Smith Bros., Inc. v. Lucas

15 S.W.2d 27
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 8, 1928
DocketNo. 10315.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 15 S.W.2d 27 (Smith Bros., Inc. v. Lucas) 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
Smith Bros., Inc. v. Lucas, 15 S.W.2d 27 (Tex. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinions

* Writ of error granted. *Page 28 In a suit in a district court of Dallas county by Smith Bros., Inc., appellant, against appellees, W. J. Lucas and others, to recover a personal judgment against Lucas and the foreclosure of a lien for pavement on certain described property against Lucas and the other appellees, judgment was entered in favor of all of appellees, and an appeal has been duly prosecuted to this court. The facts necessary for a disposition of the questions raised on this appeal are:

On February 23, 1924, the governing body of the city of Dallas duly passed a resolution ordering the pavement of a portion of Seventh street, under plans and specifications duly prepared and filed by its engineer. Appellant was awarded the contract for such pavement, the cost of which was to be assessed against the property abutting on paved portion of such street and against the owners of such property, except the city was to pay the cost of paving on all street intersections. All the preliminary steps, required by the Dallas City Charter to be taken, in order to fix a personal liability for such costs on the respective owners of said property and to fix a lien on the property, were duly performed by the governing body of the city of Dallas and appellant duly executed its contract of paving. One of these preliminary steps was the adoption of an ordinance by the governing body of the city of Dallas, on September 21, 1925, fixing the amount of the cost of paving to be assessed against each abutting property owner, declaring his personal liability therefor, and declaring a lien against his said property for the cost so assessed against him. This ordinance fixed the amount assessed against Lucas for the cost of this street improvement of $578.72, declared his personal liability for such sum, and declared a lien on his abutting property for the payment thereof; also on September 21, 1925, the paving certificate, authorized by the city charter and ordinance, was duly issued to appellant. This certificate was in due form and is clothed with the legal effect the city charter gives to such certificates.

This city ordinance described the property of Lucas as located on Seventh and Denver streets, in city block 74/3055, and abutting on Seventh street 97.5 feet. The recorded plat of the Oak Cliff addition to the city of Dallas, in which addition this property is located, designates this said lot as lot No. 8 of said block, and gives its dimensions as 100 feet frontage on Seventh street and a depth of 150 feet, making 150 feet frontage on *Page 29 Denver street. Some years prior to the passage of the original resolution declaring the pavement of Seventh street, a strip fronting 2 1/2 feet on Seventh street and off of the east side of this lot was sold to the owner of the adjoining lot. In 1922, the owner of lot No. 8 subdivided it into three lots, each fronting 50 feet on Denver street and extending back 97 1/2 feet, and these subdivision lots will be referred to as the north lot, the middle lot, and the south lot. The north lot is the only one that abuts on Seventh street. On April 8, 1928, Mrs. Mae E. Milks, a feme sole, acquired by purchase from the then owner, the north and the south lots; the owner executing to her separate deeds for each lot. On April 6, 1922, she also acquired from the same owner the middle lot. Each of the three deeds of conveyance described the lot conveyed as being a part of original lot No. 8 and as having a frontage of 50 feet on Denver street, and each was filed for record in the Dallas county deed records and duly recorded.

On May 22, 1922, appellee Lucas purchased from Mrs. Mae E. Milks both the north and middle lots, receiving a separate deed of conveyance for each lot, and duly placed the deeds of record in Dallas county. On October 7, 1922, Mrs. Mae E. Milks repurchased from appellee Lucas the north lot and duly placed this deed of record. On November 28, 1922, appellee Lucas and Mrs. Mae E. Milks were legally married. After the marriage they first lived in the house on the said middle lot, but on the last of November, 1922, they established their homestead on the north lot, the one that has a side frontage of 97 1/2 feet on Seventh street, and lived on this property as their homestead until the 20th day of February, 1925, when they were legally divorced. At the time of the marriage, Mrs. Mae E. Milks had three minor children by a former marriage, who lived with their mother and constituted a part of the family residing on this north lot. Lucas had no children, and none were born of this marriage. On February 23, 1924, the date of the passage of the original resolution, this lot was the separate property of the wife of appellee Lucas and was the homestead of the family. On January 27, 1924, by instrument of writing duly executed by them and filed for record on said date, Lucas and wife designated this north lot as their homestead.

In the judgment awarding a divorce, the court approved an agreement between the parties for division of property, and this agreement recites the separate ownership of the wife of this north lot. Likewise it recites the separate ownership of the husband in the middle lot. Ownership of the south lot had heretofore been transferred. On February 21, 1925, the day following the divorce, appellee Lucas purchased from his divorced wife the north lot, and a few weeks later moved into same, where he has continually resided since said time. A portion of this time, if not all of it, the record not being clear, the minor children of the divorced wife resided with him, and on the 8th day of September, 1927, he legally adopted these children.

Before the passage of the said ordinance, appellee Lucas, in response to notice legally given, appeared before the governing body of the city of Dallas and protested the paving charge assessed against the lot abutting 97 1/2 feet on Seventh street. Appellant, in its petition in this case, does not take cognizance of the subdivisions of lot No. 8, but alleged the existence of a lien against that portion of lot No. 8 that fronts 97 1/2 feet on Seventh street and extends back 100 feet, omitting in this description the south lot. The parties defendants in this suit, other than Lucas, include the record owner of the middle lot and those who own pre-existing liens against the north and middle lots.

Section 1 of article X of the charter of the city of Dallas provides for street improvements. In subdivision (h) of said section 1, the various steps for fixing a lien on abutting property and a personal obligation on the owner of such property for paving a street are given, and each step therein required was taken in the instant case. The last step provided for in subdivision (h) is the hearing of protest by interested parties on notice issued to them. Then follows subdivision (i), which, in so far as it bears on the issues of this case, reads as follows:

"When the hearing above mentioned has been concluded, the board of commissioners shall, by ordinance, assess against the several owners of property and against their property abutting upon the public highway or highways, or part thereof, ordered to be improved, such proportionate part of the costs of such improvements as by said board may have been adjudged against said respective owners and their property. Said ordinance shall fix a lien upon such property and declare the respective owners thereof to be personally liable for the respective amounts to be assessed.

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Bluebook (online)
15 S.W.2d 27, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-bros-inc-v-lucas-texapp-1928.