Uvalde Const. Co. v. Lawrence

93 S.W.2d 213, 1936 Tex. App. LEXIS 300
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 21, 1936
DocketNo. 12198.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 93 S.W.2d 213 (Uvalde Const. Co. v. Lawrence) 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
Uvalde Const. Co. v. Lawrence, 93 S.W.2d 213, 1936 Tex. App. LEXIS 300 (Tex. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

LOONEY, Justice.

The city of Dallas instituted this suit on a paving certificate issued to the Uvalde Paving Company, for $2,340, purportedly the pro rata part of the cost of paving 267 feet on the east side of Lattimer street in said city. The certificate is payable, one-half by Joe Z- Lawrence, and one-eighth each by Julia Florence Galloway, Lida Mae Lytel, J. B. Galloway, and Annie Galloway Riggs (the Galloway heirs), in accordance with their reputed interests in the abutting property. Plaintiff sought judgment for the pro rata part due by each, together with foreclosure of the assessment lien on the interest of each in the property. Mrs. Leola M. Miller, widow of L. B. Miller, deceased, and George W. Morris, were brought in as defendants, on the allegation that each claimed some interest in the property, and as to them foreclosure was also sought. The Uvalde Paving Company intervened, adopted the allegations of plaintiff, and alleged that it owned the cause of action therein asserted and was entitled to enforce the demand, hence prayed for appropriate relief. Defendants Lawrence, Julia Florence Galloway, Lida Mae Lytel and husband, J. B. Galloway, and Mrs. Annie Galloway Riggs and husband, answered by general denial and specially, to the effect that, having sold and conveyed their interests in the abutting property to Dr. Miller, deceased husband of Mrs. Leola M. Miller, they were no longer interested in the property, and further that, as part consideration for their said conveyance, the Millers assumed the payment of all assessments by the city against said property for said improvement, wherefore they prayed to be discharged. The defendant George W. Morris an *215 swered by general denial and a number of special pleas, which will be noticed during the progress of the discussion.

The case was tried without a jury, and resulted in a judgment in favor of defendants, the court holding that the assessment levied August 26, 1931, by the city against the property fronting 267 feet on the east side of Lattimer street was invalid, creating neither a lien on property nor the personal liability of either defendant. The Uvalde Construction Company alone appealed.

The record discloses that, on August 20, 1930, the board of commissioners of the city of Dallas (the then governing body) adopted a resolution ordering the improvement of Lattimer street between designated points, including the 267 feet in front of the property upon which ' foreclosure is sought. Without enumerating the successive steps taken by city authorities terminating in the adoption of the assessing ordinance and the issuance of the certificate sued upon, we hold that the governing body, the city engineer, and the other city officials acting in the premises, complied substantially with the provisions of the city charter; that on their face the proceedings are regular and sufficient to create, prima facie, the personal liability of owners of the abutting property named in the 'certificate and the inchoate personal liability of owners not named, for the proportionate cost of the street improvement, and a lien upon the interest in the abutting property owned by each, respectively.

However, following the adoption by the governing body of the original resolution, we think the city engineer erred in the statement filed by him, in that he ascribed to the ownership of Lawrence and the Galloway heirs, 267 feet of the frontage on Lattimer street, whereas the most satisfactory evidence shows that they owned only 150 feet; and he omitted altogether to name G. W. Morris as the owner of any of said frontage, whereas we think the evidence shows that he owned at least 117 feet of this frontage, and these errors were carried forward into, and affected the correcto ess of, the assessing ordinance later adopted by the governing body of the city.

The' disposition of this appeal, we think, necessarily turns on the ownership of the property in question at the time the original resolution ordering the improvement was adopted. Several theories, based upon maps and other evidence, are presented m argument; but we are of opinion that the most satisfactory and conclusive evidence in regard to the ownership of the property is furnished by the judgment of the Forty-Fourth judicial district court, rendered October 24, 1932, in the suit by George W. Morris, originally filed against 'Dr. L. B. Miller, involving the title to this property. The record discloses in this connection that, on November 24, 1930, the defendants, Joe Z. Lawrence and the Galloway heirs, to wit, J. B. Galloway, Lida Mae Lytel and husband, Annie Galloway Riggs and husband, and Julia Florence Galloway, by guardian Bedford Galloway, and Bedford Galloway individually (owner of á one-third life estate in the land), conveyed their interests in the land to L. B. Miller in consideration, among others, of the assumption by Miller of the payment of all assessments made and levied by the city of Dallas against the property by reason of the street improvement. In the suit mentioned, Mrs. Miller recovered 150 feet of the frontage, and Morris recovered the remaining 117 feet. So, we conclude that, at the inception of the paving enterprise, Lawrence, the Galloway heirs, and Miller, owned only 150 feet of the abutting property, and that, under the assumpsit, Dr. Miller became and was primarily liable for the payment, to the extent of his ownership, of the taxes levied by the city for such improvement, hence his widow, Mrs. Leola Miller, is liable for only 1B%87ths of $2,340, being the total cost of the improvement.

Throughout, Mrs. Miller recognized and admitted her liability to pay for the improvement in proportion to her ownership of the property, and prior to the institution of suit, tendered to the paving company the amount of the installment that would have been due for such interest, which being refused, she reasserted in an appropriate plea her willingness to pay an amount proportionate to her ownership, and even offered, if required, to pay the .money into the registry of court. However, the paving company refused to accept the tender, because it was thought that its acceptance might jeopardize the rights of the company as to the remainder of the assessment.

In view of this situation, we think the court erred in not rendering judgment for the paving company against Mrs. Miller, on her plea of tender for 15%e7ths of *216 $2,340, with 7 per cent, interest per annum from August 26, 1931, the date of the assessing- ordinance, to May 17, 1932, the date of the rejection of the tender, together with foreclosure of the paving lien on her said interest in the abutting property. But we do not think the company is entitled' to recover interest accruing since the latter date, attorney’s fees, or court costs, and judgment will be here rendered accordingly.

This brings us to consider the status, in the litigation, of Lawrence and the Galloway heirs. It is obvious, we think, that they are not liable at all on the paving certificate, for the reason that purportedly it evidences personal liabilities and liens for the cost of improving property abutting 267 feet on Lattimer street, when in fact they did not own, in the aggregate, more than ISO feet; the city being without power to require payment of more than was justly chargeable for the frontage owned. This doctrine is fundamentally sound and universally recognized.

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Bluebook (online)
93 S.W.2d 213, 1936 Tex. App. LEXIS 300, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/uvalde-const-co-v-lawrence-texapp-1936.