City of Missouri City v. State Ex Rel. City of Alvin

123 S.W.3d 606, 2003 Tex. App. LEXIS 9602, 2003 WL 22673932
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 13, 2003
Docket14-03-00361-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 123 S.W.3d 606 (City of Missouri City v. State Ex Rel. City of Alvin) 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 Missouri City v. State Ex Rel. City of Alvin, 123 S.W.3d 606, 2003 Tex. App. LEXIS 9602, 2003 WL 22673932 (Tex. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

OPINION

JOHN S. ANDERSON, Justice.

This is an appeal from a summary judgment voiding an annexation ordinance passed by the City of Missouri City (“Missouri City”), and awarding attorney’s fees to the City of Alvin (“Alvin”). 1 We affirm.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

In 1960, Alvin passed an ordinance purporting to annex a 100-foot-wide strip of land approximately 137 miles long. The strip extends east from Alvin’s east city limit line, runs north along the Brazo-ria/Galveston County line to a point northeast of Manvel, circles south around to the west side of Manvel, then extends west to the Brazos River, and follows the Brazos River to a point south of the Derrington State Farm. The strip then extends to a point east of Texas Highway 288, from which it runs southeast, following Austin Bayou and various commissioner’s precinct lines. The strip next jogs back to the southwest and eventually follows the meanders of Bastrop Bayou to Bastrop Bay, continuing to the “Gulf of Mexico,” from which it proceeds northeast to a point on the Brazoria/Galveston County line, and runs back along this line to the point east of Alvin’s city limits, referred to above. 2

Forty-two years later, in September 2002, Missouri City approved an ordinance purporting to annex an L-shaped strip of land 1000 feet wide and extending into the municipal territory and extraterritorial jurisdiction (“ETJ”) Alvin claimed by virtue of its 1960 ordinance. The L-shaped strip is attached to a strip of Missouri City territory that is twenty-five feet wide.

The State, on behalf of Alvin, filed a quo warranto action against the City of Missouri City, and against its mayor and council members in their official capacities. The State alleged Missouri City illegally extended its incorporated area into Alvin’s municipal territory and further violated *609 Texas Local Government Code section 42.041 by extending its territory into Alvin’s ETJ -without Alvin’s consent. 3 The State also alleged Missouri City violated section 43.0545 by annexing land located within Missouri City’s extraterritorial jurisdiction only by virtue of the fact the land was contiguous to municipal territory less than 1000 feet wide at its narrowest point. 4 The State alleged discovery was to be conducted under Level Two. 5

Missouri City answered, alleging Alvin’s 1960 annexation was void because of defects in the legal description, and therefore *610 Alvin had no extraterritorial jurisdiction over land surrounding the 1960 annexation. Missouri City also asserted a general denial and defenses of waiver and estoppel.

In November 2002, Alvin filed a petition in intervention naming only the City of Missouri City as a defendant and requesting declaratory relief. In addition to the allegations set forth by the State, Alvin responded to Missouri City’s allegation the 1960 annexation was void. Alvin asserted (1) it had provided various municipal services to the annexed area, thereby creating an irrebuttable and uncontestable presumption of validity under Local Government Code section 41.003; 6 (2) the annexation was validly effected in 1960, reaffirmed when Alvin was incorporated as a home rule city in 1963, and both the annexation and incorporation have been validated by eight subsequent validation statutes; and (3) statutes of limitation or laches bar Missouri City’s challenge. 7 Alvin included a prayer for attorney’s fees.

Missouri City responded to Alvin’s intervention with a general denial. It also al *611 leged a defect of parties, asserting that quo warranto was the only means of challenging the annexation, and Alvin could not maintain the action on its own.

In January 2003, appellees filed a motion for summary judgment. They alleged Missouri City’s attempted annexation violated Texas law in three respects: (1) Missouri City could not lawfully annex into Alvin’s territorial limits; (2) Missouri City could not lawfully annex into Alvin’s ETJ; and (3) Missouri City could not annex from a strip less than 1000 feet wide at its narrowest point.

Missouri City immediately moved for a continuance and requested a docket control order. It claimed it had outstanding discovery requests due in February, still needed to conduct two oral depositions, and had not had adequate time to review the production responses or conduct adequate discovery. The motion was neither verified nor accompanied by a supporting affidavit.

In its subsequent response to the motion for summary judgment, Missouri City contended that the following four sets of material fact issues precluded summary judgment, and more might be developed with additional discovery: (1) those related to deficiencies in the legal description of Alvin’s 1960 annexation; (2) those related to Alvin’s failure to include the annexation on maps prepared since 1960; (3) those related to the annexation’s having controlling adjacency with Manvel, rather than Alvin; and (4) those related to the reasons for Missouri City’s 2002 annexation. Missouri City also alleged Alvin could not rely on the validating statutes or on the Local Government Code sections it cited. Finally, Missouri City alleged the motion for summary judgment was premature because sufficient time for discovery had not elapsed. Attached to Missouri City’s response was the affidavit of Mark Watler, one of Missouri City’s attorneys of record. Watler stated his December 10, 2002 review of documents “required follow-up in certain respects.” Watler also referred to outstanding discovery requests, copies of which were attached to the affidavit.

Appellees opposed the motion for continuance, arguing in part that the dispositive issues were questions of law, which required no further discovery. They argued that granting the motion would create economic risk for Alvin and Brazoria County. They also referred to the lack of verification or affidavit.

Without stating the grounds, the trial court granted appellees’ summary judgment motion and declared the Missouri City annexation ordinance null and void. The court further awarded appellees’ attorney’s fees in an amount to be determined by separate order, absent agreement by the parties. The style of the order does not include the mayor or council members; the order does not contain a clause purporting to dispose of all parties and all claims. The City of Missouri City filed a notice of appeal, naming only itself as appellant.

Alvin and the State then filed a request to quantify attorney’s fees. In turn, Missouri City filed a motion to strike Alvin’s intervention, arguing Alvin could not bring the suit in its own name and its suit was duplicative of the State’s quo warranto suit. Missouri City requested the court delete from its summary judgment order any relief granted to Alvin.

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123 S.W.3d 606, 2003 Tex. App. LEXIS 9602, 2003 WL 22673932, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-missouri-city-v-state-ex-rel-city-of-alvin-texapp-2003.