Sturgeon v. City of Paris

122 S.W. 967, 58 Tex. Civ. App. 102, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 706
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 2, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 122 S.W. 967 (Sturgeon v. City of Paris) 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
Sturgeon v. City of Paris, 122 S.W. 967, 58 Tex. Civ. App. 102, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 706 (Tex. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

LEVY, Associate Justice.

— Appellant sought to compel appellee, by mandatory injunction, to restore the pipes and the connection with its water-main and to furnish him water therefrom for use on his premises within the corporate limits of the city. The trial was to the court without a jury, and a judgment was entered against appellant denying the injunction. By his petition the appellant claims that in September, 1908, the City of Paris, a municipal corporation duly incorporated and acting as such by authority of special Act of the Legislature of 1905, and incorporated and acting as such prior thereto by authority of special Act of the Legislature of 1889, and specially authorized by each of the special Acts to provide, own and maintain a system of public waterworks, which it did, illegally and wrongfully disconnected and discontinued its water with his premises situated in the city limits, which was previously connected by appellee to appellant’s premises, and which was used by appellant on his premises and for use of himself and family, and refused to let him have any water at all from its main. By proper allegations appellant claims the right, and as entitled to the use of the city water, and to compel the city to grant the use of the water to him, upon (1) a legal and binding contract with the city to sell and furnish him water on his premises so long as he desired to use the water and paid for the same, made on October 12, 1904, he having at all times fully complied with the con *104 tract, the city having power to make the contract under its charter of 1889 then in force; (2) independent of contract, as a citizen and resident of the city owning premises within the corporate limits and residing thereupon with his family; (3) as an owner of property within the corporate limits to the extent of the property within the corporate limits, whether he was an inhabitant of the city or not. Appellee, in answer, at length denied any contract with 'appellant to furnish him water so long as he desired and paid for same, but claimed that, if the agreement it made with appellant, which was set out and relied on by him, was a contract, it was only a contract at will, and could be rescinded by either party at any time, and that it was rescinded by appellee after due notice to appellant. prior to the time the premises were disconnected; that the charter provision of the city of 1889 restricted the use of the waterworks to “inhabitants” of the city, and that appellant was never an inhabitant of the city, and that his premises and his residence thereon were adjoining and outside the corporate limits of the city, except five feet east of his west boundary line, which was within the corporate limits; and that section 252 of the charter of 1905, set out, specially denied the city the right or power to sell the use of the water to any person living beyond the limits of the corporation.

The findings of fact by the court appear in the record, and the same are supported by the testimony, and we here adopt the same. The findings substantially show that appellant is not and never has been a citizen, resident or inhabitant of the City of Paris, but lives beyond its limits, and owns, and has continuously before and since October 12, 1904, resided with his family upon and occupied as a homestead a tract of land of about three acres in the Gr. W. Cox headright in Lamar County, which tract lies east of and adjoins the City of Paris. The tract fronts south on Lamar and west on Pacific avenues, and has improvements on it consisting of a dwelling, barn, horse lot, chicken lot, flowers, trees and shrubbery. That a strip of the premises five feet in width, fronting south on Lamar and extending north 500 feet with the east boundary line of Pacific avenue, is within the corporate limits of the City of Paris, and that the east boundary line of the corporate limits is five feet east of the west boundary line of appellant’s premises; that this strip includes a portion of appellant’s yard and chicken lot, and has on it a few shrubs and trees, but there is no house, dwelling or other structure on it, and this strip is the only portion of his premises within the corporate limits, and that the extreme west edge of his house is twenty-seven feet east of the east boundary line of the corporate limits of the city, and that no part of the house is within the corporate limits. The City of Paris is a municipal corporation situated in Lamar County, Texas, and incorporated by special Act of the Twenty-ninth Legislature, which contains, among other things, section 252, which provides: “The city council shall not have the right or power to grant, extend or sell the use, enjoyment or benefit of any public utilities established, owned or operated by the City of. Paris to any person living beyond the limits of the corporation of the City of Paris, provided that manufacturing plants are not included in the provisions of this section.” That on the 12th of October, 1904, *105 the City of Paris was a municipal corporation duly incorporated by virtue of Special Act of the Legislature of 1889, and that among other tilings section 24 of said Act provides: "Also the city council may provide, own and maintain waterworks for the use of the city and inhabitants;” that on the 12th of October, 1904, the City of Paris owned, maintained and operated a system of waterworks, and still owns, maintains and operates the same. On the 12th of October, 1904, appellant made in writing an application to the City of Paris, upon its regular blank form for such purposes, for the introduction of water into his premises, agreeing in the application to be governed by all existing rules and regulations, or any that may be established from time to time for the management of the same. This application was approved by the superintendent of appellee, who had full power to make and annul contracts for the supply of water, on October 21, 1904, and service connection made by appellee on the portion of appellant’s premises within the corporate limits; and this was the only agreement appellee had with appellant. Appellant, at his own cost, caused pipes to be laid on his premises, and connected his house, yard and lot with service, and placed fixtures in his house, bath-room and kitchen, and has been using city water, and paying therefor the usual rental, continuously since the connection was made until September 20, 1908, when appellee, after notice to appellant, disconnected same.

After stating the case. — It is the contention of appellant by his first assignment of error, that to the extent of the premises owned by him as situated within the corporate limits of the City of Paris he is entitled, as a matter of right, to the use of the city water upon paying for it, as he did, and upon complying with all reasonable regulations, which he did, whether he be an inhabitant of the City of Paris or not.

In view of the finding of fact by the trial court, and which is not complained of, and which finding we think fully supported by the evidence, that appellant is not and has never been a citizen, resident or inhabitant of the City of Paris, but now lives beyond and outside of its corporate limits with his family, and has continuously lived and resided outside of the corporate limits of the city since October 12, 1904, we are of the opinion that the assignment should be overruled. Appellant concedes the established rule of law to be that a municipal corporation is restricted and limited to the power and authority capable of being legally exercised under its charter, and can not legally exercise power which is expressly denied.

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Bluebook (online)
122 S.W. 967, 58 Tex. Civ. App. 102, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 706, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sturgeon-v-city-of-paris-texapp-1909.