Port Arthur Housing Co. v. City of Port Arthur

181 S.W.2d 1017, 1944 Tex. App. LEXIS 845
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 22, 1944
DocketNo. 4255.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 181 S.W.2d 1017 (Port Arthur Housing Co. v. City of Port Arthur) 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
Port Arthur Housing Co. v. City of Port Arthur, 181 S.W.2d 1017, 1944 Tex. App. LEXIS 845 (Tex. Ct. App. 1944).

Opinion

MURRAY, Justice.

This is a suit for a mandatory injunction, brought by the appellant, Port Arthur Housing Company, against City of Port Arthur to compel the City to furnish water service to a house owned by it, located within the corporate limits of the town of Lake View, Texas, another municipal corporation near the City of Port Arthur. The *1018 plaintiff applied also for a temporary mandatory injunction and upon a hearing before the court, without a jury, upon such application the district court refused to grant the relief prayed for. The appellant has appealed from the order of the trial court denying the temporary mandatory injunction.

The appellant is engaged in the construction of a housing project within the corporate limits of the town of Lake View, which contemplates the erection of 184 dwellings, and all such dwellings when completed will be dependent upon the water system of the 'City of Port Arthur for water for domestic use. The City of Port Arthur has its own water system and for many years has supplied water to residents of the City of Port Arthur and also to a great many houses and establishments outside its own corporate limits. The water lines for its distribution of water within the town of Lake View are not owned by the City of Port Arthur nor by the town of Lake View, but were placed there by the developers of Lake View before it was incorporated.

The appellant, through one of its officers, made written application to the appellee for water service at a completed house in the town of Lake View, enclosing a check for the usual tapping service charged for water service by the City of Port Arthur. The application gave full information as to location of the premises where water service was desired, the type of residence, stated that “compliance would be made with all reasonable rules and regulations of the City of Port Arthur enacted for the protection of its water system.” The appellee refused the application. The appellee, by its ordinance, required an inspection fee for the inspection of the premises before a water connection was established and further required the installation of a drum trap under all bath tubs in the town of Lake View, as well as in the City of Port Arthur, as a condition to delivering water, and the appellant refused to comply with the requirements of the City of Port Arthur in these two respects.

The city of Port Arthur provided water to the municipality of Griffing Park, to Texas Steel Manufacturing Company, the United States Naval Section Base at Sabine Pass, Texas, and others, all outside of its own corporate limits, without requiring compliance with its plumbing code. In such instances, however, the City of Port Arthur made no connections directly to individual houses but delivered water to a master meter. It delivered and sold water to residents of the town of Lake View to individual owners of houses, who complied with the requirements for inspection and installation of bath tub drum traps.

The appellant bases its appeal upon the-following points: First, the refusal of the trial court to issue its temporary mandatory injunction was in legal effect holding that the City of Port Arthur had the legal right to enforce its ordinances regulating sewers and house draining within the corporate confines of another incorporated municipality; second, the refusal of the court to grant its temporary mandatory injunction had the legal effect of holding that the City of Port Arthur had the legal right to contract with the appellant for water service at its house in the town of Lake View upon any conditions or terms the City of Port Arthur saw fit to impose upon appellant; third, since the City of Port Arthur had for a long period of time furnished water to adjacent communities outside the City of Port Arthur the City could not require them to comply with the city’s building or plumbing code regulating house draining, sewerage or plumbing in the separate municipality of Lake View which had its own sewer system and plumbing code; fourth, since the City of Port Arthur was engaged in a proprietary capacity in furnishing water to citizens outside its corporate limits, it cannot impose any rules and regulations upon those living outside of its corporate limits which are unreasonable or arbitrary and do not have a direct connection or relation to the purity and preservation of the water supply of the City of Port Arthur; fifth, the City of Port Arthur has no power to require appellant, or residents of the town of Lake View, to comply with its plumbing code since the town of Lake View has enacted its own plumbing code, with which the appellant has in all things complied; sixth, the town of Lake View owns and operates its own sewer system, which is not connected in any way with the sewer system of Port Arthur, and such a requirement as that for drum traps in the Port Arthur plumbing code has no connection whatever with the purity and preservation of the water supply of the City of Port Arthur, such requirement for drum traps is merely collateral to the operation of the City of Port Arthur water system and cannot legally be made a condition precedent to the city’s *1019 legal obligation to furnish domestic water to the appellant’s house in the town of Lake View; seventh, to require residents of the town of Lake View to pay inspection fees to the City of Port Arthur and to comply with the ordinances of the City of Port Arthur regulating sewers and draining when the town of Lake View has a similar ordinance providing for the imposition of inspection fees on appellant, requiring it to observe certain requirements regarding sewerage disposal and drainage, would in effect place appellant in double jeopardy and require it to comply with two ordinances, both of which are penal in their nature, this being contrary to the Constitution of the State of Texas, and imposing upon appellant a burden never contemplated by law; eighth, the City of Port Arthur has no legal right to refuse to furnish domestic water to appellant upon the basis that its ordinances have not been complied with by the appellant, since said ordinances are upon their face null, void and unconstitutional, and, even if valid, could have no extra territorial operation and effect.

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Bluebook (online)
181 S.W.2d 1017, 1944 Tex. App. LEXIS 845, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/port-arthur-housing-co-v-city-of-port-arthur-texapp-1944.