Mills County v. Brown County

30 S.W. 476, 10 Tex. Civ. App. 356, 1895 Tex. App. LEXIS 86
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 10, 1895
DocketNo. 1293.
StatusPublished

This text of 30 S.W. 476 (Mills County v. Brown County) 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
Mills County v. Brown County, 30 S.W. 476, 10 Tex. Civ. App. 356, 1895 Tex. App. LEXIS 86 (Tex. Ct. App. 1895).

Opinion

FISHER, Chief Justice.

This is an action by Brown County against Mills County to recover the pro rata share of the indebtedness of Brown County due by Mills County as a part of the severed territory of Brown County under the Act of the Twenty-third Legislature, page 124. Judgment below was rendered in favor of Brown County.

Findings of Facts.—We find the following as the facts in the case:

1. That Brown County was created and organized in 1858.

2. Mills County was created and organized in 1887 out of territory taken from Brown, Hamilton, Comanche, and Lampasas Counties.

3. The territory taken from Brown County in the formation of Mills County is comprised within the following metes and bounds, to wit: Beginning at the southeast corner of the Richard Blevins survey, on the Colorado River; thence in a direct line to the southeast corner of survey number 1, Sulphur Fork Iron Works; thence easterly to the south line of the E. Yarbo survey 1550 varas west of the southeast" corner; thence north 82° east to the line between Brown and Comanche Counties north 32° east 110 varas from the southeast corner of the T. H. Cox survey and the northeast corner of the Tunnage survey; thence south 30° east with the line heretofore existing and established between Brown and Comanche Counties and between Brown and Hamilton Counties to the northeast corner of Lampasas County and the southeast corner of Brown County, as said line and corner existed and were established at and before the creation of Mills County; thence west with the line between Brown and Lampasas Counties, as it existed at and prior to the creation of Mills County, to the Colorado River, at the mouth of the Pecan Bayou; thence up said Colorado River with its meanders to the place of beginning, containing 308 square miles, and at the time of the creation of Mills County contained property the total taxable value of which was $760,817.

4. Just prior to and at the time of the creation of Mills County, and before the severance of the.above described territory, the total taxable value of all property in Brown County was $4,370,022, and after the excision of the aforesaid territory to form part of Mills County, the total taxable value of all property remaining in Brown County was $3,376,205.

5. At the time of the creation and organization of Mills County, Brow County was justly indebted in the aggregate sum of $61,899.50.

6. That of said indebtedness with interest, as calculated by the auditor, which is admitted to be correct, estimated according to the taxable values taken from Brown County at the creation of Mills, and *358 the taxable values remaining to Brown would give the ratio found by the court of $17,694.73.

7. That all said indebtedness had been paid by Brown County prior to the institution of this suit.

8. That $9000 of the amount claimed by Brown from Mills was paid by Brown with money raised by taxation, and $8764.73 was paid by Brown County with money borrowed on funding bonds issued by Brown County, in November, 1889, for the purpose of paying said indebtedness.

9. At the time of the organization of Mills County, the items and amounts of the indebtedness of Brown County were as follows:

On court house bonds issued for the purpose of building courthouse..........................................$43,500.00
Bridge bonds outstanding............................... 12,500.00
G. B. Huston, for assessing tax for 1887 ................. 511.73
First class, or jury fund................................ 1,924.50
Third class, or general fund............................. 3,443.27
Total.............................................$61,879.50

On which interest accrued as calculated.

10. That the court house for the erection of which the bonds were issued, at the time Mills County was created, was retained by Brown County, and is now the court house of Brown County, and at the time of the creation of Mills County was of the value of $50,000.

11. That the bridges for which a bonded indebtedness was created were not cut off in the territory taken in the creation of Mills County, but were retained and are in Brown County, and are of the value of $15,000.

12. That the claim of Brown County against Mills County for its pro rata share of the indebtedness of Brown County was presented to the Commissioners Court of Mills County at its February Term, 1889, and said court then refused to allow or audit the same.

13. That on the 4th of March, 1889, Brown County filed suit in the District Court of Mills County against Mills County, and in said court in said cause, which was on the docket of said court number 17, on the 16th day of September, 1889, filed plaintiff’s first amended original petition, which was between the same parties and -for the same cause of action as in this cause, and that defendant, Mills County, filed answer, joining issue on law and facts, and that there was a final judgment rendered in said cause number 47 in the District Court of Mills County at its September Term, 1889, in favor of Brown County and against Mills County. That Mills County appealed said case to the Supreme Court of Texas, and on the 21st day of June, 1892, said court entered judgment reversing and dismissing the same. A motion for a rehearing was filed by Brown County in said Supreme Court, and said motion was by said Supreme Court transferred to the Court *359 of Civil Appeals, and said Court of Civil Appeals overruled said motion. That on the 13th day of March, 1894, the mandate issued out of the said Court of Civil Appeals, Third Supreme Judicial District of Texas, with copies of the judgment of the Supreme Court and the said Court of Civil Appeals, which was filed in the District Court of Mills County on March 16,1894, said court being then in session at its regular March Term, 1894. That the court ordered said cause dismissed in accordance with mandate and decree of the Supreme Court. That said order was entered on the docket of the court, but was not entered in the minutes of said court, and that there is now a motion pending to have said order of dismissal entered nunc pro tune at the September Term, 1894, of said court. In connection with this argument, the plea of lis pendens and res adjudicata in defendant’s answer is hereby referred to as explanatory.

14. The journals of the House of Bepresentatives and the Senate, Twenty-third Legislature, show that the Act of the Twenty-third Legislature of Texas, page 124, chapter 96, entitled “An act to provide for the payment by new counties of their proportionate share of the indebtedness of the older counties from which they were created,” did not upon its passage by said Twenty-third Legislature receive a two-third vote of each house of the said Legislature taken by yeas and nays entered upon the journals.

15. Brown County authorized bringing this suit.

16. That Mills County since its organization has incurred a bonded indebtedness of 832,500, of which $1000 for jail, $24,500 for court house, and $7000 for bridge.

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Related

Mills County v. Brown County
20 S.W. 81 (Texas Supreme Court, 1892)

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Bluebook (online)
30 S.W. 476, 10 Tex. Civ. App. 356, 1895 Tex. App. LEXIS 86, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mills-county-v-brown-county-texapp-1895.