As used in this article, the following words, terms and phrases
shall have the meanings respectively ascribed to them in this section,
unless the context requires otherwise:
Brush.
Scrub vegetation or dense undergrowth.
Carrion.
The dead and putrefying flesh of any animal, fowl or fish.
Dump.
To dispose, discharge, place, deposit, throw, leave, sweep,
scatter, unload, or toss.
Filth.
Any matter in a putrescent state.
Garbage.
Any kitchen refuse, foodstuffs or related material, including
all decayable waste.
Impure or unwholesome matter.
Any putrescible or nonputrescible condition, object or matter
which tends to or may or could cause injury, death or disease to human
beings.
Junk.
All worn-out, worthless or discarded material, including,
but not limited to, any of the following materials, or parts of said
materials, or any combination thereof: new or used iron, steel or
nonferrous metallic scrap, brass or waste materials; used and/or inoperative
household appliances, household electrical or plumbing fixtures, floor
coverings and/or window coverings not currently in use; used lumber,
brick, cement block, wire, tubing and pipe, tubs, drums, barrels and/or
roofing material not currently in use; air conditioning and heating
equipment not currently in use; used vehicle components and parts
not currently in use; used furniture other than that designed for
outdoor use or that which would normally be considered as antique
furniture; used and/or inoperative residential lawn care equipment
and machinery not currently in use; used pallets, windows or doors
not currently in use; new or used sheetmetal, structural steel and/or
chains not currently in use; used and/or inoperable vending machines,
radios and/or televisions not currently in use; and any other type
of used and/or inoperable machinery or equipment not currently in
use.
Matter.
That of which any physical object is composed.
Nuisance.
Any condition, object, material or matter that is dangerous
or detrimental to human life or health; or that renders the ground,
the water, the air or food a hazard or is likely to cause injury to
human life or health; or that is offensive to the senses; or that
threatens to become detrimental to the public health; and shall include,
but not be limited to, any abandoned wells, shafts or basements, abandoned
refrigerators, stagnant or unwholesome water, sinks, privies, filth,
carrion, rubbish, junk, trash, debris or refuse, impure or unwholesome
matter of any kind, or any objectionable, unsightly, or unsanitary
matter of whatever nature.
Owner.
Any person or entity shown as the property owner on the latest
property tax assessment rolls or any person having or claiming to
have any legal or equitable interest in the property, including any
agent who is responsible for managing, leasing or operating the property.
Person.
Any individual, firm, partnership, association, business,
corporation or other entity.
Property.
All privately owned, occupied or unoccupied property, including
vacant land, and/or a building designed or used for residential, commercial,
business, industrial or religious purposes. The term shall also include
a yard, ground, wall, driveway, fence, porch, steps or other structure
appurtenant to the property.
Putrescible.
The decomposition of organic matter with the formation of
foul-smelling, incompletely oxidized products.
Refuse.
Heterogeneous accumulations of worn-out, used, broken, rejected
or worthless materials, including, but not limited to, garbage, rubbish,
paper or lifter, and other decayable or nondecayable matter.
Rubbish.
Junk, trash, debris, rubble, stone, useless fragments of
building materials, and other miscellaneous useless waste or rejected
matter.
Trash and debris.
All manner of refuse, including, but not limited to, mounds
of dirt, piles of leaves, grass and weed clippings, paper trash, useless
fragments of building material, rubble, furniture other than furniture
designed for outside use, useless household items and appliances,
items of salvage, such as scrap metal and wood, old barrels, old tires,
objects that hold water for an extended time, tree and brush trimmings,
and other miscellaneous wastes or rejected matter.
Weeds.
Any vegetation that because of its height is objectionable,
unsightly or unsanitary, excluding shrubs, bushes and trees, cultivated
flowers, and cultivated crops.
(Ordinance 10-0809-01, sec. 3.A,
adopted 8/10/10)
(a) It
is unlawful and declared a nuisance for any person owning, claiming,
occupying or having supervision or control of any real property, occupied
or unoccupied, within the corporate limits of the city, to permit
or allow any stagnant or unwholesome water, sinks, refuse, filth,
carrion, weeds, rubbish, brush and refuse, trash, debris, junk, garbage,
impure or unwholesome matter of any kind, or objectionable or unsightly
matter of whatever nature, to accumulate or remain upon any such real
property or within any public easement on or across such real property
or upon any adjacent public street or alley right-of-way between the
property line of such real property and where the paved surface of
the street or alley begins.
(b) It
shall be unlawful and declared a nuisance for any person to dump,
or permit to be dumped, upon or along any drain, gutter, alley, sidewalk,
street, park, right-of-way or vacant lot into or adjacent to water,
or any other public or private property within the corporate limits
of the city, any unwholesome water, refuse, rubbish, trash, debris,
filth, carrion, weeds, brush, junk, garbage, impure or unwholesome
matter of any kind or other objectionable or unsightly matter of whatever
kind.
