Rockwall County v. Adams

244 S.W. 842, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 1332
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 14, 1922
DocketNo. 8850.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 244 S.W. 842 (Rockwall County v. Adams) 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
Rockwall County v. Adams, 244 S.W. 842, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 1332 (Tex. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

HAMILTON, J.

Under the provisions of the general laws of Texas, Rockwall county voted to issue its bonds for the purpose of constructing and maintaining macadamized roads in that county. The bonds having been issued and sold, and the proceeds having been paid into the county treasury, the Legislature subsequently enacted a special law more or less specifically directing how the funds derived from this bond issue should be expended in constructing and maintaining the roads, and also directing that certain of the roads constructed should extend through the towns of Rockwall, Eate, and Royse. Acts 36th Legislature, c. 67. Construction of the roads was prosecuted under the directions of this amendment, the supervision of the construction being under the commissioners’ court and its advisors, in conformity with the provisions of the law. In the course of the building of one of the roads through the city of Royse, appellant determined to extend it through the property owned by ap-pellees located in that city, said property being of a homestead nature. Having futilely sought to purchase a right of way from ap-pellees through the property, appellant instituted proceedings seeking to acquire it by condemnation. ■ Appellees resisted by filing a plea to the jurisdiction of the court, which was sustained and the suit dismissed. Erom a decree to this- effect, the appeal is prosecuted.

To sustain the judgment of the trial court, appellees proffer an argument which falls into three distinct parts in support of the same number o'f propositions, which may be stated substantially as follows:

(1) The city of Royse is a municipal corporation with more than 1,000, and less than 5,000, inhabitants, and is incorporated under the general laws of Texas. These facts being established by the record and conceded by appellant, appellees argue that the city of Royse has exclusive jurisdiction over its streets and exclusive power to condemn private property within its corporate limits for street and highway purposes, and that Rock- *843 wall county Is clothed with no authority to exercise the power of eminent domain within the corporate limits of Royse.

(2) The proposition is advanced that the special road law of Rockwall county did not deprive the city of Royse of exclusive control over its streets and its right to open, close, and widen highways within its corporate limits, and conferred no authority upon Rockwall county to condemn private property within the corporate limits of said city.

(3) It is contended that, conceding the special enactment of the Legislature, providing for and governing the construction of macadamized roads in Rockwall county, granted to the county the power and right to condemn private property within the corporate limits of the city of Royse, still the right could .be exercised only upon the basis of an order of the commissioners’ court first made and entered by it at a regular or special session of the court, and the suit having been instituted upon a petition which did not allege that such order of the commissioners’ court had been made and entered, the order 'dismissing the ease was proper.

The fact that the city of Royse is a municipal corporation, which the general laws of Texas clothes with the power to exercise exclusive jurisdiction and authority over its streets and confers upon it the power of eminent domain in municipal affairs, constitutes no reason upon which to rest the contention that Rockwall county is without authority to condemn property within the corporate limits of the city of Royse for the purpose of constructing the road through that city in conformity with the designs and plans of the commissioners’ court, and its ad-visors made under the authority of the special road law. The Legislature is the source of whatever municipal authority is bestowed upon the city of Royse, and that authority may be abrogated or qualified by the exercise of the same legislative power which brought it into existence. The municipal power and municipal existence of Royse rest upon general legislative enactment. They are creatures of the general law.

That provisions of a general statute may be qualified or set aside in a given instance for the accomplishment of a particular governmental purpose pursued through a specific prescription of legislative procedure applied by a designated agency is a sound proposition of law, which need be merely stated to refute the contention that certain municipal powers existing perforce of general statutory authority nullify a special legislative enactment, passed for the attainment of such particular governmental purpose.

The operation of the special enactment within the limits of the municipality is not to be affected because of the exclusive power and control of municipal corporations over streets, or because of the right of eminent domain conferred for municipal purposes. The Legislature is not without power to confer the exercise of right of eminent domain upon other agencies by special enactment, to be exercised by such agencies within the territorial confines of the municipality. The grant of such power to, and the exercise of it by, Rockwall county for the purpose of constructing the road through Royse constitute in fact no conflict with, or invasion of, the rights and powers conferred upon Royse by general law to control its streets and condemn private property for municipal uses and purposes. The exclusive control of streets and the power of eminent domain reposed in Royse, for municipal purposes are unimpaired and undisturbed by the provision in the road law for the exercise of eminent domain.

The Rockwall county road law is a special act passed for the accomplishment of a purpose as to which it contains unusual mandatory requirements. It is characterized by the unusual and emphatic feature that the construction of macadamized public roads by Rockwall county is not only authorized, but by its terms particular and mandatory requirements are made for the location and direction of the road involved here. In this respect, as well as in others, the discretion of the functionaries clothed with the control of the work required to be performed is circumscribed by legislative command. Section 13 of the special road law requires that the road be extended through the towns of Rock-wall, Fate, and Royse, and section 15 explicitly makes the building of the road through these towns compulsory. Gammel’s Laws of Texas, vol. 19, 20-8, et seq. This act is an amendment to the road law of Rock-wall county existing at that time, and became effective March 15, 1919. By amenda-tory act an amendment was passed June 18, 1920 (Loc. & Sp. Act a 3G Leg. 3d Called Sess. c. 90), the only purpose of which was to confer upon the commissioners’ court of Rockwall county special authority to occupy any land and to acquire material, etc., for the purpose of building the roads for the building of which the Legislature had already provided. Under this last-named amendment these proceedings were instituted. The amendment reads as follows:

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Related

Adams v. Rockwall County
280 S.W. 759 (Texas Commission of Appeals, 1926)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
244 S.W. 842, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 1332, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rockwall-county-v-adams-texapp-1922.