Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion ( 1961 )


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  •                         THEAITORNEYGENERAL
    OF      TEXAS
    AUSTIN    ~.TEXAS
    BVILL    WILSON
    A’ITORNEY      GENE-L
    April 12, 1961
    Honorable Jack N. Fant             Opinion No. WW-1040
    County Attorney
    El Paso County                     Re:    Authority of Commissioners
    El Paso, Texas                            Court of El Paso County to
    convey 1.67 acres of land,
    dedicated and used as a
    county park, back to its
    grantor, the United States
    of America, under the facts
    stated, and related ques-
    Dear Mr. Fant:                            tions.
    In your letter pertaining to the above subject, you
    ask the opinion of this office as to the authority of the
    Commissioners Court of El Paso County to convey certain land
    back to the grantor, the United States of America, the validity
    of a deed executed by the County Judge of El Paso County con-
    veying such land to the United,States pursuant to an agree-
    ment between the County and the City of El Paso, and the
    validity of the agreement entered into between the City and
    the County relating to the conveyance of such land. You fur-
    ther request the opinion of this office on the question of
    whether, under Article 1175, Vernon's Civil Statutes, the
    City of El Paso has or had the right of eminent domain to
    acquire the fee simple title to said property for city purposes;
    and if the City and County agreed upon the public use of the
    property by agreement and the County thereafter executed such
    a deed, if the deed and agreement would thus be valid.
    From the facts presented in your letter it appears
    that the United States, on October 11, 1937, acting through
    the then Secretary of State, conveyed approximately 352 acres
    of land (in which the 1.67 acres in question are included) to
    the County of El Paso, 'so long as the said premises continue
    to be used by or on behalf of ths grantee herein for public
    recreational park purposes . . .   The County then established
    a county park known as Ascarate Park on this land and has con-
    tinued to own, operate, maintain and control said park. As
    a result of negotiations between the Federal Government and
    the County and City of El Paso, the Commissioners Court, on
    January 11, 1960, passed an order stating:
    Honorable Jack N. Fant, Page 2 (WW-1040)
    II
    . . . that the County of El Paso deed to the
    Federal Government a strip of land in Ascarate
    Park consisting of 1.67 acres which will in turn
    be deeded over to the City by the Federal Govern-
    ment for the purpose of the City of El Paso erect-
    ing a training tower for firemen which in turn
    will reduce the fire insurance rate in El Paso and
    that the County Judge be authorized to sign said
    deed on approval of same by the County Attorney."
    Thereafter, on January 13, 1960, the County Judge, on behalf
    of the County, executed a Special Warranty Deed conveying the
    1.67 acres to the United States of America for the purpose of
    enabling the United States to convey this land to the City of
    El Paso. Also on January 13, 1960, the Mayor of El Paso and
    the County Judge, on behalf of the City and County, respectively,
    signed an agreement providing as follows:
    II
    . . .
    "Whereas, by deed dated October 11, 1937,
    the United States of America conveyed to the
    County of El Paso for public recreational park
    purposes a tract of land which had been acquir-
    ed by the United States in connection with the
    rectification of the Rio Grande in the El Paso-
    Juarez Valley; and
    ltWhereas,it is deemed in the public in-
    terest that 1.6737 acres of land more or less
    out of said tract be conveyed to the City of El
    Paso, for public purposes other than those per-
    mitted in the deed from the United States to
    the County, said 1.6737 acres being a part of
    Ascarate Park, situated In El Paso County, Texas,
    and more particularly described by metes and
    bounds as follows:
    II
    . . . fiand descrlptio~
    "Now therefore In consideration of the pre-
    mises and of the mutual benefits moving to each
    of the parties therefrom, the City agrees to use
    said property for a fire drill tower and such
    other necessary incidental uses pertaining to
    said drill tower and exercises and drills connect-
    ed therewith, and the City further agrees with the
    County that the City will not conduct upon said
    property any concessions.
    Honorable Jack N. Fant, Page 3 (WW-1040)
    11               II
    .   .   .
