Comeau v. City of Brookside Village, B2497

Decision Date08 April 1981
Docket NumberNo. B2497,B2497
Citation616 S.W.2d 333
PartiesHomer N. COMEAU, et al., Appellants, v. CITY OF BROOKSIDE VILLAGE, et al., Appellees. (14th Dist.)
CourtTexas Court of Appeals

John A. Wright, Jr., Houston, for appellants.

William E. Kuhlmann, Manley, Hesson & Kuhlmann, Pasadena, for appellees.

Before COULSON, MILLER and MURPHY, JJ.

COULSON, Justice.

This case involves the constitutionality of two city ordinances of the City of Brookside Village. Appellants, Homer N. Comeau and Hazel A. Comeau, plaintiffs in the trial court, appeal from a judgment rendered in favor of defendant, appellee, City of Brookside Village. We affirm in part and reverse and render in part.

Appellants are the owners of a four acre lot in city of Brookside Village. In July of 1978, appellants presented a request to the city council that they be allowed to move their mobile home on to the property for use as their residence. The request was denied by the city council on August 3, 1978. On or about September 8, 1978, appellants moved the home onto their property. Appellants also have a store, icehouse, and storage sheds on the premises. Appellants brought this suit for injunctive relief and damages against the City of Brookside Village. After trial to the court, the court rendered its judgment that appellants take nothing and that appellants move their mobile home from its unauthorized location within sixty days from the final judgment.

At issue are Ordinances No. 58 and No. 78. Ordinance No. 58 pertains to mobile home parks and defines a mobile home as a portable vehicle constructed on a chassis and which has been designed so that it may be occupied and used without a permanent foundation. The trial court found that appellants' home is a mobile home and that finding is not challenged in this court. Ordinance No. 78 amended No. 58 and provides in section II, "(p)arking of mobile homes, camper buses, motor homes and camper trailers, for use as a residence, outside of a mobile home park shall be prohibited." Appellants attack the constitutionality of this ordinance on various grounds.

Appellants complain that the trial court erred in finding that Ordinances No. 58 and No. 78 are valid and constitutional as they bear no substantial relationship to the public health, safety, morals or general welfare. Appellants also assert that no evidence was presented to support a finding that mobile homes should be regulated in a different manner than on-site built structures. We agree. The right of a citizen to use his property as he chooses so long as he harms nobody is an inherent and constitutional right. Spann v. City of Dallas, 111 Tex. 350, 235 S.W. 513 (1921). The police power cannot be invoked for the abridgement of a particular use of private property unless such use threatens the public health, the public safety, the public comfort or welfare. Id. The mayor of City of Brookside Village, Eston Louis Boehm, Jr., testified that the City has no water or sewage facilities. Residents must install septic tanks and a health problem is created when too many septic tanks are in an area. The mayor stated the city wanted to limit mobile homes to mobile home parks because of the lack of sewage, water and fire protection. He stated the ordinance was for the safety and welfare of the citizens of the city. The mayor did state, however, that the requirements for utilities for a site-built house and a mobile home are the same. Don Marshall Rives, building official for the City of Brookside, also testified that...

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1 cases
  • City of Brookside Village v. Comeau
    • United States
    • Texas Supreme Court
    • May 19, 1982
    ...nothing by their suit but reversed and rendered the judgment of the trial court on the issue of the validity of the city's ordinances. 616 S.W.2d 333. It held the ordinances unconstitutional, as an unfair restriction on the use of property which served no legitimate state interest. 1 We rev......

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