Mudge v. Hughes

212 S.W. 819, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 754
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 22, 1919
DocketNo. 6241.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 212 S.W. 819 (Mudge v. Hughes) 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
Mudge v. Hughes, 212 S.W. 819, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 754 (Tex. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

MOURSUND, J.

Appellants filed suit in the district court of Bexar county in and for the Forty-Fifth judicial district of Texas against appellees, A. A. Hughes, who resides in said Bexar county, and E. F. Rawson, who resides in Cameron county, Tex., alleging, in substance, as follows: That appellants respectively own certain tracts of land, describing the same, situated in Hidalgo county, Tex.; that said tracts of land are situated within the semi-arid district of Texas, where the natural rainfall is insufficient to produce crops; that they owned, and still own, water rights appurtenant to their respective tracts of land entitling them to be supplied with water from an irrigation plant owned by the Valley Reservoir & Canal Company, a cor *820 poration duly incorporated under tlie laws of Tesas, as a public service irrigation corporation, which corporation bad duly conveyed to appellants said water rights; that said conveyances embodied contracts between appellants and the’said Valley Reservoir & Canal Company running with the land, the stipulations of said contracts setting forth the fixed charges and other rates to be charged for supplying water from said irrigation plant; that afterwards receivers had been appointed of the property of the Valley Reservoir & Canal Company, including said irrigation system, by the district court of Cameron county, Tex., and that the said appellees had been appointed said receivers; that ap-pellees were unlawfully mating certain demands' upon appellants, and requiring appellants to comply with said unlawful demands as conditions precedent to allowing appellants to enjoy their said easements during the year 1919; that each and all of said demands were unreasonable; that appellees were unlawfully withholding from appellants the enjoyment of their said easements, to wit, their said water rights, because of the refusal of appellants to comply with said unlawful demands.

Among the unlawful demands, as,alleged by appellants, was one requiring them to pay to appellees the amounts of the fixed charges on each and every acre of their lands that appellees' claimed had accrued prior to the time of the appointment of any receivers by the said district court, being the fixed charg-provided by their said contracts with the said Valley Reservoir & Canal Company for the years 1914, 1915, and 1916, which said fixed charges appellants alleged they did not owe, and were in dispute between them and the said Valley Reservoir & Canal Company prior to the appointment of any receivers of the property of the said Valley Reservoir & Canal Company, and which were in litigation as to all of the appellants, except appellant Paschen, in the district court of Hidalgo county, Tex., and the district courts of said Bexar county prior to any appointment of receivers of the property of the said Valley Reservoir & Canal Company.

Another was a demand that appellants pay to appellees the sum of $5 per acre on each and every acre of their said lands for the purpose of making permanent betterments in the said irrigation system, - and to pay one-half of the salaries of appellees as receivers of the property of the said Valley Reservoir & Canal Company during the year 1919, and this over and above the charges made for supplying water.

Appellants further alleged that the appel-lees, defendants, were also discriminating against appellants in favor of others who may have complied with said demands by a certain date by undertaking not to allow appellants the enjoyment of their said easements in the event that the supply of water of said irrigation system should be exhausted by those who complied with said demands by said date, even though appellants should- comply with said demands after said date, that is to say, appellees were giving a preference to those who should comply with said demands by said date.

Appellants further alleged that all of said demands as well as the said preference were unreasonable and unlawful.

Appellants alleged that the time was right at hand when the enjoyment of their said easements was necessary to enable them to make crops on their said lands during the year 1919; and unless they were allowed at once the enjoyment of their water rights they would be deprived of the beneficial enjoyment of their lands during the year 1919, whereby they would suffer great and irreparable losses, for which they had no adequate remedy at law.

Appellants offered to pay to appellees in advance the fixed charges stipulated in their water contracts with the said Valley Reservoir & Canal Company, to wit, $4 per acre on each and every acre of land owned by all the appellants other than appellant Paschen in accordance with their said water contracts and $3 an acre on each and every acre owned by appellant Paschen in accordance with his said contract; and they offered, further, to pay to appellees in advance the said charge of $5 per acre demanded by appellees for the purpose of making permanent betterments in and on said irrigation system, and to pay on the salaries of said receivers in case the court should so require, and to comply with any and all reasonable rules and regulations that appellees had prescribed or might prescribe as to supplying them with water to irrigate their said lands from said irrigation system, and they offered to do any and all things they ought in equity and good conscience to do.

Appellants prayed for the issuance of a preliminary injunction restraining and prohibiting appellees from withholding from them the enjoyment of their said easements until appellants should comply with said unreasonable and unlawful demands during the pendency of the suit; and they prayed that, on final hearing, the court adjudicate each and all of said demands of appellees to be unreasonable and unlawful, and that a peremptory writ of mandamus issue compelling appellees to permit appellants to enjoy their said easements, to wit, their said water rights, in accordance with their said contracts, and that the appellees be perpetually enjoined and prohibited from requiring appellants to comply with said unreasonable and unlawful demands as a condition preced *821 ent to appellants’ being allowed to enjoy their said water rights. Appellants also pray for general relief.

Appellees first interposed a plea to the jurisdiction of the court to hear and determine the controversy between appellants and ap-pellees in substance as follows: That they had been duly appointed by the district court of Cameron county receivers of the property of the Valley Reservoir & Canal Company, including the irrigation system of said corporation, in a suit numbered 3073 on the docket of said court, wherein the American National Insurance Company and the San Antonio Loan & Trust Company were plaintiffs, and the Valley Reservoir & Canal Company, John Closner, W. F. Sprague, and others were defendants, entitled American National Insurance Company et al. v. Valley Reservoir & Canal Company et al., and were duly authorized by the order of said district court to continue the operation of said irrigation system, but under orders of the court; that they were operating and managing said irrigating system under orders of said court, and that they were making said demands alleged by appellants under an express order of said court, a copy of which order they attached to their said plea to the jurisdiction and made the said copy a part of said plea.

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Bluebook (online)
212 S.W. 819, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 754, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mudge-v-hughes-texapp-1919.