Lurie v. City of Houston

220 S.W.2d 320, 1949 Tex. App. LEXIS 1743
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 24, 1949
DocketNo. 12068
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 220 S.W.2d 320 (Lurie v. City of Houston) 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
Lurie v. City of Houston, 220 S.W.2d 320, 1949 Tex. App. LEXIS 1743 (Tex. Ct. App. 1949).

Opinion

CODY, Justice.

Appellant states that the nature of this proceeding is a suit by appellee to have two wooden frame buildings belonging to [322]*322her, located in the City of Houston, declared serious fire hazards to life and property, and abated by. demolishing' them. Appellant defended on the ground that, aside from being constructed of wood, said buildings could be repaired so as to eliminate any fire hazard, and this without any substantial reconstruction of said buildings. From appellant’s pleadings, it would appear that it is her theory that the real basis of appellee’s suit to have her buildings demolished is the fact that the same are of wooden construction, and were incorporated in fire zone No. 4 of the City of Houston, in 1937. And it is her position that wooden buildings which have been incorporated in a fire zone may lawfully be repaired as long as such repair does not amount to substantially reconstructing same, and that wooden buildings that have been incorporated in -a fire zone cannot be ordered destroyed as public nuisances, nor can they be condemned except upon payment to the owner as private property taken for a public use. In this connection it should be said that it is appellee’s position that the buildings in question are public nuisances irrespective of their wooden construction, and their inclusion in a fire zone, and that same could not be abated except by being destroyed.

On the trial the jury found that both buildings were fire hazards; that the three story building could not be repaired without undertaking repairs resulting in a substantial reconstruction thereof; that the two story building was capable of being repaired so as to eliminate the fire hazard. However, upon appellee’s motion, the court disregarded the jury’s finding that the two story building could be so repaired as being without any support in the evidence, and rendered judgment finding said buildings to be public nuisances as fire hazards and that they could not be rendered otherwise without substantial reconstruction and ordered same to' be 'abated by being destroyed.

It appears that the two buildings in question, along with a third building belonging to appellant, all being located on the same block in the City of Houston, were erected before the section of the city in which they are located became what is called in the record a Negro Section of the city. That appellant moved from said block, and the two buildings which appel-lee seeks to have abated as public nuisances-were rented out as crowded Negro tenements.

Appellant has predicated her appeal on seven points, which as phrased by her read :

1. Where the jury found on substantial evidence that defendant’s wooden buildings could be repaired, it was error for the' Court to grant plaintiff intervenor’s motion to disregard the jury’s finding and-render judgment against the defendant for destruction of buildings notwithstanding the verdict.

2. Wooden buildings having a legal existence, constructed prior to their inclusion into fire zones of a city, could not be destroyed as public nuisances without payment of reasonable compensation and/ or observance of due process of law.

3. Wooden buildings having a legal existence prior to inclusion in the fire zone of a city could not be declared to be a public nuisance and abated by destruction unless such wooden buildings are found as a fact to be more than 50% damaged by rot, deterioration, casualty or dilapidation and cannot be otherwise repaired.

> 4. Pleadings alleging that wooden buildings were public nuisances on the grounds of being fire hazards were insufficient, and defendant intervenor’s exceptions, motion for instructed verdict, motion for judgment non obstante veredicto, for a declarative relief, and motion for judgment on the verdict should have been sustained.

5. Failure to submit proper special issues raised by pleadings and evidence inquiring 'offensively as to the existence or nonexistence of facts alleged to constitute wooden buildings fire hazards and defensively as to repairability so as to remove defects was error requiring reversal and prevented the entry of a valid final judgment.

6. Where the Court failed to give requested definitions and explanations of the meaning of legal and technical terms, the Court’s charge as submitted was a charge [323]*323submitting questions of law and mixed questions of law and fact to the jury and the failure to submit to the jury proper definitions and explanations and the proper component elements of the controlling or ultimate ground of recovery was error requiring reversal.

7. Where plaintiff intervenor recovered judgment for no monetary amount the Court abused its discretion in requiring defendant to execute a $7500 supersedeas or penalty bond payable to the city and such bond was excesrve, and denied equal protection under the law.

Appellee, in addition to answering appellant’s points with several counterpoints, is also prosecuting a cross-appeal, and in that connection urges two cross-points which we will state after we have passed on the main appeal.

It will be noted that most of appellant’s points present mere abstractions. Appel-lee complains of appellant’s disregard of the briefing rules and the resulting difficulty of knowing what appellant is urging. However, appellee has expressly requested that appellant be not required to rebrief. Whether time has been saved by not requiring the case to be rebriefed may be questioned. But with the aid of appellant’s brief we are confident that we have grasped the points which appellant intends to urge as error.

The principal matter which is concretely urged as error by appellant comes to this: That the allegations in appellee’s petition setting up grounds to have appellant’s buildings declared public nuisances, and to have same abated by being demolished, are insufficient to support the special issues which the court submitted to the jury, particularly where the issues as submitted were objected to on the ground that, as submitted, the court could not determine from the jury’s answers which of the grounds charged as nuisances were sustained by the jury, and how such nuisance could be abated short of destruction of the buildings.

This complaint of appellant is sustained by the record.

The following allegations of appellee’s petition were evidently the allegations which the court considered raised the issues which he submitted to the jury. Their substance is, with respect to the two-story building: That the building is extremely dilapidated, rotted and in an unsound condition. That the building is so constructed as to promote the rapid and violent spread of fire throughout all parts of said building. That the tenement rooms are small, crowded, and totally lacking in proper exits. That the hallways are narrow and inadequately lighted. That the electric wiring is extremely bad, and the tenants habitually bridge the fuses. That kerosene, gas and wood stoves are maintained in the building in an unsafe and faulty condition. That the fuses are cracked. That the building has caught fire several times. That the porches and stairs on the second floor are rotted. That the partitions throughout the building are composed either of single board walls or pasteboard. That, “due to the foregoing conditions the said wooden frame building and its occupancy as a tenement is a serious fire hazard to life and property, particularly to the inhabitants of the building.”

The court submitted the entire case to the jury on four special issues.

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Related

City of Houston v. Lurie
224 S.W.2d 871 (Texas Supreme Court, 1949)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
220 S.W.2d 320, 1949 Tex. App. LEXIS 1743, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lurie-v-city-of-houston-texapp-1949.