Vilbig v. Housing Authority of the City of Dallas

287 S.W.2d 323, 1955 Tex. App. LEXIS 2361
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 4, 1955
Docket15014
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 287 S.W.2d 323 (Vilbig v. Housing Authority of the City of Dallas) 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
Vilbig v. Housing Authority of the City of Dallas, 287 S.W.2d 323, 1955 Tex. App. LEXIS 2361 (Tex. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinions

YOUNG, Justice.

The suit of appellants was for rescission and cancellation of three deeds to lands located in defendant Authority’s West Dallas project of Public Housing, claiming legal fraud in the circumstances of their acquisition; making party thereto the Dallas Salesmanship Club. At close of testimony the trial court withdrew the case from consideration by the jury; rendering judgment that plaintiffs take nothing, which ruling is the occasion of this appeal. In Townsend v. Housing Authority, etc., Tex.Civ.App., 277 S.W.2d 211, the complaining party had likewise unsuccessfully prosecuted a suit for rescission of deed against these same appellees. However, for complete sequence, much of the same factual background, though of like nature, must be restated.

As mentioned in the cited case, the Trinity River District, commonly known as West Dallas, had long been recognized as a slum district; some 30,000 people living there with no sanitary sewage facilities; largely without running water, with shallow wells located in vicinity of dry outside toilets; and many abandoned gravel pits serving as dumping ground for garbage, refuse and debris, thereby constituting a serious menace to community health. The area occupied for most part a territory once in the flood plain of the Trinity River; later fairly well protected by a levee system, but outside the .Dallas municipal limits. In early 1950 various civic committees, after studies of such locality, had proposed to appellee Authority a Housing Project for West Dallas, and in September the latter Body filed with Federal Officials in Washington an application for program reservation covering 3,500 units of low-cost rental housing; the local Authority at the same time entering into a cooperation agreement with City of Dallas, Dallas County, and Dallas Independent School District respecting the development of such a program. Accordingly, the firm of Forrest & Cotton, outstanding engineers and long familiar with drainage conditions of the immediate Trinity River Basin, were employed to make an analysis of the entire West Dallas area and recommend a site for the project; Mr. Forrest making verbal report to the Housing Commissioners on December 1, 1950, discussing the various problems; appellee Authority later in December approving a preliminary development. program and site; fixing same as covering some 513 acres of land bounded as follows: Westmoreland Road on the west, .Singleton on the south, Hampton Road on east side, and on north by the old winding river. channel and Canada Street. Above development program, filed by the Public Housing Authority at Washington in January 1951, demonstrating feasibility of the project, was approved; the local Authority then entering into a contract with the Federal agency for a loan of $37,500,000.

The lands of plaintiffs, in controversy, lie in the southeast 30-acre section of the project tract; more particularly, some twelve acres thereof bounded by Singleton Boulevard running east and west, Plampton, north and south, also by Fishtrap Road and Toronto Street, now Pritchett Drive. In the preliminary development plan, this southeast portion of the site had been considered an unbuildable area, the exhaustive report (Exhibit J) suggesting a recreational use be made thereof. But material here, the steps taken by appellee Authority for consummation of the project, in order of occurrence, were as follows: In April 1951, [326]*326the local Authority by formal resolution fixed the boundaries for the project as already described; in May, through the Board of Commissioners, adopting a resolution declaring that the acquisition of lands (S13 acres) within such boundaries was necessary; and pursuant to provisions of Art. 12691c authorizing the obtainance of fee simple title thereto, either by negotiation or condemnation proceedings. Plans for demolition, grading, foundations, etc., were then in order, and after June 8, 1951 (upon resolution adopting a site for location of buildings) work was actually begun ; and plans for construction of buildings being approved on January 15, .1952, contracts therefor were entered into. Touching the property in suit, situated as above stated in the project site, on November 23, 1951, plaintiffs deeded to appellee Authority by instrument of warranty the five improved lots in Hampton Gardens Addition for a cash consideration of $40,000. In November 1951 and April 1952, the Authority had filed condemnation suits on the Hoífman and Foy tracts; and thereafter, while these cases were in County Court at Law on appeal by plaintiffs, same were settled by agreement of the parties relative to cash compensation to be paid; and said tracts were conveyed to the Authority by general warranty deeds, viz.: Hoffman property for $1,750 and Foy for $52,250.

C. A. Vilbig, J. W. Vilbig, Jr., and sister, Mrs. Virginia Vilbig Taff, sued individually and as devisees under the will of J. W. Vilbig, Sr.; plaintiffs first named owning jointly the Hampton Gardens lots. Plaintiffs alleged that appellee Authority had filed above and other suits against them, and under threat of condemnation the described deeds were executed; that they had been holding such property for business purposes and would not otherwise have parted with title; that the petitions for condemnation filed by the Authority alleging a necessity for acquisition of the property for public housing construction were false and untrue, as also was the resolution by its Board of Commissioners declaring a necessity; such actions by the Board being fraudulently taken, and “in fact it was at no time the intention of the Housing Authority to erect any type of low cost housing, buildings, or improvements to be rented for homes, upon any part of the plaintiffs’ property.” Plaintiffs then allege the negotiations commenced by the Authority and Dallas Salesmanship Club prior to March 1953, whereby the southeast 30 acres was to be declared excess land and sold to the Club as a Shopping Center for a consideration of $163,000, the lands in question being a part of said acreage. As such phase of the controversy is fully detailed in Townsend’s appeal, supra, reference is made thereto for brevity; plaintiffs charging that because of aforesaid “false and fraudulent representations made personally and to the court,” these three deeds should be canceled, set aside, and held for nought; offering to do equity by return of consideration received.

Defendant Housing Authority answering, alleged in substance that all issues attempted to be raised in plaintiffs’ pleadings were such as could and should have been raised and determined in condemnation suits; that plaintiffs, being threatened with statutory proceedings and two suits filed against them,-the issues now pled had been waived, compromised and settled by their later conveyance of the properties through ■ general warranty deeds; that all of said site was needed for adequate development of the 3,500 units on firm ground with proper foundations, for proper grading and drainage of the project; elimination of unsanitary conditions existing on those parts of the acreage deemed unbuildable, but which constituted a serious health hazard; also in order to provide sufficient areas for storing of drainage and storm waters.

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Vilbig v. Housing Authority of the City of Dallas
287 S.W.2d 323 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1955)

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Bluebook (online)
287 S.W.2d 323, 1955 Tex. App. LEXIS 2361, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vilbig-v-housing-authority-of-the-city-of-dallas-texapp-1955.