Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion ( 1948 )


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  •                   2%~     ATPOWNEY          GENE-L
    cwTEx~s
    PRICE  DANIEL
    ATTORNEYGENERAL
    Hon. A. C. Winborn
    District Attorney
    Harris County
    Houston, Texas
    Attn:      Hon. W. K. Richardson
    Opinion No. V-624
    Re:   Authority of County Clerk
    to record a map of a sub-
    division within,and ap-
    proved by the off.icersof,
    a town of less than 25,000
    without approval ef same
    by officers of a city ef
    over 25,000, within 5 miles
    of such subdivision.
    Dear Sir:
    We refer to your request for an opinion on
    the following question:
    The governing body of Jacinto City in
    Harris County, a city incorporated under
    general law, approved a map of a subdivi-
    sion of land situated in said city, outside
    of but within five miles of the incorpor-
    ated city of Houston which has a population
    of more than 25,000.
    Is it necessary that the City Planning
    Commission of the city.of Houston or the
    Commissioners’ Court of Harris Co,untyop-
    prove the said map to authoriz.ethe County
    Clerk of Harris County to file’,
    and record
    such map in the office of~,theCounty Clerk
    of Harris County?
    The Acts involved,in your request are Ver-
    non’s Civil Statutes, Articles 974a, enacted in 1927,
    and 6626, as amended fin 1931.
    Hon. A. C. Winborn - Page 2   (V- 624 )
    The pertinent parts of Article 974a read in
    part:
    "Sec. 3. That it shall be unlawful
    for the County Clerk of any county in which
    such land lies to receive or record any
    such plan, plat or replat, unless and un-
    til the same shall have been approved by
    the City Planning Commission of any city af-
    fected by this Act, if said city have a City
    Planning Commission and if it have no City
    ?lanning Commission, unless and until the
    said plan, plat or replat shall have been ap-
    proved by the governing body of such city.
    "Sec. 4.   IS such plan or plat, or re-
    plat shall conform to the general plan of
    said city and its streets, alleys, parks,
    playgrounds and public utility facilities,
    including those which have been or may be
    laid out, and to the general plan for the
    extension of such city and of its roads,
    streets and public highways within said city
    Pm   ithin fi e riles of the corworate l&g=
    iiLLLa/       regard being had ,foraccess to
    and,extensi& of sewer and water mains and
    the instrumentalities of public utilities,
    aad if same shall conform to such Penera.&
    rules and reculations, if anv. governing
    nlat and subdivisions of land fallina with-
    in ifs jurisdiction as the aoverning bodv of
    such citv mav adont and nromulgate to pro-
    mote the health, safety, morals or general
    welfare of the community, and the safe, or-
    derly and healthful development of said COR-
    ( c
    munity (wh        er
    for said DurDoses such cities are herebv au-
    thorized to adont and wromulsate after vub-
    lit hearing held thereon). then it shall be
    the duty of said City Plannine Commission or
    of the governing bodv of such citv. as the
    case mav be. to endorse awnroval unon the
    plan, alat or reDlat submitted to it.”
    In June 1931, the Supreme Court approved an
    opinion by the Commission of Appeals in the case of
    Hollis, County Clerk v. The Parkland Corporation, 
    120 Tex. 531
    , 40 S. W. (2d) 53, pertaining to the duty of
    the County Clerk concerning the filing and recording of
    Hon. A. C. Winborn - rage 3   (V-624)
    maps of subdivisions. The Court said:
    “Putting aside the crave censtitutiomal,
    questions i’nvolved.and treating the orovis-
    ions of this act as valid. with resnect to
    lands lvinz outside the territorial boundaries
    of the city . . . the case will first be con-
    sidered from that standpoint. The plat appears
    to be duly acknowledged as required by law and
    bears the approval of the City Planning Comis-
    sion. This is all that the act calls for as a
    prerequisite of the recording of the plat in
    the office of the county clerk. With refer-
    en   to the acuroval. o d-u      oval. of such
    p1zz.sas are contemelatid by the’act. at lea f;
    s reeards the recordinr of the nlats. the,csQ
    until of Fort Worth has nothine to do
    io”esthe act purport to give the city cbu.%l
    any authority in that respect, except in case
    there was no city planning commission. Tha.
    powor to regulate the recistration of instru-
    nents in the office of the CO&Y    clerk does
    not anwertaig to B              . . . .
    ‘1. . I Article 6591 makes it the duty
    of the county clerk to record all instruments
    of writing authorized or required to be re-
    corded in the county clerk’s office. By the
    provisions of article 6626, certain specified
    instruments Ior other instruments of writing
