Matagorda County Drainage Dist. No. 5 v. Borden

195 S.W. 308, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 526
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 12, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 195 S.W. 308 (Matagorda County Drainage Dist. No. 5 v. Borden) 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
Matagorda County Drainage Dist. No. 5 v. Borden, 195 S.W. 308, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 526 (Tex. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

GRAVES, J.

This is the second appeal to this court in this "litigation over the same subject-matter and between the same parties. The first appeal, reported in 181 S. W. 780 (Matagorda County Drainage District No. 5 v. Borden, et al.), was from an order of the district judge granting a temporary injunction in this case, said order and judgment having been affirmed in this court in an opinion reported in the cited volume of the Southwestern Reporter. The case was later, at the January, 1916, term of the district court of Matagorda county, tried on its merits upon an amended petition filed by appellees against appellants seeking a perpetuation of the temporary injunction formerly granted them. The court upon this final trial rendered judgment for appellees against appellants perpetuating the temporary injunction, and the present appeal is from that final judgment.

This amended petition, though slightly different in such minor and unimportant respects as omitting the county judge as a party, the allegations against the sale of the drainage district bonds, and the prayer for damages, was, in so far as it sought relief against the damaging of appellees’ property known as the Mad Island Pasture, a mere amplification of the original petition, the allegations being, however, much more specific and complete.

The statement of the case as made by this court on the former appeal, as set out on pages 780 and 781 of 181 S. W. was as follows :

“The appellees sue as legal owners of a large body of pasture land, 4,962 acres of which are within Matagorda Drainage District No. 5 and 7,057 acres adjoining said drainage district. The suit is against the drainage district and its trustees or commissioners and a firm of contractors who had entered into a contract with said commissioners to construct certain ditches in said district for the purpose of draining it. The injunction was sought for the purpose of restraining the construction of said ditches, upon the ground that if they were constructed in accordance with the plans and specifications prepared by the engineer of the drainage district, and which defendants were about to carry out, plaintiffs’ land within and without said district would be greatly damaged by the overflow of water drained from said district and cast upon plaintiffs’ land by the contemplated ditches. The damage that it is claimed will accrue to plaintiffs’ land by the construction of the ditches is alleged to be $50,000. It is further alleged that the defendant drainage district has no funds on hand and none which are available out of which to compensate plaintiffs for the damages that it will cause them by the construction of said ditches, and that the district cannot raise the money by taxation to pay such damages, because it has already levied the full amount of taxes which it is authorized to levy by the Constitution and laws of this state, and the taxes so levied are already set apart for the redemption of the bonds issued to provide the necessary funds to pay for the construction of the drainage ditches and the survey and preparation of plans for the drainage system for said district; all of the proceeds of the sale of said bonds being' required for said purposes. The petition prays that defendants be enjoined from the construc *309 tion of said ditches until plaintiffs have been adequately, compensated for the injury and damages that will be caused plaintiffs’ property by their construction.”

The most substantial and material change in the positions of the parties in the two trials for injunction were that in the one from which this appeal is taken the appellants sought to bring themselves within the rules of law stated in this court’s opinion upon the first appeal by making tender, in their supplemental answer to appellees’ amended petition for injunction, of payment for the right of way across appellees’ lands, and claiming that, as a quasi public corporation and under the express provision of the drainage law (R. S. art. 2590), the drainage district had the right of eminent domain, and the consequent authority to condemn the lands for the purposes sought, and asking the district court in this suit for injunction to order the condemnation and valuation of the lands, and offering to pay the full amount found when that had been done. A special exception directed against this part of said answer, on the ground that that court .was wholly without jurisdiction to so condemn said lands and assess damages, was sustained by the court. This action is complained of under the thirteenth assignment, and, since it raises the question of the court’s jurisdiction to grant the only material additional right over what was involved in the former hearing and the appeal therefrom — that is, the alleged right to have the land condemned and valued through that court — it will be first discussed.

We think appellants mistook their forum, and must overrule their contention. The section of the drainage law invoked (Vernon’s Say les’ Statutes, art. 2590), granting the drainage district the right of eminent domain for the purpose of condemning and acquiring the right of way to lands for its uses, provides for its exercise in a precise and particular manner, and evidently in that manner alone, as follows:

“All such condemnation proceedings shall be instituted under the direction of the drainage commissioners, and in the name of the drainage district, and the assessing of damages shall be in conformity to the statutes of the state of Texas for condemning and acquiring the right of way by railroads.”

Now, when the statutes “for condemning and acquiring the right of-way by railroads” are looked to, only one article is found, to wit, art. 6531, Vernon’s Say les’ Statutes, which could possibly confer this jurisdiction upon the district court, and that is a special statute, apparently limited to the particular instance of railway companies sued in trespass to try title to recover possession of a railway right of way, and reading as follows :

“When any railroad company is sued for any property occupied by it for railroad purposes, or for damages thereto, the court in which such •suit is pending may determine all matters in ■dispute between the parties, including the condemnation of the property, upon petition or cross-bill asking such remedy by defendant, but the plea for condemnation shall be an admission of the plaintiff’s title to such property.”

While under this .article, when properly invoked in the particular class of cases therein contemplated, a district court, having already acquired jurisdiction, could condemn land and award damages, as an incident to the suit in trespass to try title, for the purpose of completing its jurisdiction and determining all matters there in dispute between the parties (Rabb v. Canal Co., 62 Tex. Civ. App. 24, 130 S. W. 916), it is from its terms evident that it did not confer general jurisdiction for the condemnation of lands upon that court, but seems to have restricted the exercise of such jurisdiction to the particular class of cases where the railroad had been sued for, or for damages to, property already occupied by it.

Nor ido we think the provision in article 2590 of the drainage law, that “the assessing of damages shall be in conformity to the statutes * * * for condemning and acquiring the right of way by railroads,” was meant to refer to this single article.

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195 S.W. 308, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 526, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matagorda-county-drainage-dist-no-5-v-borden-texapp-1917.