Lovett v. Cronin

245 S.W.2d 519, 1951 Tex. App. LEXIS 1897
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 27, 1951
DocketNo. 4788
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 245 S.W.2d 519 (Lovett v. Cronin) 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
Lovett v. Cronin, 245 S.W.2d 519, 1951 Tex. App. LEXIS 1897 (Tex. Ct. App. 1951).

Opinion

WALKER, Justice.

This proceeding is an appeal from an order of the District Court of San Jacinto County denying a temporary injunction. The appellants are the plaintiffs and the appellees, the defendants.

The defendants are the directors of the San Jacinto County Water Control & Improvement District No. 1. This District lies wholly within the boundaries of San Jacinto County. It was created, and the Defendants were appointed directors of this District, by an order of the State Board of Water Engineers dated June 11, 1951, which granted a petition therefor filed with the Board on May 8, 1951. The creation of the District, and the appointment of defendants, were confirmed by an election held in the District on July 31, 1951. When the order appealed from was passed, the defendants had not canvassed and declared the results of this election, but they have done so since.

The suit is a collateral attack upon the creation of the District, brought by three citizens in their capacity as such, for themselves and others in like case. It is not an appeal from, the order of the State Board of Water Engineers and it is not in quo warranto.

[520]*520Plaintiffs prayed for injunctive relief, temporary and permanent, restraining defendants from canvassing and declaring the results of the election and also, in substance and effect, from'performing their duties as directors of the District; and they prayed further that the order creating the District and the election confirming the District be declared void.

Plaintiffs alleged three grounds for this relief.

First, Plaintiffs alleged that the State Board of Water Engineers had no jurisdiction to create the District because it lay wholly within the limits of the County. Plaintiffs said that such a district must be created by the County Commissioners’ Court. Defendants say that the Board had jurisdiction to act because the petition for creation of 'the District, which was granted as prayed for, requested that the District have the power to provide for the disposal of sewage, and that under Article 7880-3a, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.Statutes, jurisdiction to create a district having this power was vested in the Board. Defendants alleged these facts and swore to their answer, and we assume that the proof on which the trial court acted sustained defendants’ allegations. According to the record the order appealed from was based upon a stipulation concerning the facts, and this stipulation as copied refers to, but does not include, a transcript of the proceedings had in the creation of the District.

Plaintiffs have abandoned this ground for relief.

Second, Plaintiffs alleged that the petition for creation of the District had not been filed with the county clerk. Defendants denied this, and the proof showed that a certified copy of the petition filed with the State Board of Water Engineers was filed with the county clerk on June 21, 1951, with copies of the Board’s order creating the District and copies of the notices of the hearing at which this order was passed. Defendants alleged that the election confirming the creation of the District was ordered on July 2nd, and we assume in support of the order appealed from that this allegation was proved. Thus the petition for creation of the District was on file in the county clerk’s office when the election was ordered, and was available for inspection by the public.

Third, Plaintiffs alleged that the persons who signed the petition for the creation of the District did not own 50% of the value of the lands in the District. This allegation was proved, and the proof showed, too, that the signatories were not a majority of the owners of the land in the District. However, the proof also showed (we so construe the stipulation, in support of the order appealed from) that more than 50 persons owning land in the District resided in the District, and Defendants say that by reason of this fact the number of persons signing the petition complied with the law and that the requirement invoked by the Plaintiffs did not apply. We note that Defendants’ sworn answer alleged that the petition for creation of the District was signed by 71 qualified landowners residing in the District, and there is no disagreement between the parties as to the facts.

Opinion

1. The appeal is not moot, because the Plaintiffs prayed that Defendants be restrained from performing their official duties. Plaintiffs’ prayer was not limited to restraint of Defendants from canvassing and declaring the results of the election.

2. The State Board of Water Engineers had jurisdiction to create the District under the following provisions of Article 7880-3a, Vernon’s Ann.Civ. Statutes: “* * * (6) the duty to hear and determine petitions for the creation of a district proposed to exercise the powers and functions in this Section provided shall, exclusively, be vested in the State Board of Water Engineers of the State of Texas, who shall hear and determine the same under the applicable provisions of Section 5 of Chapter 280 * * Among the “powers and functions in this Section provided” was the following: “That water control and improvement districts * * * may include in their purposes and plans all works, facilities, plants, equipment, and appliances in any and all manner incident to, helpful or necessary to the collection, transportation, [521]*521processing, disposal, and control of all domestic, industrial, or communal wastes, whether of fluids, solids, or composites * * *. The foregoing ends may be accomplished by any and all mechanical or chemical means or processes incident, necessary, or helpful to such purposes, to the end that the public health and welfare may be conserved and promoted and the purity and sanitary condition of the State’s waters protected, effected, or restored.”

Under these provisions, it was immaterial that the District lay wholly within the limits of the county.

The petition for the creation of the District invoked the powers granted to the Board by these provisions because it prayed that the District be given power to provide facilities for the disposal of sewage, and. this petition was granted by the Board.

3. It was not necessary that the signatories to the petition for creation of the District own 50% in value of the lands, within the District.

The governing statute is Article 7880-10, Vernon’s Ann.Civ. Statutes, which provides: “Petition for the organization of a water control and improvement district shall be signed iby a majority in number of the holders of title to the lands therein, and the owners of a majority in value of the lands therein, as shown by the county tax rolls, provided, if the number of such land owners therein is more than fifty, such petition shall be sufficient if same is signed by fifty land owners.”

The matter in issue at this point is the construction of the proviso, which operates as an exception to the rule first declared, and the construction of the proviso depends upon the meaning of “such land owners”. We think that these words refer to persons owning lands in the District (who may be otherwise qualified to sign such a petition); and we therefore construe the proviso as meaning that if there are more than fifty landowners of this sort, the petition need not be signed by more than 50 of these persons. That is, we construe the proviso as making an exception not only to the requirement of a majority in number (which the Plaintiffs concede) but also to the requirement of a majority in value.

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Texas Attorney General Reports, 1956

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245 S.W.2d 519, 1951 Tex. App. LEXIS 1897, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lovett-v-cronin-texapp-1951.