Smith v. Cathey

226 S.W. 158, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 1126
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 5, 1920
DocketNo. 8452.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 226 S.W. 158 (Smith v. Cathey) 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 v. Cathey, 226 S.W. 158, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 1126 (Tex. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

RAINEY, C. J.

Appellant filed an application for a writ of injunction against the commissioners of Wood county, seeking to restrain said commissioners’ court from paying out of the Wood county fund a certain sum for connecting a certain piece of the Jim Hogg highway in the town of Winns-boro, incorporated, within said county. The writ was denied, and the judge set the motion down for hearing at the next term of court in said county, and this appeal was taken.

The petition alleged, among other things, as follows:

“That relator is a citizen and taxpayer of Wood county; that respondents, the county judge and county commissioners of Wood county, composing the commissioners’ court of said county, on the 24th day of February, 1920, made arid entered into a contract ■ with one O. L. Origler for paving with concrete a portion of Main street in the city of Winnsboro; that said city is, and was at that time, a duly incorporated municipality, situated partly in Wood and partly in Franklin county; that said contract is signed by Wood county, party of the first part, by B. F. Oathey, county judge, and each of the four county commissioners of Wood county, and by O. L. Origler, party of the second part; that said contract provides for the paving with concrete by said Origler a portion of Main street in the city of Winnsboro, the pavement to be 20 feet wide through the center of said Main street and approximately 840 feet in length; that Wood county will pay the said Origler the contract price of $6,389.78 for said paving, in monthly payments as the work pre-gresses, with a provision for payment by the county at actual cost plus 15 per cent, for ‘any work in connection with said paving which may be ordered by the engineer, and which is not covered by the unit prices’; that the said purported contract is recognized by the Wood county commissioners’ court as 'a binding, subsisting, and valid obligation of said commissioners’ court and of Wood county commissioners’ court and of Wood county, and that, unless restrained, the said commissioners’ court will pay to the said Origler large sums of money belonging to the road and bridge fund or other funds of said *159 Wood county, contrary to law; that said purported contract is void and unenforceable, as being beyond the power of jurisdiction of said commissioners’ court to mate or enter into any contract for paving Main street in the city of Winnsboro; that relator, as a citizen and taxpayer of Wood county, is interested in the disposition to be made of the county’s funds, including the proceeds of the sale of bonds voted for the construction of permanent public roads; that, unless enjoined and restrained, the said commissioners’ court will pay out funds belonging to the county for paving Main street in the incorporated city of Winnsboro, and that said funds will be lost to the taxpayers and citizens of said county; that thereby the county, the taxpayers, and the relator in particular, will suffer great and irreparable injury; and that relator is without any adequate remedy at law. Wherefore he prays that a temporary injunction be granted, etc.
“The respondents answered ‘only for the purpose of resisting plaintiff’s (relator’s) prayer for temporary injunction,’ by general demurrer, nine special exceptions, a general denial, and to the merits substantially as follows: That Main street in the city of'Winnsboro is part of a state highway, designated by the state highway commission as highway No. 37; that as such part of said highway the said Main street may be under the law graded and made a permanent roadbed through said city; that the commissioners’ court of Wood county should expend money for that purpose, and that in doing so they would be acting within the scope of their authority; that the city of Winnsboro has a population of 2,COO or 3,000 inhabitants, who pay taxes to the state and county on nearly $2,000,000 of taxable values; that there are a large number of automobiles there on which the owners pay a large part of the license tax collected in Wood county; that there are some 10 or 12 public roads leading out of said city, among them one to Mt. Yernon, in Franklin county, and one to Quitman, the county seat of Wood county; that the state highway, to be known as the ‘Jim Hogg highway,’ will probably be from Galveston on the south to the state line on the north; that said highway between Mt. Yernon and Quitman should be made of such surface as will bear the traffic over it; that especially the 810 feet of Main street contracted to be paved with concrete is burdened with a heavy traffic, being in the midst of the business'part of Winnsboro; that, in the exercise of their discretion, the commissioners’ court acted for the b.est interest of the public in making the contract for concrete paving; that no part of the highway in Wood county will be used more, .if as much, as this part of same.
“To this relator replied in supplementary petition, demurring to the answer as wholly insufficient in law and as showing no defense whatever to relator’s petition, general denial, etc.”

The judge stated that he would dispose of the demurrers and exceptions in his final order, after hearing the evidence, whereupon relator and counsel for respondents had entered in the record the following agreement as to facts, as found in appellant’s brief:

That Wood county had voted a million and a quarter dollars' of bonds for the purpose of improving the public roads of said county; that the bonds had been sold and the proceeds collected; that before the bond issue was voted the commissioners’ court of Wood county issued a map of the county designating and showing the roads to be improved; that there was printed on said map the following statement: ‘We agree to build the system of roads designated on the above map, provided the right of way is furnished without expense to the county’ — and that said map and statement were signed by the county judge and county commissioners of Wood county in their official capacities; that the Jim Hogg highway, designated by the state highway commission, was to .begin on Bed river, passing through Franklin and Wood counties, via Winnsboro, Quitman, and Mineóla, and on south to the Gulf; that an appropriation had been made for part of this highway and used on same south of Quit-man (the testimony of County Judge Cathey shows, however, that this appropriation of state funds had been made to a shoe string district including the town of Quitman and the city of Mineóla, prior to the county bond issue); respondents agree to the contract as set out in relator’s petition; that Winnsboro is an incorporated town or city of 2,000 or 3,000 population; that Main is the principal business street of the city, running north and south through the city, and thát the 840 feet of concrete pavement contracted for by the commissioners’ court will begin about 800 yards north of the south boundary lire of the corporation and end at a point about 400 yards south of the Franklin county line, on Main street; that relator is a resident citizen and taxpayer of Wood county; and that his road tax is about $80 per year.

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Bluebook (online)
226 S.W. 158, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 1126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-cathey-texapp-1920.