Thayer v. Greer

229 S.W.2d 833, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 2066
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 20, 1950
DocketNo. 6045
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 229 S.W.2d 833 (Thayer v. Greer) 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
Thayer v. Greer, 229 S.W.2d 833, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 2066 (Tex. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

STOKES, Justice.

On January 12, 1948, upon a petition duly signed and presented to the Commissioners of Floyd County, an election was called and later held, which resulted in the voting and issuance of'bonds of the county in the sum of $500,000, the proceeds of which were to be used for the construction of cer[834]*834tain farm-to-market paved! roads. The order calling the election designated eight roads of the county as being those which would be paved. On December 8, 1949, the date this suit was filed, four of the roads had been completed; contracts had been entered into for the construction of the remaining four and they were in the process of construction. The order contained the provision that the State Highway Department' may participate in any roads to be improved 'with the proceeds of the bond issue to the extent- and in any manner it desired. One of the roads designated by the order was described in para graph “(c)” and is referred to in the record as the Pleasant Valley road; and another described in paragraph “(g)” is referred to as the Dougherty road. These are two of the roads that were under construction when the suit was filed and they constituted the subject-matter of a contract entered into between the Highway Commission and the Commissioners’ Court of Floyd County to the effect that the Highway Commission would contribute $25,000 and the Commissioners’ Court would contribute $84,600, making a total of $109,600, which was the estimated cost of constructing these two roads. There is a paved highway extending from Floydada in a westerly direction to the east line of Hale County and, on this highway, several miles west of Floydada,. is a community called Sand Hill. In addition to the contribution of $25,000 above mentioned, the Highway Commission made a commitment to the Commissioners’ Court under which it agreed to construct a paved .r.oad from Sand Hill north approximately four miles, thence east approximately one mile. Another community, known as Pleasant Valley, is located two miles past of the point where this road turns east and the road to be built by the Highway Commission, therefore, terminated one mile west of Pleasant Valley. The Pleasant Valley road designated in paragraph (c) of the order extends from Highway No. 70 at Lockney south to Pleasant Valley, a distance of 4½ miles. Thus it will be seen that, when the Pleasant Valley road is completed, there will be a gap in the pavement of one mile from Pleasant Valley west to the end of the pavement to be laid by the Highway Commission on the Sand Hill road.

The contract between the Commissioners’ Court and the Highway Commission, concerning the Dougherty and' Pleasant Valley roads, was consummated; through an application made to the Commission by the Commissioners’ Court and an acceptance of it, or a commitment, by the Highway Commission. In the commitment it was provided that the Commissioners’ Court of Floyd County would deposit the sum of $84,-600 with the Highway Commission and that the Pleasant Valley road to be paved with the combined fund would extend from Highway No. 70 at Lockney south to Pleasant Valley school, thence west to the end of the proposed Sand Hill road, a distance of approximately 5½ miles. From this statement it will be seen that the gap of one mile between Pleasant Valley and the end of the pavement of the Sand Hill road was included in the contract and encompassed 5½ miles instead of terminating at Pleasant Valley and encompassing 4½ miles as designated in the order calling the bond election, and it involved an estimated additional expenditure of,$8000 out of the combined fund established by the contributions of the Commissioners’ Court and the Highway Commission.

The order of the Commissioners’ Court calling the election contained the provision that “If any funds remain after completion of the designated roads, they shall be used to construct other farm-to-market roads designated by majority vote of the Commissioners’ Court.” The record shows that the Highway Commission contemplates awarding the contract for construction of the Pleasant Valley and Dougherty roads in October 1950. This suit was instituted by appellant, Ralph Thayer, and sixty other resident property tax-paying citizens of Floyd County in which they seek .an injunction against the State Highway engineer, members of the Highway Commission and the county judge and county commissioners of Floyd County, enjoining them from expending the proceeds of the sale of the road bonds in the construction of the one-mile gap. between Pleasant Valley and the end of the pavement on the Sand Hill road until [835]*835the construction of the roads designated in the order has been completed. Neither the state highway engineer nor the members of the Highway Commission filed an answer or made appearance at the trial, but the county judge and county commissioners of Floyd County duly answered by allegations not necessary to detail here but sufficient in all respects to draw the issues necessary for a proper adjudication of the controversy.

The case was set for hearing upon appellants’ prayer for a temporary injunction fo'r January 5, 1950, and, on that day, the appellants and appellees, the county judge and county commissioners of Floyd County, appeared and submitted the case to the court without the intervention of a jury. After hearing the evidence and argument of counsel the court rendered judgment denying appellants the temporary injunction prayed for by them and they duly excepted and have brought the case here for review upon a single assignment of error in which they contend the court erred in refusing to grant a temporary injunction, enjoining the ap-pellees from paying out money for the construction of roads not set out and designated in the order calling the election until the completion of the roads that are set out and designated therein.

Appellants’ pleadings and their brief refer, rather indefinitely, to roads not set out and designated in the order calling the election, but the only road involved is the one.mile of road from Pleasant Valley west to the end of the pavement proposed to he laid by the State Highway Commission on the Sand Hill Road. The order calling the election did not include this one-mile gap but' it was included in the contract between the Commissioners’ Court and the Highway Commission. The question is, therefore, whether or not appellants were entitled to an injunction restraining the Commissioners’ Court and the Highway Commission from expending any of the proceeds of the bond issue in the construction of this one mile of pavement prior to the completion of the roads designated in the order calling the bond election. The roads not completed, but under construction, were the Baker, Providence, Pleasant Valley and Dougherty roads. The construction of the Baker road was being prosecuted -under a contract secured by a solvent bond. The contract price was $52,321.85 and, prior to awarding the contract, the Commissioners’ Court set apart and earmarked the sum of $75,000 to pay the contract price, which was approximately $23,000 in excess of the amount provided by the contract.

The State Highway Commission had agreed to construct the Providence road without cost to Floyd County except for procuring the right-of-way. If the Highway Commission should fail to carry out its commitment as to that road, and the Commissioners’ Court were forced to do so, the expense would be $64,000.

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Bluebook (online)
229 S.W.2d 833, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 2066, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thayer-v-greer-texapp-1950.