Town of Palm Valley, Texas v. Johnson, Paul and the Johnson Company D/B/A J. Properties

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 31, 2000
Docket13-98-00287-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Town of Palm Valley, Texas v. Johnson, Paul and the Johnson Company D/B/A J. Properties (Town of Palm Valley, Texas v. Johnson, Paul and the Johnson Company D/B/A J. Properties) 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
Town of Palm Valley, Texas v. Johnson, Paul and the Johnson Company D/B/A J. Properties, (Tex. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

NUMBER 13-98-287-CV

COURT OF APPEALS

THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

CORPUS CHRISTI

____________________________________________________________________

TOWN OF PALM VALLEY, TEXAS, Appellant,

v.

PAUL JOHNSON AND THE JOHNSON

COMPANY D/B/A J PROPERTIES, Appellees.

____________________________________________________________________

On appeal from the 357th District Court of Cameron County, Texas.

____________________________________________________________________

OPINION

Before the Court En Banc

Justice Yañez delivered the opinion of the Court, in which Justices

Dorsey, Hinojosa, and McCraw(1) joined

Appellant, the Town of Palm Valley ("Palm Valley"), appeals a judgment granting declaratory and injunctive relief in favor of appellees, Paul Johnson and The Johnson Company d/b/a J Properties ("Johnson"). Following a trial, the court granted judgment permanently enjoining Palm Valley from closing, obstructing, or otherwise denying public access to Lemon Drive, a public street located within the town's boundaries. By fourteen issues, Palm Valley contends the trial court erred in: (1) granting the injunction because Johnson failed to establish he had suffered irreparable injury; (2) concluding that Johnson's property abuts Lemon Drive; and (3) concluding that the entire length of Lemon Drive as originally platted was accepted as a public street, that no portion of it was ever abandoned, and that there was no failure of any conditional limitation in the original dedication. We affirm.

A subdivision plat for Palm Valley Estates Unit number nine, a residential subdivision developed as one of a series of units in a country club complex near Harlingen, was approved by Cameron County and filed for record on August 14, 1972. The plat shows residential lots and streets, including Lemon Drive, which extends southward approximately three hundred feet from Palm Valley Drive West to the southern boundary of the subdivision. The plat states that the developer "hereby dedicate[s] the Roads, Streets, and drives as shown and delineated hereon to the public so long as the same shall be used and maintained as such." The plat shows five lots with frontage along Lemon Drive, which "dead-ends" into the southern boundary line of the property. Lemon Drive was subsequently paved, except for a four-foot section at its southern end.

Palm Valley was incorporated on September 11, 1980. Unit number nine was included in the incorporation, which made the southern boundary of the subdivision coterminous with the southern boundary of the town.

Pursuant to a request from residents along Lemon Drive, Palm Valley's Board of Aldermen voted on June 16, 1987 to close Lemon Drive at its southern end and erect a barricade. Apparently, however, no barricade was erected at that time.

On June 25, 1990, Paul Johnson purchased a twenty-acre tract located immediately south of and contiguous to Palm Valley's southern boundary. Several weeks later, he conveyed the property to the Johnson Company d/b/a J Properties and hired an engineering firm to design a residential subdivision on the property. The firm designed a proposed subdivision, Palm Valley South, which showed a street called Lemon Drive connecting to the existing Lemon Drive. Johnson requested access from Palm Valley to the existing Lemon Drive for his proposed subdivision. In response, the Board of Aldermen voted on October 9, 1990 to erect a barricade and fence at the southern end of Lemon Drive. Approximately a month later, Palm Valley completed construction of a fence along its southern boundary and across the southern end of Lemon Drive.

In a letter dated October 14, 1991, the City of Harlingen advised Palm Valley that Johnson's proposed subdivision plat had been approved, subject to a requirement that Lemon Drive be continued into the subdivision from the southern boundary of Unit number nine.(2) The letter also noted that although the City of Harlingen was aware of Palm Valley's claim that it had closed Lemon Drive, it "ha[d] not received any notice that the Town of Palm Valley's Board of Aldermen has taken proper legal action to close, abandon, and vacate Lemon Drive as a public thoroughfare." On November 19, 1991, the Board of Aldermen adopted an ordinance purportedly "closing" Lemon Drive "one or two feet inside the southern boundary" and declaring it to be a cul-de-sac. Shortly thereafter, appellees filed suit seeking injunctive relief.

Almost two years later, on November 5, 1993, Palm Valley re-platted the four-foot unpaved strip at the south end of Lemon Drive, declaring that the re-platted portion was "no longer a part of the platted road and street right-of-way," and had "devolved in accordance with the dedication provisions of the original plat of said Unit No. 9." The certificate on the re-plat acknowledged that "said replatted portion was, prior to this replat, a portion of previously platted road and street right-of-way."

Appellees' suit for declaratory and injunctive relief was tried to the court on May 11, 1995. Following a lengthy recess,(3)the trial court issued findings of fact and conclusions of law and granted a declaratory judgment and permanent injunction in favor of appellees. The relevant findings and conclusions were:

* As originally platted, Lemon Drive extends to and touches the southern boundary line of Palm Valley Estates Unit No. 9, which became the southern city limit of the Town of Palm Valley.

* Although not all the platted right of way was paved, Lemon Drive was opened and maintained as a public street from its original dedication through the date of this suit.

* The public right of way known as Lemon Drive extends to and touches the southernmost boundary of Palm Valley Estates Unit No. 9 and the Town of Palm Valley city limits.

* The Johnson property abuts the public street known as Lemon Drive within the Town of Palm Valley, Texas.

* Neither Johnson nor any predecessor or successor in interest to the Johnson property consented to the closure of said street.

* On May 8, 1991, the City of Harlingen approved the Johnson's subdivision, known as Palm Valley South Subdivision, with the condition that Lemon Drive be continued as a through street from Palm Valley Estates Unit No. 9 to Palm Valley South Subdivision.

* The action of the Town of Palm Valley has denied the owners of the Johnson property access to the public street and right of way known as Lemon Drive.

* The Town of Palm Valley has never initiated or completed a condemnation suit against the owners of the Johnson property regarding Lemon Drive.

* For purposes of the application of Tex. Rev. Civ. Stat. Ann. Art. 1016 [repealed, now Tex. Transp. Code. Ann. 311.008 (Vernon 1999)], Palm Valley South Subdivision abuts Lemon Drive in the Town of Palm Valley, Texas.

* [That statute] requires consent of all owners of real property abutting a public street to consent to the closing of such a street.

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Town of Palm Valley, Texas v. Johnson, Paul and the Johnson Company D/B/A J. Properties, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/town-of-palm-valley-texas-v-johnson-paul-and-the-j-texapp-2000.