    On January 15, 1960, the United States Commissioner,
    International Boundary and Water Commission, United States
    and Mexico, acting for and on behalf of the United States
    of America, conveyed the 1.67 acres, without warranty, to
    the City of El Paso to be used for public purposes.
    Section 18 of Article V of the Constitution of
    Texas confers authority upon the Commissioners Court in the
    following language:
    11
    . . . The County Commissioners so chosen,
    ,with the County Judge as presiding officer, shall
    compose the County Commissioners Court, which
    shall exercise such powers and jurisdiction over
    all county business, as is conferred by this Con-
    stitution and the law: of the State, or as may be
    hereafter prescribed.
    Statutory provisions relating to the disposition of
    county lands such as are involved here are found in Articles
    6078a, 5248~2,and 1577, Vernon's Civil Statutes.
    Article 6078a pertains to the abandonment of county
    parks and does not apply to the above facts inasmuch as the
    Commissioners Court made no determination to close and aban-
    don the land as a park.
    Article 5248c, relating to the authority of counties
    to convey lands to the United States at private sale is L
    also inapplicable inasmuch as it pertains to the sale of
    lands used for public purposes which are in excess of the
    needs of the county for its public purposes. These lands
    are authorized to be conveyed to the United States, 'for
    any fair consideration . . . under the provisions of the
    Statutes of the United States of America a;thorizing the
    acquisition of sites for public buildings.   That this
    Statute was not intended to encompass the situation here
    presented is further evidenced by the wording of Section 3,
    validating, "proceedings and orders heretofore had and made
    . . . for the conveyance . . . of any plot of ground such
    as is described in Section 1 hereof to the United States of
    America, pursuant to any advertisement by its officers in-
    viting proposals to sell site for any public building . . .',
    and by Section 4, the emergency clause, which reads in part
    as follows:
    Honorable Jack N. Fant, Page 4 (WW-1040)
    "Sec. 4. The fact that the erection of
    public buildings for the United States of
    America at locations convenient for the
    public may be prevented or delayed unless
    this Act be enacted to takz immediate effect
    creates an emergency . . .   Acts 46th Leg.,
    1939, P. 139.
    The conveyance by the Commissioners Court to the
    United States of America was not in compliance with the pro-
    visions of Article 1577, which reads as follows:
    "The Commissioners Court may, by an order
    to be entered on its minutes, appoint a Commis-
    sioner to sell and dispose of any real estate
    of the county at public auction, and notice of
    said public auction shall be advertised at least
    twenty (20) days before the day of sale, by the
    officer, by having the notice thereof published
    in the English language once a week for three
    (3) consecutive weeks preceding such sale in
    a newspaper in the county in which the real
    estate is located and in the county which owns
    the real estate, if they are not the same. The
    deed of such Commissioner, made in conformity
    to such order for and in behalf of the county,
    duly acknowledged and proven and recorded, shall
    be sufficient to convey to the purchasers all
    the right, title, and interest and estate which
    the county may have in and to the premises to be
    conveyed. Provided, however, that where abandon-
    ed right-of-way property is no longer needed for
    highway or road purposes and the county decides
    to sell said right-of-way property, it shall be
    sold with the following priorities: (1) to abut-
    ting or adjoining landowners; (2) to the original
    grantors, his heirs or assigns of the original
    tract from whence said right-of-way was conveyed;
    or (3) at public auction as provided above. Noth-
    ing contained in this Article shall authorize any
    Commissioners Court to dispose of any lands given,
    donated or granted to such county for the purpose
    of education in any other manner than shall be
    directed by law. As amended Acts 1949, 51st Le
    p. 904, ch. 485, g 1; Acts 1953, 53rd Leg., p. 8$',
    ch. 133, g 1."
    Honorable Jack N. Fant, Page 5 (WW-1040)
    The authority of the Commissioners Court to convey
    county lands in a manner other than that provided by this
    Statute was denied in the case of Fernuson v. Halsell, 
    47 Tex. 421
    , (1877), wherein the Court, holding invalid a deed
    which conveyed county land at a private sale, stated:
    II
    . . . Although this statute is permissive
    in its terms, yet it is the only mode expressly
    pointed out in the general laws of the State by
    which the County Court can divest the county of
    its title to its real estate. No special law,
    as applicable to this particular case, has been
    referred to. The general doctrine is, that as
    the County Court is the agent of the county, in
    its corporate capacity, it must conform to
    the mode prescribed for its action in the
    exercise of the powers confided to it. The
    prescribing of a mode of exercising a power
    by such subordinate agencies of the Govern-
    ment has often been held to be a restriction
    to that mode.
