Meaney v. Nueces County Nav. Dist. No. 1

222 S.W.2d 402, 1949 Tex. App. LEXIS 2046
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 16, 1949
DocketNos. 11919, 11920
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 222 S.W.2d 402 (Meaney v. Nueces County Nav. Dist. No. 1) 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
Meaney v. Nueces County Nav. Dist. No. 1, 222 S.W.2d 402, 1949 Tex. App. LEXIS 2046 (Tex. Ct. App. 1949).

Opinion

NORVELL, Justice.

The controlling question presented by this appeal is whether or not the appellee, Nueces County Navigation District No. 1, is authorized to acquire the fee simple title to land (exclusive of minerals and all mineral rights), by condemnation proceedings. The County Court of Nueces County held for the district in two separate cases which have been appealed to this Court. The two appeals were submitted and argued together. Mary Dunn Meaney, appellant in Cause No. 11919, and Helen Dunn, appellant in Cause No. 11920, own adjoining tracts of land, which were condemned by the district.

Appellee’s brief contains a statement of the case which we have examined and find correct. It is as follows:

[404]*404“Appellee is a Navigation District being a governmental agency and body politic incorporated with governmental powers and existing under the laws of the State of Texas. Its boundaries extend to and include all of Nueces County. After an election on October 31, 1922, it was created under Article 3, Section 52 of the Constitution and the General Laws of the State of Texas, Vernon’s Ann.St. On April 23, 1931, Appellee was duly converted to a Navigation District operating under Article 16, Section 59, of the Constitution of the State of Texas (Conservation and Reclamation) and the laws applicable thereto and so exists today.
“The port facilities of Appellee District consist of a main turning basin extending from the Bascule Bridge westward, and the presently existing industrial canal extending from the turning basin westward to Avery Point. These are both deep water projects and Appellee owns the fee of all lands within their bounds. In the original project which was the main turning basin, Appellee District owned the fee of the land and itself dredged and constructed the turning basin. It later conveyed to the United States an easement to dredge within the area, reserving unto itself all incidents- of fee ownership and agreeing to hold harmless the United States in its operations in the basin. The industrial canal from the turning basin to Avery Point is likewise a deep water project under which Appellee District holds fee title to all lands within its bounds, having dredged the canal itself and later having conveyed to the United States an easement to dredge in the canal reserving unto Appellee District all other rights of fee ownership and contracting to hold harmless the United States in its operations just as in the original project.
. “The case here on appeal arises out of a proposed further extension of Appellee’s port facilities from Avery Point westward approximately three and one-half miles to the vicinity of Corn Products Refining Company Plant on the shores of Nueces Bay with a channel and additional turning basin. This will be a shallow water project proposed to a depth of twelve feet and is to be surrounded, as the rest of the harbor facilities are surrounded, by a continuous levee holding out the waters of Nueces Bay for the purpose of preventing silting of the channel from waters of the Nueces River which empties into Nueces Bay.
“In order to obtain sufficient dredged fill or spoil to construct the necessary levee, the channel will be dredged to eighteen feet. The construction of the entire project is at the cost of the Appellee District. In order to get the best bids obtainable, the War Department Corps of Engineers are assisting the Appellee by asking for bids and contracting the work. Funds in the sum of $308,000.00 have by Appellee been turned over to the War Department, for payment to the private contractor who is successful in getting the construction contract. The channel and turning basin is entirely and solely a project of-Appellee District.
“Appellee -holds, by patent from the State Of Texas, the fee of the surface (exclusive of minerals and all mineral rights) of submerged lands in Nueces Bay immediately adjoining and to the northward of the lands of Appellant landowners, Meaney and Dunn. A small, low, sandy spit or peninsula has built up at the mouth of a drainage ditch which drains through a narrow 43 foot opening in a railroad bridge into Nueces Bay on the lands of Appellant Dunn immediately west of and adjoining the lands of Appellant Meaney. The proposed channel is to be constructed on and over the submerged lands in Nueces Bay of which the Appellee District holds fee title, crossing the tip of this sandy spit which constitutes the land in question in this case and in which Appellee has condemned the fee of the surface (exclusive of minerals and all mineral rights).
“In order to protect its channel from silting from the drainage ditch, Appellee proposes to construct a settling basin between -the mouth of the ditch and its channel. This will consist of a levee built immediately south of the channel’s bulkhead line (a building line beyond which docks and other structures may not be built) for the purpose of spreading the flow from the ditch and causing a deposit of silt over a wide area to prevent another peninsula being built up. The levee will contain weirs to prevent the backing of water on the upland. Its construction was found necessary [405]*405to save the great cost of having to mobilize a dredge for the only purpose of removing one shoal instead of the regularly anticipated once per two year maintenance in a levee-protected channel. The entire expense of maintenance is to be at the cost of Appellee District.”

The tracts of land involved are comparatively small, being one tract of 2.09 acres, owned by appellant Meaney, and two tracts of 0.064 and 440 square feet, respectively, owned by appellant Dunn. These tracts, being situated as they are upon a peninsula, are for the most part bounded by lands in which the appellee owns the fee, exclusive of minerals and mineral rights. Certain rights of way for roads were also involved in the condemnation proceedings but there are no issues concerning them raised upon this appeal. As appellants and appellee were unable to agree upon the title or interest that the district should take in the land, condemnation proceedings were instituted. Appellants objected to the commissioners’ awards and the cases were then tried to a jury in the County Court. However, a stipulation was made relating to the amount of damages which provided that appellants Mary Dunn Meaney and Helen Dunn should receive $6,201.12 and $1,721.-82 each, respectively, in the event the lands were condemned. The only issue submitted to the jury was an inquiry as to whether or not the action of the district in seeking to condemn the fee (exclusive of minerals and mineral rights) rather than a perpetual easement, was “arbitrary, unreasonable and a clear abuse of discretion.” Under the stipulation made by the parties, the damages would be the same, regardless of the estate or interest acquired by the district, be it the fee title (exclusive of minerals and all mineral rights) or a perpetual easement.

Insofar as we were able to ascertain upon the argument of this case, the practical difference in appellants’ opinion as to their rights under the judgment of the County Court and a grant of a perpetual easement only, would relate to their right of ingress and egress to the bay, or later to the channel after construction had been completed.

It would seem that the principal question presented by this appeal, that is, the authority of the district to condemn a fee title, has been settled by the case of National Association of Audubon Societies v. Arroyo Colorado Nav.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
222 S.W.2d 402, 1949 Tex. App. LEXIS 2046, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meaney-v-nueces-county-nav-dist-no-1-texapp-1949.