City of Pasadena v. Houston Endowment, Inc.

438 S.W.2d 152, 1969 Tex. App. LEXIS 2739
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 29, 1969
Docket198
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 438 S.W.2d 152 (City of Pasadena v. Houston Endowment, Inc.) 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 Pasadena v. Houston Endowment, Inc., 438 S.W.2d 152, 1969 Tex. App. LEXIS 2739 (Tex. Ct. App. 1969).

Opinion

BARRON, Justice.

This suit was filed by Houston Endowment, Inc., appellee, to enjoin the City of Pasadena, its mayor, tax assessor-collector and members of the city council from annexing appellee’s land to the corporate limits of the City of Pasadena, a municipal corporation. The City of Pasadena is a Home Rule city deriving its powers from Art. 11, Sec. S of the Constitution of Texas, Vernon’s Ann.St. The present suit was instituted after the City of Pasadena, pursuant to the prerequisites of Article 970a, Vernon’s Ann.Tex.Civ.St., had passed on first reading Ordinance No. 68-113 annexing the property of appellee to the City of Pasadena. The trial court overruled the city’s pleas in abatement, special exceptions and motions to dismiss, and temporarily enjoined the city and its officers from proceeding further with the annexation pending final hearing and determination of the merits of this cause. In its order granting the temporary injunction the trial court found, as a fact, that Houston Endowment’s said land is suitable only for agricultural or industrial purposes and is not fit for residential or municipal purposes. The trial court further found that Houston Endowment would receive no benefit iron annexation, while the city’s threatened annexation and unequal taxation would seriously injure the market value of Houston Endowment’s land. The trial court further found, as a fact, that the proposed annexation and taxation by the city violates Article I, Secs. 17 and 19 of the Texas Constitution and the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, and accordingly is unconstitutional, void and unauthorized by law or color of law. The City of Pasadena and its above officers have appealed from the temporary injunction entered by the trial court.

Houston Endowment owns approximately 800 acres of land adjoining the Houston Ship Channel. In 1913, pursuant to Arts. 1183-1187, V.A.T.S., the City of Houston created a navigation district which extended eastwardly for twenty miles along the channel in a strip 5,000 feet wide, 2,500 feet on either side of the channel’s center. About 576 acres of appellee’s tract lies south of this strip, and none of the property sought to be annexed lies within the navigation district. Property owned by Ethyl Corporation lies west of and generally contiguous to appellee’s tract. Tenneco Corporation owns the property contiguous to and east of appellee’s land. Phillips Petroleum Company owns a tract west of and generally adjacent to Ethyl’s property.

*155 Houston Endowment’s land and portions of the land flanking it are unimproved. The tract is of the same nature and location as portions of the Tenneco, Phillips, and Ethyl parcels. However, at a hearing on the proposed annexation it was shown that the Tenneco, Phillips and Ethyl tracts have some improvements thereon, and that the Houston Endowment tract has no improvements. Such unimproved condition has continued for approximately'the last thirty years. Appellee’s land is presently used for agricultural purposes, but it is far more valuable for industrial development than for any other use. The property’s close proximity to petrochemical complexes probably renders it unfit for residential or related purposes.

Although Pasadena has made other efforts to annex appellee’s 576 acres, it has not annexed the surrounding property of Ethyl, Tenneco or Phillips. To the contrary, it has expressly agreed not to do so. Effective January 1, 1967, Pasadena entered into an “industrial district contract” with Phillips in which the city promised not to annex Phillips’ property, and the contract provided that Phillips should pay, in lieu of taxes, a sum approximately equivalent to 30% of the normal City of Pasadena rate. Pasadena later made similar industrial district contracts with Ethyl and Tenneco. Phillips, Ethyl and Tenneco land constitute industrial districts established by various ordinances of the City of Pasadena, and all of the property involved lies within the extraterritorial jurisdiction of the city and is contiguous to the corporate limits of the city as contemplated by Art. 970a, V.A.T.S., known as the Municipal Annexation Act of 1963, as amended.

In late 1967, the city held a hearing concerning proposed annexation of Houston Endowment’s tract. Despite objections made concerning the constitutionality of the plan, the city passed on first reading annexation ordinance No. 67-2057, immediately after which Houston Endowment filed Cause No. 748,560 in the 129th District Court of Harris County, in which it attacked the city’s plan. After a hearing the district court enjoined taxation at that time. The city then passed another annexation ordinance, No. 67-2070 and moved to dissolve the injunction. The district court subsequently denied the motion and instead reformed the injunction to forbid any taxation pending trial on the merits. On August 6, 1968, an agreed judgment was entered declaring ordinances 67-2057 and 67-2070 void because of defective property descriptions.

The present ordinance is No. 68-113, which appellee again objects to as unconstitutional and void, and which seeks to annex the property of appellee. The facts are in no material dispute.

The City of Pasadena contends that the trial court erred in overruling motions to dismiss, in abatement and special exceptions, because this suit is a collateral attack upon the annexation ordinance here involved, and the suit cannot be maintained unless the ordinance is void on its face; in holding that such annexation would result in unequal, non-uniform and discriminatory taxation upon appellee’s land; in holding that appellee had no adequate remedy at law, in that its remedy is an action in quo warranto; and that the trial court erred in enjoining the city from annexing appellee’s land, because the ordinance is not void, the City of Pasadena (a Home Rule city) having the power to annex the area included within such ordinance.

Concerning appellant’s first and third contentions above that quo warranto proceedings are the sole and exclusive remedy by which the legality of the existence of a municipal corporation may be questioned, an unconstitutional statute or ordinance does not constitute color of law, and insofar as Houston Endowment’s pleadings that the annexation ordinance is unconstitutional and void are concerned, the law seems to be settled against appellants. Houston Endowment contends in its suit that Pasadena has no power whatever to *156 do what it is trying to do. It is well settled that any aggrieved party can properly challenge an allegedly void annexation ordinance, and such party’s right to maintain suit does not depend upon whether there is substantial basis for constitutional questions raised. Under the allegations of the petition in this case, to hold otherwise would be to beg the question. Appellee had the right to test the constitutional question and to seek the court’s ruling thereon without the state’s joinder. See Walling v. North Central Tex. Municipal Water Authority, 162 Tex. 527, 348 S.W.2d 532; City of Irving v. Callaway, 363 S.W.2d 832, 834 (Tex.Civ.App.), writ ref., n. r. e., and cases cited; Deacon v. City of Euless, 405 S.W.2d 59 (Tex.Sup.); Parks v. West, 102 Tex. 11, 111 S.W. 726.

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Bluebook (online)
438 S.W.2d 152, 1969 Tex. App. LEXIS 2739, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-pasadena-v-houston-endowment-inc-texapp-1969.