Richardson v. Lone Star Salt Co.

49 S.W. 647, 20 Tex. Civ. App. 486, 1899 Tex. App. LEXIS 193
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 22, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 49 S.W. 647 (Richardson v. Lone Star Salt Co.) 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
Richardson v. Lone Star Salt Co., 49 S.W. 647, 20 Tex. Civ. App. 486, 1899 Tex. App. LEXIS 193 (Tex. Ct. App. 1899).

Opinion

FISHER, Chief Justice.

This action was brought by the appellant against the appellee to abate certain nuisances in the nature of obstructions in Richardson and Frank streets and Pacific Avenue of the town of Grand Saline. These obstructions were placed in the streets and continued there by the appellee; Judgment below was rendered in favor of appellant to the extent only of abating the obstruction in Richardson Street, and the court declined to render judgment in favor of appellant abating the obstructions in Pacific Avenue and Frank Street.

It appears from the facts that the tract of land upon which the town of Grand Saline is located was originally owned by the appellant, Sam *487 Q. Richardson, and that he sold the part upon which the town was located. The Texas Railway Company laid off the land into lots, blocks, and streets, and had the same platted, and sold lots with reference thereto. And in this connection it is well to say that the facts, in effect, show a dedication of the streets in question to the public. Richardson Street, it seems, was the west boundary line of the town as laid out by the Texas Pacific Railway Company, and Pacific Avenue, Frank Street, and Garland Street were streets running east and west. In February, 1890, the Texas Pacific Railway Company sold to the appellee, the Salt Company, certain lots in blocks 17, 18, 7, and 8, upon which they subsequently erected their salt works. These lots were sold with reference to the plat of the town of Grand Saline as prepared by the Texas Pacific Railway Company.

The appellant, Richardson, laid out an addition to the town commencing on the west of Richardson Street and extending west. This addition was laid out into blocks, lots, and streets, and the streets were made to conform to- those that had been previously laid out by the Texas Pacific Railway Company. In other words, Garland Street, Frank Street, and Pacific Avenue were extended on west through Richardson’s addition, the same width as in the Texas Pacific addition, and forty feet was by the appellant added to Richardson Street, so as to make that street eighty feet wide. When the addition was laid out it was platted, and the appellant testifies that it was recorded in the records of Van Zandt County and was of record when the defendant bought of the railway company.

The facts show that Richardson Street and Pacific Avenue were obstructed by the defendant by constructing thereon a large tank of water, and that- a part of defendant’s buildings are in Pacific Avenue, and that avenue has also been used by the defendant as a woodyard, and that defendant has obstructed Frank Street by placing wood therein and by building part of its works across it. The business part of the town of Grand Saline is east of the property owned by the appellant, known as Richardson’s addition^ and that, before these obstructions were placed in the streets by the appellee, Frank Street was the main thoroughfare of the town coming from the west. The appellee commenced to place obstructions in the street about 1891, and Frank Street was finally obstructed in the year 1895.

The facts show that the appellant never, in any manner, consented or agreed to the placing of these obstructions in the street, and the evidence clearly shows that such obstructions have resulted in a depreciation of the value of the lots in his addition.

The appellant expresses no dissatisfaction as to so much of the judgment as abates the nuisance in Richardson Street, but contends that the obstructions in Pacific Avenue and Frank Street should have been ordered removed.

The court below gave the following charge:

“If you believe from the testimony that, at the time the original plant of the defendant company was laid out and the construction thereof com *488 menced, the plaintiff knew that said plant was about to be or was being constructed so as to obstruct the streets of Grand Saline mentioned in plaintiff’s petition, and that the plaintiff made no objections thereto, and that said plant was so constructed by the defendant at a large expenditure of money without objection by the plaintiff, and that defendant would not have so constructed its said original plant had plaintiff objected thereto, and that said plant, as originally contemplated and constructed partly on said streets, was of a permanent character, and that additions thereto were subsequently made at a large expenditure of money on the part of defendant, and that the plaintiff knew of said extensions at the commencement of or during their erection and still made no objection thereto until after said plant had been completely constructed as it existed at the institution of this suit, and that subsequently to said constructions differences arose between the defendant and plaintiff which caused plaintiff to withdraw his acquiescence and consent to the construction and maintenance of said plant, and that said plant can not be reconstructed by the defendant without the expenditure of a large sum of money, then you are instructed that the plaintiff can not recover herein on his claim for abatement of the obstructions of the streets of Grand Saline caused by the construction of said plant on said streets.”

This charge is complained of by an assignment of error, and we agree with the appellant that the charge is unwarranted by the facts in the record. The only evidence bearing upon this question is that the appellant may have known and evidently did know that the obstructions were being placed in the streets by the appellee, and that some of them were of a costly nature.

There is-no evidence in the record whatever as to any act, word, or conduct upon the part of the appellant that would have induced or lead the appellee to believe that the appellant acquiesced in or consented to the erection of the nuisances. He testifies positively that he did not consent, and in this he is not contradicted, and the only fact whatever bearing upon this question is that he did not formally protest and he remained silent during the time that the obstructions were being placed in the streets. There was no evidence whatever of acquiescence independent of the silence of plaintiff and some delay in invoking a remedy to abate the nuisance.

Under the present statutes of this State, it is clear that no right in the obstruction of a public street can grow up on th'e ground of limitation, for the statute in such a ease expressly declares that limitation shall not run. The appellee must have known when it placed the obstructions in the streets, they being in the nature of a public nuisance, that as against the rights of the public no rights could ripen in it by the lapse of time, and when these encroachments were made, the appellee must have known that it was a wrongdoer and violator of the law, which not only affected the rights of the public in their easement in the street, but also the rights of any individual whose interests were peculiarly affected by reason of the obstruction; and that, if such was the case, the individual would have *489 the same right as the public to abate the nuisance, and it could no more assert the defense of limitation in such a case than it could if the remedy had been invoked by the public.

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Bluebook (online)
49 S.W. 647, 20 Tex. Civ. App. 486, 1899 Tex. App. LEXIS 193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richardson-v-lone-star-salt-co-texapp-1899.