    concerning lands or tenements’ are authorized
    to be so recorded, when ackno’!Jedaedor Dr0vef.j
    gccordine t la      The plat in question and
    the accompa~yin~‘written dedication come with-
    in the purview of the last-mentioned statute.
    ?We recommend that the first certified
    question be answered by saying that The Park-
    land Corporation has a statutory right to have
    filed for record the tendered plot and dedica-
    tion.”
    While the Hollis case was pending in the Su-
    preme Court, Article 6626 was amended.
    Article 6626, as enacted in 1846, read:
    Hon.   A. C. Winborn - Page 4   (V-624)
    "The following instruments of writing,
    which shall have been acknowledged or proved
    according to law, are authorized to be re-
    corded, viz. all deeds, mortgages, convey-
    ances, deeds of trust, bonds for title, cove-
    nants, defeasances, or other instruments of
    writing concerning any lands or tenements, or
    goods and chattels, or moveable property of
    any description."
    In 1931 Article 6626 was'amended by adding
    the following:
    '1. . . provided, however, that in cases
    of subdivision or re-subdivision of real prop-
    erty no map or plat of m         subdivw
    gr re-subdivision shall be filed or recorded
    until the same has be n authorizad bv the Cofo-
    missioners' court of Fhe county in which.the
    real estate is situated by order duly entered
    in the minutes of said court except in cases
    of partition or other subdiv!sion through a
    cour,tof record; provided, that within incoc
    m                         the g?v;-&yg body -
    n lieu of the Commissio        ourt
    shall perform the duties hereinabove imposed
    upon the Commissioners' Court."
    In Trawalter County Clerk v. Schaefer, 
    142 Tex. 521
    , 179 S. W. (2dj 765, a map of property located
    outside of San Antonio, but within 5 miles thereof, had
    been approved by the governing body of that city, under
    Article 974a but not by the Commissioners1 ,Court as re-
    quired by Article 6626. It was contended that the 1931
    amendment of Article 6626 is void. The Court said in
    upholding the validity of the Act:
    ,I     We are Sully avare of the fact
    that judiciai discretion may exist in judi-
    cial tribunals less definitely defined than
    it can exist in tribunals or authorities
    which exercise purely executive or adminis-
    trative powers. We are also Sully aware of
    the fact that executive and administrative
    authorities cannot be clothed with undefinea
    unrestrained. or arbitrarv powers. In spite'
    of the rules just mentioned, we are convinced
    that this act does not clothe the commission-
    courts with unrestrained. undefined. or
    .63-s'
    Hen. A. C. ‘Jlnhorn- Page 5   (V-624)
    zutrarv   no er or even with undefined iudi-
    cial discretron. To the contrarv. we thi&
    the Act. taken as a whole. is 'sufficiently
    certain to furnish commissioners’ courts
    with a definite auide to eovern their action%
    thereunder.”
    With reference to the matter here under con-
    sideration, the Supreme Court then stated:
    a a ter cant n    that Article
    6626 a6*amehdzi tvlthe 1931eA%  has onerated
    to reveal the extra-territorial nrovisions
    of Article 974a. Acts 1927. We are in ac-
    cord with Trawalter!g contention. Article
    974a, Acts 1927, provides that maps or plats
    of subdivisions such as the one here involv-
    ed shall be approved by certain named auth-
    orities of cities and towns of 25,000 inhab-
    itants or more, if the land represented by
    such maps or plats is situated within the cor-
    porate limits of such municipalities or with-
    in five miles thereof. Article 6626, Acts
    1931, by its very plain language provides
    that no map or plat of any subdivision of
    land shall be filed or recorded until such
    filing and recording has been authorized by
    the commissionerst court. Article 6626, Acts
    1931, then excepts from its general provision
    maps or plats of subdivisions situated within
    the corporate limits of cities and towns, and
    maps or plats of subdivisions authorized by
    courts of record. It is plainly evident that
    the exception to Article 6626, Acts ‘1931,re-
    garding maps or plats of land situated within
    the corporate lipits of cities and towns oper-
    ates to keep in force the provisions of Arti-
    cle 974a, Acts 1927, insofar as such last-
    mentioned Act covers g)aDs or olats of land
    situated with;l
    n t                      ol’the
    cities and towns mentioned therein, cut it
    does not operar;eto preserve or keep in force
    such Act insofar as it co ers extra-w-
    toripl          Certainly zad the Legislature
    intenfledsuci a construction to be given Ar-
    ticle 6626, Acts 1931, It would have included
    lands within five miles OS cities and towns
    of 25,000 inhabitants or more in the language
    of the exception.
