Sayles v. City of Abilene

290 S.W. 239
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 3, 1926
DocketNo. 237. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 290 S.W. 239 (Sayles v. City of Abilene) 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
Sayles v. City of Abilene, 290 S.W. 239 (Tex. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

' PANNILL, C. J.

Inasmuch as this appeal presents the question of the sufficiency of the petition filed by appellant, as plaintiff, in the district court, it will be necessary to make a detailed statement of the' plaintiff’s petition and the grounds relied on by the appellee to show its insufficiency. It is believed that this can be done, however, in substance, without setting out in full either the petition or the several demurrers urged thereto. The purpose of the suit is for specific performance of a contract entered into between the board of commissioners of the city of Abilene and appellant. The petition alleged that the appel-lee is a municipal corporation, operating under a special charter, granted to it by the Legislature. Among other powers given to said city by its charter was a power to sell any real estate or personal property owned by it. By appropriate allegations the execution of the contract sued upon was shown to have been made in accordance with the law governing the execution of contracts by a municipal corporation. The contract is set out in full in the petition, and no question is made as to its form or manner of execution, and, in substance, it provides for the sale by said city to appellant of certain lands situated in Taylor county, Tex., and described as follows:

“West one-half of section 2, blk. 5, T. & P. R. R. survey, known as the Smallwood land, approximately 400 acres.
“The south one-half of section 10, blk. 3, S. P. R. R. Co. survey, 320 acres.
“Also such parts of the hereinafter described lands heretofore purchased by said city, the portions or parts of said lands sold to said Sayles being the lands not included within the Lake Abilene and situated above the water level of the proposed maximum capacity of Lake Abilene, and the said city reserves from all the hereinafter named lands a strip of land 100 ft. wide around the water level at maximum capacity of said lake, and it is understood and agreed that all the intervening spaces between the water level of said Lake Abilene and the lands hereby sold shall be used for roadway purposes only.
“(1) A part of blk. 4, T. & P. R. R. survey, 176 acres, originally purchased by said city from R. L. Hill.
“(2) A part of the Louis Sousie pre-emption survey of 85 acres, originally purchased by said city from R. L. Hill.
“(3) A part of the Mary Cranfill pre-emption survey of 132 acres, purchased by said city from W. H. Knight.
“(4) A part of the Samuel Andrews survey No. 117, of 415 acres, originally purchased by said city from G. L. Miller.
“(5) A part of the Samuel Andrews survey No. 117, of 683 acres, originally purchased by said city from A. Young.
“(6) The said city reserves such land as it desires out of the 415 acres of the Samuel Andrews survey, originally purchased from G. L. Miller, below the dam and around both ends of the dam.
“Other propositions of said contract considered material are as follows:
“Said city allows said Sayles the privilege of maintaining windmills and pumps with pipes projecting into said lake, and the said Sayles is to have access to said lake for said purposes. No water to be furnished for irrigation or commercial purposes.
“The city engineer of said city is to survey and furnish plat and field notes as to the acreage hereinabove bought and sold, in order to compute the acreage to be delivered and deeded under this contract of sale.”

Other parts of the contract related to the terms of the sale, the time for the consummation thereof, and these other provisions are not in controversy.

The petition further alleged, in substance,, that the lands hereinbefore described are located in Taylor county, without the city of' Abilene, and, with the exception of first and second tracts, are adjacent to and near the-lake known as Lake Abilene, owned by the- *241 city of Abilene, and from which said city gets its water supply and sells water to the city and others. That the first and second tracts are about 5 miles from said lake, but are on the watershed from which the flood waters flow into Lake Abilene. That Lake Abilene is fed by the rain waters falling on the watershed of Elm creek, which is in Taylor and Nolan counties, Tex., and the watershed covers many thousand acres of land and many sections of land not owned by the city of Abilene. That the remaining part of the lands described in said contract are parts of the original body of land composed of numerous tracts of land on which Lake Abilene is built and constructed, and said lands adjoin Lake Abilene, the greater portion being above the dam which impounds the waters of Lake Abilene and a small portion being below the dam which impounds the waters of Lake Abilene. That the city of Abilene owned all of said lands above described at the time it began to use the said Lake Abilene, selling water therefrom to its citizens and others, and the rain waters from the majority of said lands flow into Lake Abilene, but are much higher in altitude than Lake Abilene and much higher than the basin which holds the water in said Lake Abilene. The above lands were paid for with money secured from a bond issue for the purpose of purchasing a site and constructing a reservoir for the city of Abilene. That at the time the lake was constructed, the appellee had secured a permit' from the board of engineers for the purpose of impounding the water from the point where the dam was constructed, which permit authorized such city to impound a maximum of 15,000,000,000 gallons of water, and that said amount of water was the maximum capacity of said lake, as set forth in said contract and within the meaning of the parties thereto.

Two permits were alleged: The first to impound approximately 6,000,000,000 gallons of water and was issued in February, 1918. Later and prior to the execution of the contract sued on, a permit authorizing the appropriation of 15,000,000,000 gallons was issued by said board, such appropriation to be made within a period of 10 years from the date of the last permit and not thereafter. That the dam which had been built when the contract in issue was made, impounded approximately the amount of water called for in the first permit. That the plaintiff had surveyed land around the maximum level of said lake and had fixed the boundaries of such maximum level, and that the amount of acreage covered by said contract, after fixing such maximum level and deducting the 100 feet roadway, amounted to 1,950 acres.

Further allegations were made that, while the city purchased the property described in the contract, at the time of the purchase of the property on which the lake was actually built, as a matter of fact, the lands described in the contract were purchased in order for the city to get title to the lands actually used in the basin of the lake, and that none of the lands described in the. contract are needed for the purpose of city waterworks or for the purpose of supplying water to the city of Abilene, save and except the lands ‘actually covered by the lake and not in controversy, and the 100 feet above high water level also not in controversy.

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Bluebook (online)
290 S.W. 239, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sayles-v-city-of-abilene-texapp-1926.