the paving described in plaintiff's petition was completed and accepted June 13, 1911, as to the property on one street, and on August 8, 1911, as to the property on the other street. By another trial amendment, plaintiff pleaded that the original contract was awarded to the Metropolitan Construction Company, and by it assigned, with the consent of the city of Ft. Worth, to Roach Manigan. It further pleaded that this suit was brought by the city of Ft. Worth under a resolution of the board of commissioners of said city duly passed.

Upon a trial before the court, judgment was rendered for the city of Ft. Worth, for the use of Roach Manigan, a partnership, in the form stated, and for a foreclosure of the special assessment lien. Said judgment further provided that if, upon the sale of said described property, the proceeds thereof should be insufficient to satisfy said judgment, then plaintiff was entitled to an execution against the defendant personally to fully satisfy the judgment rendered. From this judgment the defendant has appealed.

Without attempting to take up and discuss separately the 21 assignments of error in appellant's brief, we will direct our attention to the questions and matters presented which, in our opinion, are material to the proper disposition of this appeal. From the statement of facts it appears that the contract for this paving was originally awarded by the commissioners of the city of Ft. Worth to the Metropolitan Paving Company, that after said award had been made the Metropolitan Paving Company went into the hands of a receiver, and that Roach Manigan, a partnership, purchased the contract from the receiver, and, with the consent of the city of Ft. Worth, completed said paving contract as originally made between the city and the Metropolitan Paving Company. It further appears that in 1912, subsequent to the completion of the work under the paving contract, and the issuance of the improvement certificate which forms the basis of this suit, a corporation was formed under the name of Roach Manigan Paving Company, which took over the assets of Roach Manigan, the partnership. Among other assets was this certificate and right of action. The certificate was assigned by Roach Manigan to the Roach Manigan Paving Company, but it does not affirmatively appear whether said assignment was made before or after the institution of this suit.

B. H. Mason testified for the defendant that he was secretary and treasurer of the Roach Manigan Paving Company, a corporation, successors to Roach Manigan, the partnership, on whose behalf suit was filed, and that the corporation had taken over the assets and affairs of the partnership, and was at the time of the trial the legal owner and holder of the certificate. If the transfer or assignment was made subsequent to the filing of the suit — i. e., pendente lite — then the assignor could further prosecute the suit for the benefit of the assignee, and the assignee would not be a necessary party. Bailey v. Laws, 3 Tex. Civ. App. 529, 23 S.W. 20; Drouilhet v. Pinckard, 42 S.W. 135. Nor in such a case would there be any fatal variance between the allegata and probata as to ownership. Watts v. Johnson, 4 Tex. 311. The certificate was indorsed by Roach Manigan in blank, said indorsement being undated.

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Bluebook (online)
194 S.W. 626, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 397, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kernagan-v-city-of-ft-worth-texapp-1917.