    iron.A. C. winborn - Page 6   (v-624)
    “Even if it should be held that Article
    6626, Acts 1931, has not repealed the extra-
    territorial provisions of Article 974a Acts
    1927, then maps or plats of land located wit-
    in five miles of cities and towns containing
    25,000 inhabitants or more would be included
    within the.provisions of both Acts, and in.
    such instances both Acts would have to be com-
    plied with. We hardly think that such was the
    intention of the Legislature; and yet this
    conclusion would be inescapable if it should
    be held that Article 6626, Acts 1931, has not
    repealed the extra-territorial provisions of
    Article 97&a, Acts 1927. At this point we
    wish to say that we exnress no Q&@n    as &
    the validitv of the extra-territorial vrovi -
    ion of Article 974a. Acts 1927. Hollis v. Tze
    Parkland Corporation, 120 Texas 531, 40 S. W.
    (2d) 53."
    Your request pertains to a subdivision map of
    land situated in Jacinto City, an incorporated town hav-
    ing an estimated 4,775 inhabitants, outside of, but with-
    in 5 miles of the City of Houston. The incorporated
    cities of Jacinto City and the City of Houston have no
    jurisdiction within the boundaries of each other.
    In the case of City of Galena Park v. the
    City of Houston, 133 S. ti. (2d) 162 (error refused), the
    Court had under consiaeration the question of the exer-
    cise of contemporaneous co-existent control over the same
    territory. In that regard the Court said:
    I,
    . . . Since the statute does, by neces-
    sary effect, so negate the passing of any such
    claimed right to other cities and towns under
    the general law of their creation, and, at the
    same time affirmatively does confer exclusive
    jurisdiction over the territory upon eligible
    annexing:cities, the well settled principle,
    that two municipal corporations caynot have co-
    existent control over the same territory and
    contemporaneously exercise essentially the same
    governmental powers in it applies."
    In City of West University Place v. City of
    Dellaire, 198 S. d. (Zd) 766, the Court said:
    Hon. A. C. Winborn, Page 7   (V-624)
    "The powers of local self government
    possessed by citizens of towns and cities
    of 5000 inhabitants or less are not so ample
    as those held by home rule cities. However,
    such powers of local self-government as are
    possessed by towns and cities of 5000 inhab-
    itants or less are held by the same title, as
    home rule cities ho.Ld,.,theirs;
    namely, by the
    State Constitution and general laws. Sec. 4,
    Art. XI of the State Constitution reads:
    'Cities and towns having a population of five
    thousand or less may be chartered alone by
    general law. They may levy, assess and col-
    lect . . 0' Since the title by which Bel-
    laire and Southside Place hold their munici-
    pal jurisdiction over the territory within
    their corporate limits is the Constitution
    and general laws of this State, no part of
    their territory or jurisdiction is sublcct to
    monriation    bv West Universitv Place 0n
    We therefore believe that the conclusion
    reached In your brief, submitted with your opinion re-
    quest, is correct. Following the decision in the Tra-
    Walter case and Attorney General's Opinion 0-6090, we
    hold that Article 6626 re ealed the extra-territorial
    provisions of Article 97r:a. The City of Houston,
    therefore, need not and has no jurisdiction to approve
    the plat of property located outside its limits and
    within another incorporated city.
    Further, Article 6626 simply requires that
    a city or town be incorporated in order to approve
    such plats. No particular size or population is rc-
    quired. We therefore hold that the approval of the
    governing body of an incorporated citg or town (Ja-
    cinto City) satisfies that requirement of Article 6626.
    Therefore, assuming that all other requirements are
    mot, the,plat in question is a proper subject for fil-
    ing or recordation.
    SUMMARY
    The extra-territorial provisions of
    Article 974a were repealed by Article 6626.
    Trawaltsr v. Schaefer, 
    142 Tex. 521
    , 179
    S. W. (2d) 765; Attorney General's Opinion
    0-6090.    Where property is located within
    Han, A. C. Winborn - Page 8   (v-624)
    an incorporated town (Jacinto City), and out-
    side the limits of but within 5 miles of a
    larger incorporated town (Housta), l r-2,~
    the
    approval of tti governing body of the smaller
    town in which the property is located is re-
    quired in order that a plat of such property
    may be filed and recorded by the County Clerk.
    Art. 6626.
    Very truly yours,
    ATTORNEY GENERAL OF TEXAS
    WTW:vb;erc;wb                 Assistant
    APPROVED:
    

Document Info

Docket Number: V-624

Judges: Price Daniel

Filed Date: 7/2/1948

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 2/18/2017