    II
    . . .11
    This construction was recognized in Wooters v. Hall,
    
    61 Tex. 15
    , (1884), and was followed in Llano County v. John-
    son, et al, 
    29 S.W. 56
    (Civ. App. 1895), and Llano County v.
    Knowles, et al, 
    29 S.W. 549
    (Civ. App. 1895). The following
    language was used in the latter two cases:
    II
    . . . The commissioners' court of the
    county occupy towards its property a trust
    relation, and they can only dispose of its
    property in the manner required by law, and
    for purposes that are in keeping with the
    trust they represent. They have no right
    to donate the county property or dispose of
    it so as to virtually amount to a donation.
    It is a trust estate, and principles of
    equity will not permit them to be liberal
    and generous with property they do not own,
    and which the% hold in trust for public pur-
    poses. . . .
    This interpretation was followed in Hardin Count
    v. Nona Mills Co., 
    112 S.W. 822
    (civ. APP. 1908-lTzzs.
    Levg, 
    173 S.W. 550
    (Civ. App. 1915, error ref.) and Dreeben
    Honorable Jack N. Fant, Page 6 (W-1040)
    v. Whitehurst, 
    68 S.W.2d 1025
    (Comm.App. 1934).  As evi-
    denced by Opinion No. 0-2660, a copy of which is enclosed,
    this office has consistently followed the construction of
    Article 1577 announced in the cited cases.
    Therefore, it is the opinion of this office that
    the Commissioners Court of El Paso County was without author-
    ity to convey the land in question by the method employed and
    that the deed executed by the County Judge and the agreement
    entered into between the County and the City are invalid.
    The authority of the City of El Paso to acquire by
    condemnation the fee simple title to the subject property
    is governed by Section 5 of Article XI of the Constitution
    of Texas, providing for the adoption of charters by home
    rule cities, by Section 15 of Article 1175, Vernon's Civil
    Statutes, enumerating the powers granted to such cities,
    and by the provisions of its charter. Section 15 of Article
    1175 reads, In part, as follows:
    "15.  To have the power to appropriate
    private property for public purposes whenever
    the governing authorities shall deem it neces-
    sary; . . . and to acquire lands within and
    without the city for any other municipal pur-
    pose that may be deemed advisable.        The
    power of eminent domain hereby conferred'shall
    include the right of the governing authority,
    when so expressed, to take the fee in the lands
    so condemned and such power and authority shall
    include the right to condemn public property
    for such purposes."
    However, this general grant of authority by the
    Legislature to home rule cities to condemn public lands,
    "for anv other municinal nurnose that mav be deemed advisable"
    must yield to the limitation-on that authority expressed~by
    the Texas Supreme Court in Sabine & E. T. Ry. Co. v. Gulf &
    I. Ry. Co. of Texas, 92 Tex. lb2 4b S.W. 784 (1898) , wherein
    the Court recognized the general'rule that, unless exnress
    authority is gzven by the-statute to condemn property-pre-
    viously dedicated to a public use, such authority cannot be
    Implied from the general power conferred by law when such
    condemnation would practically destroy the use to which the
    property has been devoted unless the necessity be so great
    Honorable Jack N. Fant, Page 7 (WW-1040)
    as to make the new use of paramount importance to the public,
    and it cannot be practically accomplished in any other way.
    This doctrine was followed and the power of condemnation recoe-
    nized where the proposed use would not destroy or materially
    interfere with the prior use in Texas Midland
    ----.-  R. --_
    -_- R. v.
    . . Knl~fman
    --- -...-..
    County Imp. Dist. No. 1, 175 S.lim             `` 1915, error
    IV. APP.
    dism.   Texas & N.O.R. Co. v. City of Beaumott, 285 S;W. 944
    (Civ.)app. 1926, error ref.), Central Power and Light Co. v.
