(after stating the facts as above). It is insisted by the appellant, in the several propositions, that the levy and assessment on which the certificate sued on is based is void and not enforceable for the two reasons: (1) The contract let by the city commissioners is in violation of section 2, article 4, of the charter, in that no'provision is made by the city for the payment of the debt; (2) the city commissioners by the resolution or ordinance adopted and followed provided that the amount assessed and levied against each parcel of land abutting on the street should be fixed by “the front-foot plan.” Whereas the charter required that the amount assessed and levied should be according to the value of the property so assessed.
Section 2 of article 4 of the charter provides:
“No contract other than for current expenses shall-be entered into by. said commission or city until after an appropriation shall have been duly made for the payment thereof, or a tax levied for the payment thereof, to pay interest and create a sinking fund, nor shall any contract be made in excess of the amount so appropriated or provided therefor.”
The contract in this case made by the city Commissioners provided that the contractors should look solely to the abutting property *529owners for payment of two-thirds of the cost of the street improvement, and that as to the remaining one-third of the cost “the said contractor shall he paid by the county commissioners’ court at the times and in the manner as provided in the contract by and between said commissioners’, court and said contractors herein.” It is in view of the terms of the contract that “the said contractors shall be paid by the county commission-' ers’ court” out of the funds of the county road improvement district No. 1, that the appellant insists that the city, as such, had made no “appropriation,” as required by the above charter provision, for the payment of its contract debt.
It is evident from the language of the contract that the city commission did in fact undertake to make “an appropriation” or provision for the payment of the cost apportioned to the city for paving its street. When the conditions of the contract are fulfilled payment to the contractors of compensation is expressly provided therein. The contractors are to be paid in warrants issued by the county commissioners on the special fund, then available, of the county road improvement district No. 1. The special funds of the county road improvement district No. 1 are not, it is true, primarily the tax funds “of a city.” Simmons v. Lightfoot, 105 Tex. 212, 146 S. W. 872; Moore v. Bell County (Tex. Civ. App.) 175 S. W. 849. But it does not follow, as a legal consequence, that no portion of such fund can be used by the county commissioners, or by the county commissioners and the city acting jointly, exclusively within the corporate limits of the city upon the streets determined to be improved. City of Corsicana v. Mills (Tex. Civ. App.) 235 S. W. 220. The special funds of county road improvement district No. 1 are by statute required to be used in payment of the cost “of constructing and maintaining * * * macadamized, graveled, or paved roads” within such road improvement district. Article 627, R. S. The statutory system of improvement of highways expressly provides that “a defined road district of a county” may include “towns, villages or municipal corporations of the county.” Article 631, R. S. The streets of the city, then, become an integral, part of the road district, entitled to be improved, the cost to be payable with warrants issued against such special funds of the road district. The statute does not expressly or impliedly deny authority to the county commissioners to make apportionment of a proper and reasonable portion of the special fund to be used within the corporate limits of the city upon streets, as a part of the highway, determined to be improved. The statute does grant to towns and cities the special power to control, improve, and order the improvement of any street within the corporate limits. Articles 1006-1010, R. S.; Spe-eial Charter City of Sulphur Springs, Special Acts 1911, p. 414. In thus exercising the power • given over the improvement of 'its streets the city would not be doing an act violative of the law and its charter. And if the commissioners’ court voluntarily made apportionment of a proper and reasonable portion of such special fund to be used in improvement of the city streets, as an integral part of the district highway, the county commissioners would not thereby be doing an act prohibited to them. Even though the special funds in this case as apportioned to the city were in the custody of the county treasurer and were to be paid strictly in terms of tfre statute by warrants upon the county treasurer only when “approved by the commissioners’ court of the county,” still the apportionment by the county commissioners of a portion of the special fund to be used in the city limits in improvement of the streets constituted, in effect, an available resource to the city, in the meaning of the city charter for payment of the cost of improvement of the streets. Section 8 of article 29 of the city charter specially authorizes the city commissioners to make “appropriation” for the payment of the amount to be paid by “the city at large” in the street improvement “out' of. available funds, or resources properly applicable thereto, by bond issues or otherwise.” Consequently it is thought that from the standpoint of the city charter the city commissioners did not, in making the contract in suit, fail to comply with the charter provision. Therefore the contract as made is not, in the circumstances, void as being violative of charter requirements.
