Bastrop County v. Samples

286 S.W.3d 102, 2009 Tex. App. LEXIS 3137, 2009 WL 1255565
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 8, 2009
Docket03-08-00582-CV, 03-08-00648-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 286 S.W.3d 102 (Bastrop County v. Samples) 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
Bastrop County v. Samples, 286 S.W.3d 102, 2009 Tex. App. LEXIS 3137, 2009 WL 1255565 (Tex. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

OPINION

DAVID PURYEAR, Justice.

Bastrop County, Texas, appellant and relator in these proceedings, has filed a motion for rehearing. We withdraw our opinion and judgment of March 20, 2009, and substitute this opinion. We overrule Bastrop County’s motion for rehearing.

Bastrop County filed an interlocutory appeal, see Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code *103 Ann. § 51.014(a)(8) (West 2008), and petition for writ of mandamus, see Tex. R. App. P. 52.3, complaining of the trial court’s refusal to rule on the County’s plea to the jurisdiction and abatement of the underlying proceeding to allow appellee and real party in interest Denver Samples to exhaust administrative remedies. 1 We reverse the trial court’s abatement order and affirm the court’s implicit denial of the plea to the jurisdiction. We dismiss the County’s petition for writ of mandamus.

The underlying lawsuit was brought by Samples against the County, One Martin’s Meadow, Ltd., Main Street, Ltd., James Garon, and James E. Garon & Associates, Inc. In that suit, Samples alleged that in 1960 he bought nineteen acres along State Highway 21. Sometime after 1960, James and Rozelle Martin bought about 145 acres east of Samples’s property. Samples gave the Martins verbal permission to use a 62-foot stretch of Samples’s property to gain access from the Martin property to SH21. The throughway was not paved, but over time, it became “impressed with tire ruts while the native shrubs and grasses continued to grow between the ruts.” In 2002, after James Martin died, Rozelle Martin sold the property to One Martin’s Meadow, which subdivided the property for a housing development. The deed to One Martin’s Meadow did not purport to include any interest in the throughway across Samples’s property. However, One Martin’s Meadow, relying on a survey performed by James Garon and Garon’s surveying firm and on a county roadmap prepared by the County, paved the throughway across Samples’s property to SH21. Samples was never contacted for permission to use his property for highway access.

Samples sued One Martin’s Meadow and Main Street, Ltd., which constructed homes in the subdivision, for trespass to try title. Main Street filed a cross-claim against One Martin’s Meadow, asserting that One Martin’s Meadow had represented to Main Street that the subdivision had access rights across Samples’s property to the highway. Samples later dismissed his claims against Main Street. One Martin’s Meadow filed a third-party petition against Garon and his firm, alleging that they were negligent in their survey of the property and had certified that the property had access to and from SH21 across the throughway, which One Martin’s Meadow believed was named Martin’s Crossing Drive. In March 2008, Samples amended his petition to add the County as a defendant, alleging that in June 2007, the County, through its commissioners court, created a roadmap that improperly designated Martin’s Crossing Drive as a road in which the County had a public interest. Samples sought to contest the County’s designation of the throughway as a county road and asked the trial court to set aside the County’s designation in the County’s roadmap and to require the County to redraw the map. The County filed a plea to the jurisdiction, asserting that under chapter 258 of the transportation code, Samples was required to contest the roadmap at the commissioners-court level before he could sue in the trial court to have the map redrawn. See Tex. Transp. Code Ann. §§ 258.001-.007 (West Supp. 2008). Following a hearing on the County’s plea, the trial court signed an order abating the proceeding to allow Samples “the opportunity to pursue *104 the administrative remedies available under Chapter 258.”

In its interlocutory appeal, the County argues that the trial court should have granted the plea and dismissed the suit rather than abating it because Samples did not exhaust his administrative remedies before suing the County. In its mandamus petition, the County argues that the trial court abused its discretion in refusing to rule on the County’s plea to the jurisdiction.

A county’s commissioners court may propose a roadmap showing all roads in which the county “claims the existence of a public interest.” Id. § 258.002(a). A commissioners court proposing a county road-map must hold a public meeting, during which a person asserting a private interest in a road may protest the road’s inclusion on the map. Id. § 258.002(b). A person asserting a private interest may also file a written protest' at any time before the public hearing. Id. If a protest is made or filed, the commissioners court shall appoint a jury to determine whether the public has an interest in the contested road. Id. The commissioners court is required to publish notice of the hearing in at least one newspaper of general circulation in the county. Id. § 258.002(c). A person claiming a private interest in a road in which the county asserts a public interest “may contest the inclusion of the road in the county road map by filing a suit in a district court in the county in which the road is located not later than the second anniversary of the date on which the county road map including the road was adopted.” Id. § 258.004(a). “The county has the burden of proving that the county has continuously maintained ... the road in question.” Id. § 258.004(b).

The County argues that because Samples did not appear at the hearing on the map or file a written protest before the hearing, he has not exhausted the available administrative remedies and therefore may not sue under section 258.004. The County contends that section 258.002(b), which states that a person asserting a private interest in a road claimed to be public “may” file a written protest or appear at the roadmap hearing, should be read as requiring the landowner to protest at or before the hearing before he may sue under section 258.004. As support, the County points to other statutes in which “may” has been interpreted as setting out a mandatory precondition to suit. However, those statutory frameworks are very different than the one at issue here.

In Schroeder v. Texas Iron Works, Inc., the supreme court concluded that by stating that an aggrieved person “may file” a complaint with the Texas Commission on Human Rights, the Commission on Human Rights Act meant that the person must have exhausted his administrative remedies before filing suit. 813 S.W.2d 483, 487-88 (Tex.1991). It reached this conclusion after considering that the Act was intended to advance policies set out in federal anti-discrimination statutes, which require “exhaustion of administrative remedies prior to litigation”; established “a comprehensive administrative review system”; and used the date a complaint was filed with the commission to determine the deadline for filing suit in a trial court. See id. at 485-87. In Gregg County v. Farrar,

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
286 S.W.3d 102, 2009 Tex. App. LEXIS 3137, 2009 WL 1255565, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bastrop-county-v-samples-texapp-2009.