City of Houston v. Maguire Oil Co.

342 S.W.3d 726, 2011 Tex. App. LEXIS 3306, 2011 WL 1643587
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 3, 2011
Docket14-09-00701-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 342 S.W.3d 726 (City of Houston v. Maguire Oil Co.) 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 Houston v. Maguire Oil Co., 342 S.W.3d 726, 2011 Tex. App. LEXIS 3306, 2011 WL 1643587 (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

OPINION

WILLIAM J. BOYCE, Justice.

The City of Houston appeals from a judgment in favor of Maguire Oil Company and others 1 arising from an inverse condemnation claim predicated on the errone *729 ous invocation of an inapplicable city ordinance to revoke Maguire’s natural gas drilling permit. We affirm the trial court’s judgment.

Background

The fight over Maguire’s thwarted effort to drill for natural gas near Lake Houston is poised to mark its twentieth anniversary. This dispute encompasses one drilling site, two trials, three trial courts, four appeals, 2 and five Houston mayors.

I. Factual Background

The City acquired surface rights to land in the 1940s that eventually was inundated to create Lake Houston. The City adopted an ordinance in 1965 that generally proscribed pollution in the “control area” of Lake Houston. The City amended the ordinance in 1967 to restrict drilling in the Lake Houston “control area.” The term “control area” is significant to this litigation.

“Control area” was defined in the 1965 ordinance as “[t]hat land around the Lake within an area five (5) miles in width measured from the Normal Water’s Edge of, and within the watershed of, Lake Houston.” The City Council amended the definition of “control area” in 1977 to equate that term with the City’s “extraterritorial jurisdiction.” The shifting definition of “control area” later played a key role in the dispute. Although the definition was amended again in 1997 to expand the scope of the “control area,” the 1977 definition governs this dispute.

Between 1953 and 1991, Maguire acquired oil and gas leases covering five tracts near Lake Houston known collectively as the “Scanlan Deep Prospect.” The leases encompassing the Scanlan Deep Prospect are identified as the Scanlan, Wheless, Charpiot, Johnston, and Deussen leases.

Maguire began to investigate drilling a gas well in the Scanlan Deep Prospect in the late 1980s. Maguire initially drilled outside the city limits. After the failure of a vertical well, described as the Scanlan Deep No. 1, Maguire attempted to drill directionally. This attempt also failed. These efforts cost several million dollars.

Maguire then decided to drill a vertical well named the Wheless No. 1 inside the city limits approximately 300 feet west of Lake Houston. Maguire filed appropriate documents and asked the City to issue a drilling permit in 1991. The City approved a permit on May 7, 1991 to drill at the chosen location. The City later ratified and extended the permit. Maguire spent at least $250,000 in preparation for drilling; it cleared the location, built dikes, built roads, and signed a drilling contract.

A Lake Houston patrol noticed Ma-guire’s drilling site in October 1991 and contacted Richard Alexander, an inspector with the City’s Public Works and Engineering Water Quality Control Department. Alexander inspected the site and determined that it was approximately 300 feet from the water’s edge of Lake Houston. Alexander informed his supervisor, Senior Inspector Henry Aghedo, about the location of Maguire’s drilling site. Alexander also contacted Milton Belveal, senior inspector with the Planning and Development Department, who acknowledged that a permit had been issued to Maguire.

*730 Aghedo consulted with his superior, Roger Hulbert, who was the deputy assistant director of the Public Works and Engineering Water Quality Control Department. Hulbert believed Maguire’s permit had been issued in error and that drilling had to be stopped. Hulbert therefore instructed Alexander to issue a stop work order.

On October 31, 1991, Alexander issued a stop work order pursuant to City of Houston Code of Ordinances Chapter 23, Article IV, section 23-102, and delivered the order to Maguire’s drilling site. Section 23-102 states as follows: “No well shall be drilled within the control area of Lake Houston which is nearer than 1,000 feet from the normal water’s edge of Lake Houston or any of its drains, streams or tributaries.”

That same day, the City also wrote Ma-guire a letter stating that its drilling permit had been issued in error and was being revoked immediately because City of Houston Code of Ordinances sections 23-101 and 23-102 prohibit wells within 1,000 feet from Lake Houston. The letter was drafted by Donna Kristaponis, director of the Planning and Development Department, and stated as follows:

This [sic] to inform you that the above referenced permit appears to have been issued in error and is revoked effective immediately. All work in connection with the drilling of this well must cease immediately. Failure to cease operations will result in the issuance of a citation for each day of continued operations.
City of Houston Code of Ordinances Sections 23-101 and 23-102 prohibit wells from being drilled within 1000 feet from the normal water’s edge of Lake Houston. It appears that the entire 40 acre Wheless No. 1 site is within the 1000' setback requirement and, therefore, no wells may be drilled on it.
I apologize for any inconvenience this may have caused you.

Maguire’s original permit application was processed by Gloria Minor and approved by Hal Catón, Minor’s supervisor in the Planning and Development Department. Maguire’s renewal application was processed by Belveal and approved by Catón. Before October 31, 1991, Minor and Bel-veal were not aware of the provisions in chapter 23 of the City of Houston Code of Ordinances restricting the drilling of wells near Lake Houston. Kristaponis and Ca-tón handled the revocation of Maguire’s drilling permit, and Belveal was told that the permit had been revoked because the well would be drilled too close to Lake Houston.

Maguire met to discuss the permit revocation with the Legal, Health, and Planning and Development departments; Ma-guire also met with the deputy assistant director of the Public Works and Engineering Water Quality Control Department. No resolution was reached. All of the City’s representatives maintained that the ordinance prohibited drilling within 1,000 feet of Lake Houston, and that no department would issue a permit that did not comport with the ordinance. Deputy Assistant Director Hulbert steadfastly maintained that his department would not issue a drilling permit. Maguire attempted to communicate with the mayor, but these efforts failed.

II. Procedural Background

On October 27, 1993, Maguire sued the City in the 55th District Court of Harris County for damages and a declaratory judgment. Maguire alleged that “certain actions taken by the City against mineral interests [Maguire] owned near Lake Houston amounted to, inter alia, (1) a taking without adequate compensation or *731 due process of law; and (2) unreasonable discrimination against a mineral property owner.” Maguire Oil Co. v. City of Houston, 143 F.3d 205

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Bluebook (online)
342 S.W.3d 726, 2011 Tex. App. LEXIS 3306, 2011 WL 1643587, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-houston-v-maguire-oil-co-texapp-2011.