(c) It
shall be the duty of any person owning, claiming, occupying or having
supervision or control of any real property, occupied or unoccupied,
to keep the sidewalks in front of the person’s property free
and clear of all such matter, and to fill up, drain or regrade any
lots, ground or yards which shall have stagnant water thereon, and
to cleanse and disinfect any house, building, establishment, lot,
yard or ground from refuse, rubbish, trash, filth, carrion, or objectionable,
unsightly or unsanitary matter of any kind, or other impure or unwholesome
matter of any kind.
(Ordinance 10-0809-01, sec. 3.B,
adopted 8/10/10)
(a) It
shall be unlawful for any person owning, claiming, occupying or having
supervision or control of any real property, occupied or unoccupied,
within the corporate limits of the city, to permit weeds, brush, grass,
or any objectionable or unsightly matter to grow to a height greater
than ten inches (10") upon such real property within one hundred feet
(100') of any property line which abuts street rights-of-way, alleys,
utility easements, subdivided additions, developed property or any
buildings or other structures. It shall be the duty of such person
to keep the area from the line of his property to the curbline next
adjacent to it, if there is a curbline, and, if not, then to the centerline
of the adjacent unpaved street, or to the edge of the pavement, cleared
of the matter referred to above. All vegetation (including hay unless
the hay is cultivated on property which has been granted an agricultural
property tax exemption on the most recent tax roll as certified by
the county appraisal district), except regularly cultivated row crops,
which exceeds ten inches (10") in height shall be presumed to be objectionable
and unsightly matter; provided further that regularly cultivated row
crops shall not be allowed to grow within the right-of-way of any
public street or easement nor shall they be allowed to obstruct the
necessary view to and from adjacent rights-of-way, but shall be kept
mowed as provided herein.
(b) With
respect to lots, tracts or parcels of land of five or more acres,
the provisions of this section shall not apply to any such area greater
than one hundred feet (100') from any open public street or thoroughfare,
as measured from the right-of-way line of said street or thoroughfare,
or an area greater than one hundred feet (100') from any adjacent
property under different ownership and on which any building is located
or on which any improvement exists, as measured from the property
line.
(Ordinance 10-0809-01, sec. 3.C,
adopted 8/10/10)
For the purpose of ascertaining whether violations of this article
exist, the code enforcement official, or his designee, is authorized
to inspect the exterior of a structure, and premises which contain
no structure, and if entry onto the property is refused the code enforcement
official shall have every recourse provided by law, including but
not limited to an administrative search warrant or an injunction,
to secure entry. If the owner, occupant, or person in control cannot
be identified or located, the code enforcement official may enter
the property to the extent allowed by law.
(Ordinance 10-0809-01, sec. 3.D,
adopted 8/10/10)
It shall be the duty of any person owning, claiming, occupying or having supervision or control of any real property, as described in sections
6.04.002 and
6.04.003, to remove, drain and/or fill all prohibited matter or conditions and to cut and remove all weeds, brush, impermissible vegetative growth, and other objectionable or unsightly matter as often as may be necessary to comply with sections
6.04.002 and
6.04.003, and to use every precaution to prevent the same from occurring or growing on such property.
(Ordinance 10-0809-01, sec. 3.E,
adopted 8/10/10)
(a) It
shall be the duty of the code enforcement official or his designee
to give a minimum of seven (7) days’ official notice, in writing,
to any person violating the terms of this article, subject to the
provisions herein stated. The notice shall be in writing and may be
served on such person violating the terms of this article:
(1) By delivering it to him in person;
(2) By letter or written notice addressed to such person at the person’s
address as recorded in the county appraisal district in which the
property is located and delivered by United States certified mail,
return receipt requested, with a second optional copy by United States
regular mail; or
(3) If personal service cannot be obtained:
(A) Notice shall be provided by publication once within seven (7) days
of the date the first notice attempt is made in the city’s official
newspaper;
(B) Notice shall be provided by posting the notice on or near the front
door of each building on the property to which the violations relates;
or
(C) Notice shall be provided by posting the notice on a placard attached
to a stake driven into the ground on the property to which the violation
relates, if the property contains no buildings.
(b) If the city mails a notice to the property owner in accordance with subsection
(a) of this section and the United States Postal Service returns the notice as refused or unclaimed, the validity of the notice is not affected, and the notice is considered as delivered.
(c) The city, in the notice provided herein, may inform the property owner by certified mail, return receipt requested, or by regular mail or by a posting on the property, that if the owner commits another violation of the same kind or nature and that violation poses a danger to the public health and safety on or before the first anniversary of the date of such notice, the city, without further notice, may correct the violation at the owner’s expense and assess the expense against the property. If the violation covered by a notice under this subsection
(c) occurs within said one-year period, and the city has not been informed in writing by the property owner of an ownership change, then the city, without notice, may take any action permitted by subsection
(d) of this section, and assess its expenses as provided by section
6.04.008 of this article.
(d) If
any person violating the terms of this article fails or refuses to
comply with the demand for compliance contained in the aforementioned
notice within seven (7) days after the date of notification as provided
herein, the city may go upon such property and do or cause to be done
the work necessary to obtain compliance with this article. All costs,
charges and expenses (hereinafter “charges”) incurred
in doing or in having such work done shall be a charge to, and a personal
liability of, such person.
(Ordinance 10-0809-01, sec. 3.F,
adopted 8/10/10)
(a) The
city may abate, without notice, weeds that:
(1) Have grown higher than twenty-four inches (24");
(2) Are an immediate danger to the life, health, or safety of any person.
(b) Not later than the tenth (10th) day after the date the city abates weeds under this section, the city shall give notice to the property owner in the manner required by section
6.04.006 of this article. The notice shall contain:
(1) An identification, which is not required to be a legal description,
of the property;
(2) A description of the violation(s) of this article that occurred on
the property;
(3) A statement that the city abated the weeds; and
(4) An explanation of the property owner’s right to request an
administrative hearing about the city’s abatement of the weeds.
(c) The
city shall conduct an administrative hearing on the abatement of weeds
under this section if, not later than the thirtieth (30th) day after
the date of the abatement of the weeds, the property owner files with
the city a written request for a hearing. An administrative hearing
conducted under this section shall be conducted not later than the
twentieth (20th) day after the date a request for a hearing is filed.
The owner may testify or present any witnesses or written information
relating to the city’s abatement of the weeds.
(d) The city may assess expenses and create liens under this section in the same manner as the city assesses expenses and creates liens under section
6.04.008. A lien created under this section is subject to the same conditions as a lien created under section
6.04.008. The authority granted the city by this section is in addition to the authority granted by section
6.04.008.
(Ordinance 10-0809-01, sec. 3.G,
adopted 8/10/10)
(a) If
a notice describing the violation and the city’s rights to impose
a lien on the property without further notice as provided for herein
is delivered to the owner of such real property, and he fails or refuses
to comply with such demand for compliance within the seven (7) day
time period established herein, the aforementioned charges shall be,
in addition to a charge to and personal liability of said owner, a
privileged lien upon and against such real property, including all
fixtures and improvements thereon.
(b) To
perfect the lien against the real property, the city administrator,
municipal health authority or other municipal official designated
by the mayor or administrator, such as the code enforcement official,
shall file a written statement of such charges with the county clerk
for filing in the county land and deed records. The statement shall
be deemed sufficient if it contains the following minimum information;
however, the statement also may contain other information deemed appropriate
by the mayor, the code enforcement official or their duly appointed
representative or designee:
(1) The name of the owner of the real property, if known;
(2) A legal description of the real property;
(3) A statement of the charges incurred by the city in doing or in having
such work done as necessary to bring the real property into compliance
with this article; and
(4) A notarized affidavit executed by the code enforcement official,
or his duly appointed representative, stating that all prerequisites
required by this section for the imposition of the charges and the
affixing of the lien have been met and that all statements and/or
representations made therein are true and correct. The lien attaches
upon the filing of the lien statement with the county clerk.
(c) All
such charges shall bear interest at the rate of ten percent (10%)
per annum from the date of payment by the city. The lien obtained
is security for the expenditures made and is inferior only to tax
liens and liens for street improvements. The city may bring suit to
collect the charges, institute foreclosure proceedings, or both. The
written statement of such charges provided for herein, or a certified
copy thereof, shall be prima facie evidence of the city’s claim
for charges or right to foreclose the lien. The owner of the real
property or any other person claiming, occupying or having supervision
or control of the real property shall be jointly and severally liable
for such charges.
(d) This
remedy is in addition to any penal provision provided for in this
article.
(Ordinance 10-0809-01, sec. 3.H,
adopted 8/10/10)
The provisions of this article shall be enforced by the code
enforcement official and his duly appointed representative, and it
shall be unlawful for any person to interfere with or hinder the code
enforcement official and/or his duly appointed representative in the
exercise of their duties under this article. Notwithstanding any provisions
contained herein to the contrary, the code enforcement official and
his duly appointed representative are hereby granted the authority
to issue immediate citations to persons violating any provision of
this article in their presence.
(Ordinance 10-0809-01, sec. 3.I,
adopted 8/10/10)
(a) Any person violating or failing to comply with any provision or requirement of this article who continues to violate or fail to comply with same after seven (7) days after notice is given and received as set forth in section
6.04.006 shall also be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and upon conviction thereof shall be fined in an amount in accordance with the general penalty in section
1.01.009 of this code, such offenses being violations of the health and safety regulations of the city. A separate offense shall be deemed committed upon each day during or on which a violation or failure to comply occurs or continues to occur. This section shall be in addition to and cumulative of the provisions for abatement of the nuisance by the city and charging the cost of same against the owner of the property.
(b) Notwithstanding
the foregoing, any violation of any provision of this article which
constitutes an immediate danger or threat to the health, safety and
welfare of the public may be enjoined in a suit brought by the city
for such purpose.
(c) In
addition to any other remedies or penalties contained herein, the
city may enforce the provisions of this article pursuant to the applicable
provisions of chapter 54 of the Texas Local Government Code, which
chapter provides for the enforcement of municipal ordinances.
(d) Allegation
and evidence of a culpable mental state are not required for the proof
of an offense defined by this article.
(Ordinance 10-0809-01, sec. 3.J,
adopted 8/10/10)