City of Granite Shoals, Pat Crochet, John Gault, David Dittmar, Bessie Jackson, Shirley King, and Merilyn Nations v. Ted Winder, Jamie Parker, Beaver Island Property Owners Association, Denis Snyder, and Ted O. Kostich

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 19, 2009
Docket03-08-00323-CV
StatusPublished

This text of City of Granite Shoals, Pat Crochet, John Gault, David Dittmar, Bessie Jackson, Shirley King, and Merilyn Nations v. Ted Winder, Jamie Parker, Beaver Island Property Owners Association, Denis Snyder, and Ted O. Kostich (City of Granite Shoals, Pat Crochet, John Gault, David Dittmar, Bessie Jackson, Shirley King, and Merilyn Nations v. Ted Winder, Jamie Parker, Beaver Island Property Owners Association, Denis Snyder, and Ted O. Kostich) 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
City of Granite Shoals, Pat Crochet, John Gault, David Dittmar, Bessie Jackson, Shirley King, and Merilyn Nations v. Ted Winder, Jamie Parker, Beaver Island Property Owners Association, Denis Snyder, and Ted O. Kostich, (Tex. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-08-00323-CV

City of Granite Shoals, Pat Crochet, John Gault, David Dittmar, Bessie Jackson, Shirley King, and Merilyn Nations, Appellants

v.

Ted Winder, Jamie Parker, Beaver Island Property Owners Association, Denis Snyder, and Ted O. Kostich, Appellees

FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF BURNET COUNTY, 33RD JUDICIAL DISTRICT NO. 32649, HONORABLE GUILFORD L. JONES III, JUDGE PRESIDING

OPINION

Appellants City of Granite Shoals, Pat Crochet, John Gault, David Dittmar,

Bessie Jackson, Shirley King, and Merilyn Nations (collectively, the “City”) bring this interlocutory

appeal of the trial court’s order denying their plea to the jurisdiction.

See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code Ann. § 51.014(a)(8) (West 2008). Appellees (collectively, the

“property owners”) sued the City for declaratory relief, challenging the City’s conversion to a home-

rule municipality under article XI, section 5 of the Texas Constitution and its subsequent annexation

of the subdivisions in which the individual appellees own property. We will affirm the

trial court’s order. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

The individual appellees are property owners from the subdivisions of Beaver Island

and Web Isle, which sit adjacent to the City on Lake LBJ in Burnet County, Texas. In 2004, the

City, then a general-law municipality, annexed Beaver Island and Web Isle pursuant to its authority

under section 43.033 of the local government code.1 See Tex. Loc. Gov’t Code Ann.

§ 43.033(a)(1)-(7) (West 2008) (providing conditions under which general-law municipality may

annex adjacent territory without consent of property owners). The following year, the City Council

adopted ordinances allowing it to draft a home-rule charter and to call an election for the City to

incorporate as a home-rule city.2 See id. §§ 9.001-.003 (West 2008). Under the home-rule provision

in article XI, section 5 of the Texas Constitution, cities “having more than

five thousand (5,000) inhabitants may, by a majority vote of the qualified voters of said city, at an

election held for that purpose, adopt or amend their charters.” See Tex. Const. art. XI, § 5. The

election took place November 8, 2005. A majority of the voters approved the charter, thereby

converting the City from a Type A general-law municipality to a home-rule municipality.

On December 22, 2005, more than a year after the City annexed Beaver Island and

Web Isle pursuant to its authority as a general-law municipality, a majority of the property owners

1 In their briefs, the parties reference an extensive history of annexations and disannexations involving these properties prior to the 2004 annexation; however, we will confine our discussion to the events that directly led to this appeal. 2 Ordinance No. 427 states that a committee will be appointed to draft the City’s home-rule charter, that the charter “will be presented to the Council as soon as the City reaches 5,000 in population,” and that the charter will then be put before the citizens of the City for a vote. After the charter was drafted, the Council adopted Ordinance No. 441, ordering that a special election be held for the purpose of incorporating the City as a home-rule municipality.

2 in those communities submitted petitions for disannexation. See Tex. Loc. Gov’t Code Ann.

§ 43.033(b) (providing that majority of landowners in area may petition general-law municipality

for disannexation after one year but before three years from passage of annexation ordinance).

Therefore, the City was required to disannex Beaver Island and Web Isle, see id. (providing that “the

municipality shall immediately disannex the area” upon landowners’ submission of petition for

disannexation), which it did on January 17, 2006.3

In April 2006, the City, now acting as a home-rule municipality, again proposed to

annex Beaver Island and Web Isle, issuing notice to the property owners of its intent to annex these

and several other subdivisions in the area. The local government code provides that a home-rule

municipality may “extend the boundaries of the municipality and annex area adjacent to the

municipality.” Id. § 43.021(2). The statute does not contain a provision allowing residents to

petition home-rule municipalities for disannexation; therefore, once the City annexed Beaver Island

and Web Isle pursuant to its authority as a home-rule municipality, a majority of the residents could

not petition to force the City to disannex their territories as they had previously when the City was

a general-law municipality.

After holding two public hearings on the proposed annexations, the City Council

adopted Ordinance Nos. 462 (Beaver Island) and 466 (Web Isle), describing and annexing both

territories. Thereafter, the property owners filed suit for declaratory judgment, seeking declarations

3 Among the property owners’ complaints is their assertion that the City intentionally delayed in acting on their petitions for disannexation, thereby wrongfully subjecting them to the City’s taxes for the 2006 tax year because their properties were listed on the City’s tax rolls on January 1, 2006.

3 that certain specified actions by the City Council—(1) City Council Ordinance No. 441, which had

called for the home-rule election; (2) the home-rule election itself, held November 8, 2005; and

(3) the annexations of Beaver Island and Web Isle—were all “null and void” because “the City of

Granite Shoals does not have more than 5,000 inhabitants and is not eligible to become home rule

under the Constitution and laws of Texas.” The property owners sought further declarations that the

disannexations of Beaver Island and Web Isle became effective December 22, 2005; that they are

entitled to a refund for the 2006 property taxes paid to the City; and that the City “acted willfully,

fraudulently, in bad faith, and/or abused their discretion as public officials in determining the

population of Granite Shoals during 2005.”

The City answered and filed a plea to the jurisdiction and special exceptions, asserting

that the trial court lacked subject-matter jurisdiction over the suit. Specifically, the City argued that

(1) the property owners’ claim that they are entitled to a tax refund was not yet ripe because they

prematurely filed suit in violation of section 43.148 of the local government code; (2) the property

owners lacked standing to bring their procedural challenges to the 2006 annexation because they

should have been brought either in an election contest or by the State in a quo warranto action; and

(3) the property owners lacked standing to challenge the City’s home-rule conversion because, as

non-residents of the City, they had failed to establish a “special interest or injury” resulting from

the conversion.

After a hearing on the City’s plea, but before the trial court ruled on it, the parties

filed cross-motions for partial summary judgment, reurging their arguments regarding the questions

of subject-matter jurisdiction and standing. Much of the evidence attached to their motions

4 addressed the issue of whether the City had acted fraudulently or in bad faith in determining its

population, thereby permitting the plaintiffs to challenge the City’s home-rule conversion on the

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City of Granite Shoals, Pat Crochet, John Gault, David Dittmar, Bessie Jackson, Shirley King, and Merilyn Nations v. Ted Winder, Jamie Parker, Beaver Island Property Owners Association, Denis Snyder, and Ted O. Kostich, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-granite-shoals-pat-crochet-john-gault-david-dittmar-bessie-texapp-2009.