Lower Nueces River Water Supply District v. Cartwright

274 S.W.2d 199, 1954 Tex. App. LEXIS 2334
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 1, 1954
Docket12783
StatusPublished
Cited by46 cases

This text of 274 S.W.2d 199 (Lower Nueces River Water Supply District v. Cartwright) 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
Lower Nueces River Water Supply District v. Cartwright, 274 S.W.2d 199, 1954 Tex. App. LEXIS 2334 (Tex. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

NORVELL, Justice.

The court below declared the Act of the Legislature creating Lower Nueces River Water Supply District null and ineffective for the stated reason, “that the boundaries of the * * * District do not close and do not encompass a complete body of land and said District is not, therefore, legally created and does not legally exist.”

The correctness ' of this holding is the principal question raised upon this. appeal. Numerous other matters are raised and discussed in the brief, many of which in our opinion fall outside the power of appellees to justiciably raise, and, considering the parties to this suit, beyond the authority of the Court to properly adjudicate.

Plaintiffs below were Holman Cartwright and twelve others who own land which will be inundated if the proposed Wesley Seale *201 dam and reservoir are constructed by the Lower Nueces River Water Supply District. They, as property owners, seek to prevent the taking of their lands by the district under the power of eminent domain. The defendants named were Lower Nueces River Water Supply District, hereinafter-referred to as the “District”, and the five individuals making up its Board of Directors.

A number of additional parties intervened, among them being A. P. McMurtry, who does not allege that he owns property which the District may take or destroy in building the proposed dam, but says that he is a taxpayer and water user within the District and the City of Corpus Christi. He simply adopts the allegations of the plaintiffs’ petition. In our opinion, this' intervention neither enlarges nor restricts the scope of the litigation. The same is' likewisé true of the intervention of Dolph Briscoe and some seventeen others who describe themselves as owners of land within the watershed of the Nueces River and within the boundaries of Nueces River Conservation and Reclamation District, hereinafter sometimes referred to as the “Reclamation District”, a political subdivision of the State created by the Legislature in 1935, Acts 44th Legislature, First Called Session, p. 1660, Article 8280-115, Vernon’s Ann.Tex.Stats. These interveners assert that they are interested in the subject matter of the suit and for the most part adopt the allegations of plaintiffs’ petition.

The holders of .some, of the negotiable bonds issued by the Lower Nueces ■ River Water Supply District, namely, Merchants and Farmers Bank of Weatherford, Texas, and William H. Patton of Dallas, Texas,, also intervened and asserted that such District was and is a validly created municipal organization.

In addition to the question of the validity of the District, two additional questions of substance are raised, namely, Does the District possess the power and authority to condemn lands lying without and beyond its boundaries, and, if such power be recognized as a general proposition, does the' District possess the power to condemn lands lying within the Nueces River Conservation and Reclamation District? While the parties below evinced some willingness to litigate the validity and extent of the rights of the City of Corpus Christi in and to the waters of the Nueces River, we do not construe this suit as one to determine the validity, priority or extent of such water rights. The City of Corpus Christi is not a party to this suit, nor does any party plaintiff or intervener allege a threatened abridgment of or encroachment upon .any specifically described right held by him in and to the waters of the Nueces. Some further detailed discussion of this point is deemed appropriate, but essentially "this suit involves the authority of the District to condemn land under the power of eminent domain.

Obviously, if the District has no legal existence, it has no authority to take plaintiffs’ land. We therefore.examine the trial court’s findings that the'boundaries of the District do not close. ■ Appellant Lower Nueces River Water Supply District includes within its limits the- greater part of the City of Corpus Christi and was created by an Act of the 51st.Legislature, Acts 1949, ch. 159, p., 326, Article 8280-134, Vernon’s Ann.Tex.Stats.,, which sets out the following boundaries:

“Beginning on the southwesterly-shoreline of Corpus Christi Bay at its intersection with the centerline of Alameda Drive extended;
“Thence,' Southwest and northwest along the centerline of Alameda Drive to its intersection with the centerline of Sunshine-Airline Road;
“Thence, Southerly along the center-line of Sunshine-Airline Road to its intersection with the centerline of Lexington Boulevard;
“Thence, In a northwesterly direction along the centerline of Lexington Boulevard crossing the' centerline of Highway 286 Chapman Ranch Road and continuing along the centerline of' Lexington Boulevard and along an extension of said Lexington Boulevard' *202 m a northwesterly direction to an intersection with the centerline of Highway-9 at- the centerline of County Road No. 41, said extension of Lexington Boulevard being shown on ‘Nueces County Highway Map prepared by the Nueces County Engineering Department and dated Revised June, 1947’.
“Thence, In a northwesterly direction along the centerline of Highway 9 to an intersection with the west line of W. W. Walton Tract and the east line of Antoine Ocker Tract, being on the west line of Range 6, Section 8 and the east line of Range 5, Section 8, of the Kinney Sections;
“Thence, North along the line forming the west line of Range 6, Section 8 and the east line of Range 5, .Section 8, of the Kinney Sections, and crossing Tule Lake to a point on the south bank of Nueces River;
. “Thence; In an easterly direction' along the south bank of the Nueces River to the west shoreline of Nueces Bay;
“Thence, In a generally southerly and easterly direction along the westerly and southerly shoreline of Nueces Bay to its junction with the northerly and westerly shoreline of Corpus Christi Bay near U. S. Highway 181;
“Thence, In a generally southerly direction along the southerly and westerly shoreline of Corpus Christi Bay to the point of beginning;
“Also;
“All those certain tracts and parcels of land situated in Nueces County, Texas, described in Volume 293, page 3'33 of the Deed Records of Nueces County, Texas, and being described as follows, to wit:
“Second Tract:
“All of Fractional Section 148, lying west of the St. Louis, Brownsville &■ Mexico Railroad Company’s right-of-way, of the F. Z. Bishop Subdivision of the Weil Ranch, containing 283.46 acres, according to the map of said subdivision of record in the Map Records of Nueces County, Texas.
“Third Tract:
“All.of Fractional Section 147, lying west of the St. Louis, Brownsville & Mexico Railroad Company’s right-of-way, of the F. Z. Bishop Subdivision of the Weil Ranch, containing 14.08 acres, according to the map of said subdivision of record in the M.ap Records of Nueces County, Texas, aggregating in both tracts 297.54 acres of land.”

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Bluebook (online)
274 S.W.2d 199, 1954 Tex. App. LEXIS 2334, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lower-nueces-river-water-supply-district-v-cartwright-texapp-1954.