Alice Flores, Esequiel Flores, Celina Flores, Margaret Gonzales, Marcus Ortiz, Arnold Vyvial and Felicita Arriaga v. Texas Department of Health and Fort Bend County

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 12, 1992
Docket03-91-00440-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Alice Flores, Esequiel Flores, Celina Flores, Margaret Gonzales, Marcus Ortiz, Arnold Vyvial and Felicita Arriaga v. Texas Department of Health and Fort Bend County (Alice Flores, Esequiel Flores, Celina Flores, Margaret Gonzales, Marcus Ortiz, Arnold Vyvial and Felicita Arriaga v. Texas Department of Health and Fort Bend County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alice Flores, Esequiel Flores, Celina Flores, Margaret Gonzales, Marcus Ortiz, Arnold Vyvial and Felicita Arriaga v. Texas Department of Health and Fort Bend County, (Tex. Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

Flores v. TDH
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT OF TEXAS,


AT AUSTIN




NO. 3-91-440-CV


ALICE FLORES, ESEQUIEL FLORES, CELINA FLORES,
MARGARET GONZALES, MARCUS ORTIZ, ARNOLD VYVIAL,
AND FELICITA ARRIAGA,


APPELLANTS



vs.


TEXAS DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND FORT BEND COUNTY,


APPELLEES





FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY, 126TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT


NO. 489,700, HONORABLE W. JEANNE MEURER, JUDGE PRESIDING




This is an appeal from a suit for judicial review of a Texas Department of Health (the "Health Department") order granting a permit for expansion of a solid-waste disposal site operated by Fort Bend County (the "County"). Alice Flores, Esequiel Flores, Celina Flores, Margaret Gonzales, Marcus Ortiz, Arnold Vyvial, and Felicita Arriaga (hereinafter collectively "Appellants") filed suit in district court. The County intervened in the suit due to its interest in the permit. After the County's intervention, the district court denied a joint motion for remand filed by the Health Department and Appellants, denied a plea to the jurisdiction filed by the County, and affirmed the Health Department's order granting the expansion of the solid waste site. We will reverse the district court's judgment and render judgment remanding the case to the Health Department.



BACKGROUND

The County applied for a permit to expand an existing Type I Municipal Solid Waste Disposal Site located west of Rosenberg, Texas. (1) The Health Department held extensive adjudicative public hearings in October and November of 1989. As is often the case with solid waste disposal permits, the Appellants' chief concern centered around the determination of the groundwater level because an error in this determination may result in groundwater contamination. The experts who testified in this case as to the groundwater level reached vastly different conclusions, supported by different sets of data. One set of experts established the seasonal high groundwater table at a depth of approximately sixty feet, while the other expert set the level at sixteen feet. Following these hearings, the Health Department issued a proposal-for-decision recommending that the permit be granted. That proposal contained the Health Department's findings of fact, including finding of fact number 83 setting the level of the seasonal high groundwater table for design purposes at thirty-three feet. The Health Department issued the permit on May 31, 1990. Appellants filed a motion for rehearing. After extending its time to consider the motion, the Health Department overruled the motion for rehearing on July 25, 1990. Appellants sought judicial review within thirty days of that order.

The suit for judicial review alleged that the Health Department violated various statutory provisions, erroneously failed to reopen the proceedings on the basis of new evidence, acted arbitrarily and capriciously in setting the groundwater level, and failed to base its finding of the groundwater level on substantial evidence. The Health Department filed a general denial. On July 11, 1991, the County filed an amended plea in intervention, alleging that the suit for judicial review was not timely, that the Health Department acted properly, and that sufficient evidence supported the Health Department's findings for issuing the permit. On July 12, 1991, the Health Department amended its answer to agree with Appellants that the finding on the seasonal high groundwater level lacked substantial evidentiary support in the record and was arrived at arbitrarily and capriciously. Appellants and the Health Department thereafter filed a joint motion for remand.

A hearing was held on July 19, 1991. At that time, Appellants withdrew all claims of error except the lack of substantial evidence and the arbitrary and capricious nature of the Health Department's actions. Appellants and the Health Department urged their joint motion for remand. The County urged its plea to the jurisdiction. The district court denied the joint motion, denied the plea to the jurisdiction, and rendered a final judgment finding that substantial evidence supported the Health Department's issuance of the permit.

Appellants contend in three points of error that the district court erred in finding substantial evidence to support the Health Department's finding number 83, in finding that the Health Department did not act arbitrarily and capriciously in regard to finding number 83, and in failing to grant the joint motion for remand. The County brings a cross-point, complaining that the district court erred in failing to grant its plea to the jurisdiction.



DISCUSSION AND HOLDING


A. County's Cross-point of Error

Because the County's cross-point challenges jurisdiction, we will consider it first. The County complains that the district court lacked jurisdiction because the suit for judicial review was untimely.

This suit falls within the purview of the Administrative Procedure and Texas Register Act (APTRA). (2) According to APTRA, a motion for rehearing is overruled by operation of law if the agency does not act on it within forty-five days after notice to the parties of the agency's final decision, unless the agency issues a written order extending that time. APTRA § 16(e). In this case the forty-fifth day fell on July 15th, a Sunday. The following Monday, the Health Department issued an order extending its time to act. The County contends that the Health Department's authority to issue its extension ended on July 15th.

The Health Department relies on Rule 4 of the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure which extends deadlines that expire on a Saturday, Sunday, or a legal holiday until midnight on the following Monday or regular weekday. Tex. R. Civ. P. Ann. 4 (Supp. 1992). Applying this rule, the motion for rehearing would not have been overruled by operation of law until midnight on Monday, July 16, 1990, and the Health Department would have acted within its authority in issuing the extension order. Appellants then would have had thirty days from the order denying the motion for rehearing, issued on July 26, 1990, to file suit for judicial review. Thus, under the Health Department's construction, this suit was timely because it was filed on August 23, 1990. On the other hand, the County contends that the Health Department's time to act on the motion ended on July 15th, 1990, and that Appellants' suit, filed on August 23, 1990, was untimely. See APTRA § 19(b) (suit for judicial review must be filed within 30 days of final appealable decision).

The legal question presented is whether the rule of civil procedure for computing deadlines applies to deadlines set by APTRA. The Health Department argues that its own internal rules allow the application of Rule 4 since they specify that motions for rehearing are governed by APTRA "or other pertinent statute." See Tex. Dep't of Health, 25 Tex. Admin. Code § 1.30 (1989). The Rules of Civil Procedure have the force and effect of a statute. Missouri P. R.R. v. Cross, 501 S.W.2d 868, 872 (Tex. 1973).

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Alice Flores, Esequiel Flores, Celina Flores, Margaret Gonzales, Marcus Ortiz, Arnold Vyvial and Felicita Arriaga v. Texas Department of Health and Fort Bend County, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alice-flores-esequiel-flores-celina-flores-margaret-gonzales-marcus-texapp-1992.