The second proposition submitted is predicated upon sustaining a special demurrer to that part of the 'answer setting up as a defense that the levy and assessment of the amount payable by appellant for the street improvement was according to “the front-foot plan,” in violation of the terms of the charter in such respect. Under the terms of article 29 of the charter of the city of Sul-phur Springs the commission, the governing body of the city, is specially empowered to create and establish within specially defined limits of the city improvement districts, designating them by a certain number. The commission is authorized to create an improvement district “whenever the commission shall deem it necessary to grade, fill, raise, repair, macadamize, pave, repave or otherwise improve any avenue, street or alley or portion thereof, and shall be of the opinion that certain real estate abutting on, or in the vicinity of, such improvement or improvements will be specially benefited thereby.” The commission is authorized to determine and provide for the payment oí the cost “of such proposed improvement or improvements” either “wholly by the owners of the real estate within such proposed *530improvement district” or “in part by such owners, and in part out of the general revenue of the city or other revenues or resources that may be properly appropriated for that purpose.” Section 8 has the following direction and limitation as to the amount of the cost that shall be paid solely by the owners of the real estate within such special district:
“In making assessment and levy on the property in any taxing district, to pay for local improvements, the assessment and levy shall be in proportion to the value of each parcel of property so assessed, but in no case shall the amount assessed be greater than the amount of increased value, added to the parcel of property so assessed by reason of said improvement.”
Acting under the authority of the charter, the city commission by resolution adopted, created, and established within the city specially defined “improvement district No. 16.” In creating the improvement district it was determined and provided in the resolution by the city commission that the improvement should consist (1) “of grading, raising, filling and paving of the hereinafter described street,” being “the area known as College street”; and (2) “and installing concrete curbs and gutters on and along same.” It was further resolved by the city commission that the cost of the proposed improvement be paid as follows: (1) The railway companies to pay all cost of such improvement “on the street occupied by the tracks, between the rail' and track and two feet on the outside thereof.”
(2) “The city shall pay all the cost of the improvement in and on said street at the intersection of other streets and alleys with the street named, and one-third of all the remaining cost of grading, raising, filling and paving of the street, except the cost of curbing in front of the respective property owners, and except further such portion as is payable by the railway companies above provided.”
(3) “That the owners of the property abutting upon and adjacent to said street, as named and bounded, shall pay the whole cost of installing concrete curbs and gutters in front of their respective property, and all the remainder of said costs of said improvement, after deducting the amount specified to be paid by the city and the railway companies.”
Further it is provided in the resolution:
“Said amount to be paid by said property owners and which may • be assessed against such abutting and adjacent property and its owners shall be proportioned as the frontage of each owner is to the whole frontage to be improved. Be it further resolved that the plan adopted by the commission to be used for defraying the cost of said improvement, as applied to the property owners whose property abuts and adjoins said street, shall be according to the ‘front-foot plan and rule’; Provided that if the application of this rule, in the opinion of the commission, be unjust or unequal, or result in individual cases in assessment in excess of specific benefits received from such improvement, then the said city commission shall adopt such rule of apportionment as shall effect a substantial equality between said owners, considering the benefits received by and burdens imposed upon said owners and their respective property.”
The actual cost of the curbing is by the 'terms of the charter to be assessed against appellant. The pro rata cost of the street paving is, by the terms of the charter, to be levied and assessed according to the amount of increased value of the property added by reason of the street improvement. Hence if the levy in this case, as to the cost of “the street” improvement, was not so made it would be void. City of Dallas v. Emerson et al. (Tex. Civ. App.) 36 S. W. 304. The answer alleges that—
“The city undertook to assess the purported costs of said alleged improvement, and bind the property therefor and create a liability thereon, upon the ‘front-foot plan.’ ”
This fact as alleged, if existing, was important, in view of all the proceedings, and the appellant was entitled to prove. Therefore as a pleading the answer was not subject to demurrer. This ruling in this respect constitutes, we conclude, reversible error.
The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded.