South Memphis Land Co. v. City of Memphis

74 S.W.2d 209, 18 Tenn. App. 142, 1932 Tenn. App. LEXIS 47
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedSeptember 28, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 74 S.W.2d 209 (South Memphis Land Co. v. City of Memphis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
South Memphis Land Co. v. City of Memphis, 74 S.W.2d 209, 18 Tenn. App. 142, 1932 Tenn. App. LEXIS 47 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

HEISKELL, J.

We will adopt the statement of the case substantially as set out in the brief of the complainant.

This cause is one brought by the South Memphis Land Company, a corporation, to recover from the city of Memphis the value of certain sewers, which the bill alleges and charges were wrongfully appropriated and converted to the use of the city of Memphis, together with interest on such value since said conversion and appropriation.

The bill recites that the complainant is a corporation, owning a large tract of land in the southern part of the city of Memphis, according to the boundaries of the city, as fixed by chapter 396 of the Private Acts of the General Assembly of the State of Tennessee, for the year 1929, and other lands contiguous thereto and south of the boundaries of the city of Memphis, so fixed by the 1929 act.

The bill alleges that many years ago the complainant, for the purpose of developing its said property, undertook and started a settlement thereon, known as “New South Memphis,” wherein it secured the establishment of a large number of industrial plants, and wherein was built a large number of houses; that the complainant opened up subdivisions known as “Westside,” “Southside Highland,” “Hernando Terrace,” “Longview Heights,” “First Addition to Longview Heights, ’ ’ and ‘ ‘ Second Addition to Longview Heights, ’ ’ and in said subdivisions sold a great many lots and secured the building thereon of a great many houses.

The bill further alleges that, with the developments aforementioned, it became necessary for the residents and occupants to have both water and sewer connections and facilities. That the complainant made a contract with the Memphis Artesian Water Company, at -that time a private corporation, by which it secured water for the residents of said territories, but that it was not able to make a con“tract with the defendant, city of Memphis, to secure sewerage.

That, as a result of said failure to contract with the said city of Memphis, at great cost and expense to itself, complainant constructed, a number of years prior to said property being annexed to the city of Memphis, but inside the limits of said city of Memphis, as fixed by said Private Act of 1929, a total of 35,617 lineal feet of 6-inch *144 sewers; 4,877 lineal feet of 8-inch sewers; 182 feet of 10-ineh. sewers; and 52 manholes. Plats of said sewer lines are attached as exhibits to the original bill, and are shown on the transcript at page 12.

That, in addition to said sewers above mentioned, all of which are now in the city limits, as defined by said private act, it also owns connecting sewers essentially a part of said sewerage system south of the city, which said connecting sewers are described in the original bill.

The complainant avers that, according to the provisions of the private act above mentioned, the boundaries of the city of Memphis on the 1st day of November, 1929, were extended to Mallory avenue on the south, cutting complainant’s property, wherein said sewers were built, almost in half; that as a result thereof, all of the property of the complainant north of Mallory avenue, comprising as its greatest part 1,075 acres of woodland, and land used for farming purposes, was assessed by the defendant for city taxes in amounts aggregating hundreds of thousands of dollars, calling for the payment of many thousands of dollars for city taxes, for which the complainant receives no benefit whatsoever.

The bill further alleges that on or about the 1st day of November, 1929, the date upon which said private act became effective, the defendant wrongfully took control and possession of, and took over the management and control of, complainant’s sewers described in said bill, comprising in part the sewer system of the complainant, holding and using them as its own, and excluding the complainant from the possession and enjoyment of said sewer system.

It is set forth in the bill that the said sewers and sewer system wrongfully appropriated and converted by the defendant, city of Memphis, had been a source of profit to the complainant, in that prior to November 1, 1929, it received sewer rental and other income as a result of its ownership of said sewers. That the cost of said sewers owned by it, and within the limits of the city of Memphis, as set forth in said private act, was the sum of about $50,000.

Complainant further avers that the sewers described in said original bill, and the two connecting mains, were, and except for said conversion would yet be, the private personal property of the South Memphis Land Company, and that the same have been taken by the defendant and converted to its own use, to the great damage of the complainant, which, as a result of said wrongful taking and conversion, has received no compensation whatever.

To the original bill of the complainant, the defendant filed a demurrer, and set up (1) that the court was without jurisdiction to hear and determine the controversy between the parties; (2) that the original bill shows on its face that it is a suit to recover unliqui-dated damages, not arising out of or growing out of a breach of an oral or written contract, and for that reason the court is lacking in jurisdiction to hear and determine the'issues involved.

*145 This demurrer was by the court overruled, the court holding that the bill did not purport to invoke the aid of the chancery court in a ease of tort, but sought relief upon the implied promise in contract of defendant to pay for the sewers alleged to have been converted by it. The demurrer was overruled, without prejudice to the right of the defendant to rely on, at the hearing, any principle of law available to it as a defense to the complainant’s action. To the action of the court the defendant excepted.

The defendant answered, substantially denying the allegations of the complainant, except as to formal matters, such as corporate existence and extension of the city limits, as alleged in the bill under the provisions of private act of 1929. The answer demands proof of the ownership by the complainant of the lands set out in the original bill, and denies the ownership of complainant of the sewers and sewer system, as set out in the bill. The answer further denies the construction by the complainant of the said sewer lines, and denies the allegations as to the length, diameter, location, and sufficiency of the sewers, or that the complainant owned the connecting sewers set out in its bill.

The defendant neither admitted nor denied the collection of sewer rentals; denied that the sewer lines were worth $50,000, as of November 1, 1929, or were of any value, and further denied the right of the complainant to recover any sum whatsoever from the defendant by reason of the construction or existence of any sewers within the limits of the City of Memphis.

The defendant denied that it had done any wrongful act with respect to any of the sewers mentioned in the original bill; denied that it converted the same; or that it was excluding the complainant from rentals, or other benefits, which the complainant may have enjoyed.

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74 S.W.2d 209, 18 Tenn. App. 142, 1932 Tenn. App. LEXIS 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/south-memphis-land-co-v-city-of-memphis-tennctapp-1932.