Montague County v. White
Montague County v. White
Opinion of the Court
The appellee, W. L. White, instituted this suit against Montague county, special road district No. 3, the county judge, and the members of the commissioners’ court, and by his amended petition, filed July, 12, 1920, complained that the county, road district, and the officers named, had illegally ejected him from a strip of land 15 feet wide and 182 varas long, along the northeastern boundary of a lot or parcel of land owned by him, adjacent to the city of Bowie. He alleged, in substance, that said land had been appropriated in an effort to widen a public road extending from Bowie to Sunset in said county, and that, in so doing, certain specified fruit trees had been destroyed and his other property lessened in value, all to his damage; in the sum of $1,250, and he prayed for an injunction to restrain any further use of the described strip of land, for the recovery thereof, and for his damages.
The defendants appeared and answered, first, by a plea in abatement, alleging the pendency in the same court of a former suit upon the same cause' of action, and, second, that the claim declared upon had not been first presented and rejected by the commissioners’ court of Montague county. The defendants further pleaded in bar, first, that plaintiff had appeared and presented his claims to the commissioners’ court of Montague county, which, on September 19, 1919, had allowed him damages for widening said road in the sum of $77.50, and such appearance was pleaded as a waiver of the present action and such judgment as being final and conclusive. Further, a plea of not guilty.
The ease was tried before the court without a jury, on January 13, 1921, which rendered a judgment for plaintiff in the sum of $500 damages, pretermitting any discus-1 sion or adjudication relating to the prayer for injunction or for the recovery of the land. From such judgment the defendants have duly prosecuted this appeal.
“We, the undersigned, jurors appointed by the commissioners’ court of Montague county, Tex., at the Eebruary term of said court, beg leave to submit our report in the matter of right of way from the Meridian road, in Montague county, Texas, from Bowie City limits to the Wise county line, south of Sunset, Tex.
“We recommend that damages as follows' be allowed to the following named property owners affected: W. L. Wright $40 per acre for land used, county to build fence. * * * W. B. White, $100 per acre for land (adjoining city limits) used, county to move fence, $5 each for all pear trees destroyed. Road lines to angle from corner of yard to 60 feet width 50 feet from corner of yard.
“[Signed] W. V. Smith.
“A. W. Chandler.
“G. J. Morris.
“E. R. Sandefer.
“J. W. Miller.”
The next order is one of September 18, 1919, approving the report of the jury of view.
From the foregoing statement it will be seen that there was no order of the commissioners’ court to establish or widen the road in question, nor an order specifically appointing a jury of view for that purpose, nor do the orders of the commissioners’ court, the report of the jury of view, or any other evidence in the case, show that appellee, White, was given any notice to appear before the jury of view and present a claim for damages, and the evidence affirmatively shows that he was not present at the time the purported jury of view took the action of which appellee complains.
Assuming that the orders referred to are all of the orders relating to the controversy, as has been agreed upon and as the clerk-certified, we conclude that the proceeding was void. An examination of our statutes, relating to the powers of the commissioners' court to establish and open roads, does not seem to disclose any specific authority on the part of that court to change or widen a road already established, except as prescribed in article 6885, which must be done upon application and, except also, probably, as to that class of roads mentioned in article 6863, already cited, relating to cardinal roads leading from county seat to county seat, which it seems the commissioners' court may open without petition therefor and without giving notice of their purpose to do so. As to all other classes of roads, at least, the county commissioners’ court, in order to appropriate the lands of the individual owners, without their consent, must, as we think, take the particular steps required by the statutes. In discussing the subject, the author of 37 Gyc. says, on page 162:
“Authority under the order to open is exhausted by the action of those to whom it is directed, and cannot be resumed; and a road, once laid, cannot be altered, except by a new and original proceeding, according to the road law. This would be so, even though the boundaries do not precisely conform to the survey. The alteration of a highway must be effected in a regular proceeding for that purpose, and the statutory requirements must be strictly adhered to and complied with, especially in all matters that are intended to affect individuals or the general public with notice.”
And article 6860 of the Revised Statutes, granting commissioners’ courts “full powers * • * ⅛ order the laying out and opening of public roads when necessary, and to discontinue or alter any road whenever it shall be deemed expedient,” etc., is limited by the succeeding terms of the article, to wit, “as hereinafter prescribed.” See Haverbekken v. Hale County Judge, 109 Tex. 106, 204 S. W. 1162, where it is said, quoting from the headnote:
“The power of the commissioners’ court, under article 6860, Rev. Stats., to lay out and open public roads is thereby to be exercised ‘as hereafter prescribed,’ that is, under the limitations as to procedure imposed by the succeeding articles of the chapter; these requirements are jurisdictional and their observance essential to a valid exercise of the power of the court.”
The succeeding articles of the chapter, which are now pertinent, are articles 6877, which provides that “all roads hereafter ordered to be made shall be laid out by a jury [of view] of freeholders of the county to be appointed by the commissioners’ court,” etc.; and article 6878, which prescribes the oath that such jury shall take, and article 6879, providing that, when the jury have “qualified, as provided in the preceding article,” *743 shall proceed to lay out and mark the road in accordance with the order of the court' and the law, and to report their proceedings in writing to the next regular term of the commissioners’ court; and article 6880, which provides that the jury of freeholders—
“shall issue a notice in writing to the landowners through whose lands such proposed road may run, or to his agent or attorney, of the time when they will proceed to lay out such road, or when they will assess the damages incidental to the opening of the same, which notice shall be served upon such owner, his agent or attorney, at least five days before the day therein named,” etc.
By referring to the orders of the commissioners’ court, of which we have hereinbe-fore given a synopsis,, it will he seen that the proceedings prescribed by the statutes were not followed in the effort to take the strip of land belonging to appellee for the purpose of widening the road. We have no order, as already stated, for the widening of the road, nor do we have an order appointing a number of the jurors as members of the jury of view, nor does it appear that such jury of view qualified as the statute provides, nor does it appear that any notice was given appellee or to the public of the purpose to open or widen the road. In numerous instances such failures have been held to render the proceeding void. This is particularly true with reference to the notice to the owner, required by the statutes. See McIntire v. Lucker, 77 Tex. 259, 13 S. W. 1627; M., K. & T. Ry. Co. v. Austin (Tex. Civ. App.) 40 S. W. 35; Powell v. Carson County, 62 Tex. Civ. App. 197, 131 S. W. 235; Cooke County v. Dudenhaffer (Tex. Civ. App.) 196 S. W. 976.
It follows, the proceedings being void as we conclude, that appellee did not waive his right to damages or his right of action in this ease, by his appearance before the commissioners’ court, pleaded as a waiver. Nor was he concluded by the judgment of the commissioners’ court awarding him $77.50. See Haverbekken v. Hale, County Judge, and McIntire v. Lucker, supra.
The assignments not disposed of by what we have said complain of the judgment as excessive, hut we have carefully examined the evidence relating to the subject and think that the judgment of the trial court cannot be disturbed in that respect. While some complaint is made of the weight to be given to the testimony of one or more of the witnesses, the bill of exceptions fails to show that their testimony was excepted to for want of qualification, and the matter being entirely before the court and there being other sufficient evidence to support the court’s conclusion, we think those assignments must be overruled.
We conclude that all assignments of error must be overruled, and the judgment must be affirmed.
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Reference
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