    Willacy Count& 
    14 S.W.2d 102
    (Civ. App. 1929) and Snellen v.
    Brazoria County, 
    224 S.W.2d 305
    (Civ. App. 1949, error ref. n.r.e. ).
    The following cases concern express statutory authority: Ft.
    Worth & R. G. Rv Co. v. Southwestern Telegraph & Telephone Co.,
    
    96 Tex. 160
    , 
    71 S.W. 270
    (1903) and Fry, et al v. Jackson, et
    a, 
    264 S.W. 612
    (Civ. App. 1924). Injunctions have been upheld
    against condemnation of land used for public purposes unless the
    prior use is protected In Ft. Worth Imnrovement Dist. No. 1 v.
    City of Ft. Worth, 
    106 Tex. 148
    158 S.W. 164 
    (1913) and Harris
    County Drainage Dist. No. 12 v.'Citv of Houston, et al, 
    35 S.W. 2d
    118 (Comm. App. 1931).
    In view of the above, it is the opinion of this office
    that the City of El Paso may condemn the county's interest in
    the public land in question ifsuch right is so expressed in
    the city charter and if the proposed use will not materially
    interfere with or destroy the prior use, or if the proposed use
    is of paramount public importance and cannot practically be
    accomplished in any other way. The determination of these ques-
    tions of fact is not within the purview of this office. Even
    though the City may, under the conditions stated, exercise the
    right of eminent domain in this situation, such action would
    not validate the action of the commissioners' court in agree-
    ing to convey and conveying the land in a manner other than
    that provided by statute.
    Since the federal government has expressed its con-
    sent to the city's ownership and proposed use of the 1.67 acres
    for public purposes only, the right of the city to acquire the
    fee simple title to the subject land must be considered in con-
    nection with the reversionary interest retained by the United
    States in the original deed to the County of El Paso, provid-
    ing that, . . . whenever and in the event that the County of
    El Paso shall cease to utilize the said described premises wholly
    for public recreational park purposes, then and thereupon this
    conveyance shall be null and void, and the said land and premises,
    together with all Improvements thereon and appurtenances there-
    Honorable Jack N. Fant, Page 8 (WW-1040)
    unto in anywise belonging or appertaining shall absolutely re-
    vert to and revest in the United States of America; and no
    act or omission on the part of the United States of America
    shall be a waiver of the enforcement of such condition; . . .'
    In the case of Utah Power & Light Co. v. United States, 230
    Fed. 328 (C.C.A.&h, 1915) wherein the power company contended
    that the land of the Unite; States within the State of Utah was
    subject to the laws of the state and its power of eminent domain,
    the Circuit Court of Appeals held that the public lands of the
    United States were not subject to the state power of eminent do-
    main, either directly or indirectly, without the consent of the
    United States.
    Your fourth question is quoted as follows:
    I'
    . . . assuming that the deeds and agree-
    ment submitted herewith are valid . . . would
    the city have the right to pump . . . water from
    the County Park lake for fire training purposes?"
    In view of our opinion that the deed and agreement
    are invalid, we do not answer this question.
    SUMMARY
    The Commissioners Court of El:Paso County was
    without authority to reconvey to the United
    States of America land previously dedicated
    and used for public park purposes in a manner
    not authorized by law, and the deed executed
    by the County Judge for this purpose is in-
    valid. The City of El Paso may condemn the
    county's interest in the public land in ques-
    tion if the proposed use will not materially
    interfere with or destroy the prior public
    use, or if the proposed use is of paramount
    public importance and cannot practically be
    accomplished In any other way.
    Yours very truly,
    WILL WILSON
    Attorney General of Texas
    Dudley D: M&alla
    Assistant
    DDM:mm/hmc
    Honorable Jack N. Fant, Page $9 (WW-1040)
    APPROVED:
    OPINION COMMITTEE
    W. V. Geppert, Chairman
    William H. Pool, Jr.
    Elmer McVey
    Joe B. MeMaster
    Linward Shivers
    REVIEWED FOR THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
    BY: Leonard Passmore