W. T. Waggoner Estate v. Townsend

24 S.W.2d 83
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 18, 1929
DocketNo. 3351.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 24 S.W.2d 83 (W. T. Waggoner Estate v. Townsend) 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
W. T. Waggoner Estate v. Townsend, 24 S.W.2d 83 (Tex. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

JACKSON, J.

This suit was instituted by the plaintiff, the W. T. Waggoner estate, a trust estate created by written declaration of trust, with W. T. Waggoner as trustee, against the defendants, J. V. Townsend, county judge, and R. Cobb, H. M. King, J. M. Reynolds, and T. K. Huffman, county commissioners, of Wilbarger county, Tex., to enjoin them from condemning, taking, and injuring plaintiff’s property by building a public road across its land.

Plaintiff alleges that it is the owner of sections 18, 23, 35, 38, 52, and 53, in block No. 4, in Wilbarger county, Tex., and that the defendants have entered upon and have taken a right of way for a public road across said land without the consent of the plaintiff, and are doing irreparable injury and dampge thereto by excavating, filling in, cutting timber, building bridges, and doing all things necessary and incident to the building of such a road; that the defendants have failed to comply with the Constitution and laws of the state regulating the taking and condemning of real estate for public roads; that they made no bona fide attempt to agree with the plaintiff on the .amount of damages which would be caused to its premises by the opening of said road; that no sufficient notice was given plaintiff of the time when or the place.where the jury of view appointed by the commissioners’ court would meet and assess the damages to which plaintiff was entitled; that said jury of view gave plaintiff no opportunity to present its claim for damages, failed and refused to consider such claim, failed and refused to return such claim and file it with the report of said jury of view made to the commissioners’ court; that the defendants have not considered plaintiff’s claim for damages as -the law requires, and have not paid or tendered to the plaintiff any sum in satisfaction of the damages caused to plaintiff’s premises by the defendants in entering upon and taking a right of way and constructing a public road on plaintiff’s land.

On August 5, 1929, the Honorable Robert Cole, judge of the Sixty-Fourth judicial district of Texas, heard and considered in chambers plaintiff’s petition for an injunction and granted a temporary restraining order as therein prayed for.

*84 On August 20, 1929, the defendants answered by general demurrer, general denial, special exceptions, and specially denied that they bad failed to make a bona fide effort to agree with plaintiff on the damages and compensation to which it was entitled. Defendants also alleged in sufficient detail the proceedings had by filing a petition for the opening of the road with the commissioners’ court and the various proceedings had by the commissioners’ court for the opening of said road, and that all said proceedings were in accordance with the statutes, and that damages had been allowed the defendant and deposited as the law requires.

The pleadings of both plaintiff and the defendants, with the exhibits attached thereto, are voluminous, but the foregoing statement of the issues involved in the pleading is sufficient for a disposition of this appeal.

On August 22, 1929, at a regular term of the district court of Wilbarger county, Tex., after a hearing before the court on its merits, judgment was entered that the plaintiff take nothing by its’suit and that the temporary injunction theretofore granted he dissolved, from which judgment of the court this ap^ pea.1 is prosecuted.

Appellant’s first three assignments of error state that the court erred in certain findings of fact, but fails to state there was no evidence to support such findings; neither is it stated that such findings are contrary to the evidence nor that the evidence is insufficient to warrant such findings, much less specify the particulars in which the testimony is insufficient. The fourth assignment states that the court erred as a matter of law in refusing to perpetuate the temporary injunction theretofore granted.

“It is settled that an assignment attacking the sufficiency of the evidence to support a finding, a verdict or judgment, must specify the particulars in which the evidence is insufficient. An assignment complaining that the verdict of the jury and the judgment of the court are contrary to the law and evidence because there is no evidence to establish a fact necessary to sustain the judgment, is sufficient, but an assignment that the verdict and judgment are contrary to the evidence is too general to present the question whether the evidence wholly fails to support the judgment.

“An assignment merely asserting that the evidence is insufficient or that a finding or the verdict or judgment is not supported or sustained by the evidence, but failing to specify the particulars wherein the evidence is insufficient, is too general to require consideration, since it leaves the appellate court to search the entire statement of facts to determine the question.” S Tex. Jurisp. § 600, and authorities cited.

Appellant’s proposition under these assignments is ’ multifarious. S Tex. Jurisp. § 616. It is not germane to any of'said assignments, S Tex. Jurisp. § 617; but it does question the jurisdiction of the commissioners’ court, in the condemnation proceedings had, for failure to comply strictly with the law in such proceedings, and this suggests fundamental error.

At the request of appellant’s counsel, the court filed his findings of fact, in which he found, in substance, that on May 5, 1929, a sufficient and proper petition was filed with the commissioners’ court; that such petition was published and notice thereof posted in the manner and form and for the length of time provided by law; that thereafter, on the 4th day' of June, 1929, the commissioners’ court considered said petition and appointed 'a jury of view, composed of five qualified residents, to lay out and survey said road, directed that all the landowners through whose land said road would run be served with notice, and the damages assessed, and report their action to the commissioners’ court; that on the 12th day of June, 1929, the jurors gave R. D. Moore, the agent of the appellant, notice in writing of their appointment, informing him that they would meet on June 21, 1929, upon the premises to which appellant had some claim or title, described such premises, and that a jury of view would then proceed to assess any damages to which appellant was entitled on account of the laying out of said public road, and requesting the agent to produce a statement in writing of the damages, if any, and all evidence he desired to offer in relation thereto; that R. L. Moore and O. O. Franklin were the duly authorized agents of appellant, and, pursuant to said notice, O. O. Franklin made an effort to meet with said jury of view on the day mentioned, but did not succeed in doing so-, but that he filed with one of said jurors on said date a statement in writing, claiming $10,000 damages and compensation; that said claim was transmitted to the commissioners’ court with the report of the jury of view, and appellant was allowed the sum of $1,090 as compensation and damages; that, at the first term of the commissioners’ court thereafter, O. O.

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Bluebook (online)
24 S.W.2d 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/w-t-waggoner-estate-v-townsend-texapp-1929.