Quisenberry v. Mitchell

292 S.W. 160, 116 Tex. 378, 1927 Tex. LEXIS 98
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 9, 1927
DocketNo. 4425.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 292 S.W. 160 (Quisenberry v. Mitchell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Quisenberry v. Mitchell, 292 S.W. 160, 116 Tex. 378, 1927 Tex. LEXIS 98 (Tex. 1927).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Judge HARVEY

delivered the opinion of the Commission of Appeals, Section A.

The Honorable Court of Civil Appeals for the Second Supreme Judicial District has duly submitted certified questions hérein as follows:

“Certified Questions.

“To the Honorable Supreme Court of Texas:

“In this case R. G. Quisenberry and some forty-nine other citizens and alleged property holding taxpayers, filed suit in the District Court of Baylor County for an injunction to restrain the Commissioners Court of that county from using any part of the funds, derived from a sale of the bonds voted at an election held in the county on March 15, 1924, for the purpose of con *381 structing and improving a certain designated highway. It was alleged that the Commissioners Court, prior to the election, on, to-wit, February 5, 1924, issued a notice of the election. The petitioners alleged that one of the highways mentioned in the order of election to be constructed, maintained and operated was the one “from the courthouse at Seymour on State Highway No. 24 through Westover to the east line of Baylor County.” They alleged that this highway was also known as the FFF Highway, and had been named Highway No. 28, but that prior to the order of election said highway had been designated by the State Highway Department as Highway No. 24; that this designation was known generally to the citizens and property holding voters of Baylor County prior to and at the election held on March 15, and that such voters relied on the designation in the order of election of this highway as one to be constructed and improved, and that the order designating this highway as one to be constructed, maintained and operated with funds derived from the bond election constituted a contract on the part of the Commissioners Court that it would be so constructed, maintained and operated. They further alleged that more than a year after the election the Commissioners Court entered an order locating and establishing State Highway No. 24 from the town of Seymour to the east line of Baylor County, and directed that said road, thus established, should be constructed along lines different from the old State Highway 24, and that said new route, as located by the Commissioners Court on March 16, 1925, varied from the old highway so as to make many of the property holding taxpayers and voters who lived along Highway 24 as it was before the change inaccessible to the designated new highway; that Highway 24, as it was estábil shed and designated before the election and as established and designated after the election, radically differed in their routes and were from one to seven miles apart. Plaintiffs alleged that they and others similarly situated were irreparably damaged by said proposed change, and would be greatly inconvenienced thereby.

“The defendants answered that on September 1, 1923, the State Highway Commission designated and numbered the State Highway System and submitted to the Federal Bureau of Public Roads the State highways to be included in the Federal aid or 7 % system. The highway from Mineral Wells via" Jacksboro, Graham, Olney and Seymour to Benjamin was included in this Federal aid system and under the new numbering of the highways this highway carried and now carries the new designa *382 tion of Highway No. 24; that on October 12, 1923, the Secretary of Agriculture advised the Texas State Highway Department that the Federal aid system for Texas had been approved and included in this system was said Highway No. 24, and the Secretary of Agriculture described said Highway No. 24 as follows: ‘From Mineral Wells via Jacksboro, Graham, Olney and Seymour to. Benjamin’; that said Secretary’s letter of October 12, .1923, further stated: ‘It is recognized also that the final location on which shall be constructed each route or portion of route between the control points named thereon, as above, shall be matter for determination later as locations are made and other information which should govern develops and may not necessarily follow the location between these control points as shown on maps that are made by the State. * * * The approval of routes on the system of Federal aid highways submitted by a State as touching certain specified control points, is not to be construed as approval for construction on the location shown on the map between such control points, but such location for construction shall be subject to later determination in the light of location surveys which may develop. * * * The designation of this Highway No. 24, as well as all others, is only made to pass through certain specified control points, which in this case are Mineral Wells, Jacksboro, Graham, Olney, Seymour and Benjamin. The location between these control points is not made until after location surveys have been made.’

“The defendants further alleged that the highway as designated by the Commissioners Court on March 16, 1925, was some five miles shorter, from Seymour to Westover, than the FFF Highway, which the plaintiifs claimed to have been designated as Highway No. 24 before the election. It was further alleged that the construction of the new highway would cost some $90,000 less than the construction of the highway for which plaintiffs contended. The defendants further specially denied that there was at the time of said bond election, or at the time of the filing of the answer, any lawful known road known as the Seymour and Westover road, or that there is any lawful road of any name or without a name that runs from Seymour to Westover; or that there is any road or highway known or designated or recognized by the State or Federal Highway Departments between the town of Seymour and the town of Westover other than the said Highway No. 24, passing through the control points of Mineral Wells, Jacksboro, Graham, Olney, Seymour and Benjamin.

*383 “The pleadings for both parties are voluminous, but we believe we have stated the issues involved.

“The evidence shows that a large number of citizens and other property holding taxpayers in that part of Baylor County understood and believed at the time of the bond election that the FFF Highway, the one that the plaintiffs claimed was then designated as State Highway No. 24, had been so designated by the State Highway Department.

“Defendants’ witness, H. E. Conklin, testified that he was a maintenance superintendent with the State Highway Department; that his duties were to oversee the maintenance, to employ and discharge men in the maintenance work, to watch over the welfare of the road and the equipment of the State Highway Department, to check up the payrolls, and to purchase equipment and material; that he was acquainted with the highway from Mineral Wells to Benjamin; that the number of that highway is 24; that he received notice that it was so numbered in December, 1923, and that the designation had been made by the State Highway Commission; that under his direction, junction signs at the crossings of the highways were put up on the old highway on March 20, 1924; that in so marking the old highway he did not mean thereby to permanently designate the old highway as No. 24, but to designate it only for the purpose of temporary maintenance; that the only reason he did not put the markers on this highway sooner was for lack of sufficient help; that he had done some work on this highway, for the Highway Department, some years ago.

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Bluebook (online)
292 S.W. 160, 116 Tex. 378, 1927 Tex. LEXIS 98, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/quisenberry-v-mitchell-tex-1927.