City of Pasadena v. State Ex Rel. City of Houston

442 S.W.2d 325, 12 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 432, 1969 Tex. LEXIS 302
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJune 4, 1969
DocketB-1013
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 442 S.W.2d 325 (City of Pasadena v. State Ex Rel. City of Houston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court 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. State Ex Rel. City of Houston, 442 S.W.2d 325, 12 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 432, 1969 Tex. LEXIS 302 (Tex. 1969).

Opinion

POPE, Justice.

Houston’s motion for rehearing is granted. We withdraw our original opinion and substitute this one for it.

The State of Texas, upon the relation of the City of Houston and others, instituted this quo warranto action to oust the City of Pasadena from certain territory which both cities claim they have annexed. Houston contends that it enacted an ordinance in 1963 and a group of other ordinances in 1965 which were earlier in time than Pasadena’s 1965 annexation ordinances. Houston says that their annexation ordinances rendered the lands involved in the Pasadena ordinances nonadjacent to Pasadena. Pasadena asserts that all of the Houston ordinances are void. Both petitioner and respondents moved for summary judgment. The trial court rendered a summary judgment for Houston, sustaining the Houston ordinances and holding void the Pasadena ordinances. The court of civil appeals affirmed in part but severed the issues as to certain 1965 Houston ordinances, and ordered a dismissal of those issues. 428 S.W. 2d 388. We reverse the judgments of both courts and remand the cause to the trial court. We shall discuss the validity of (1) Houston’s 1962 annexation ordinances, (2) Houston’s 1965 annexation ordinances, and (3) Pasadena’s 1965 annexation ordinances.

During 1960 Houston and Pasadena were both enacting ordinances which sought the annexation of overlapping territory. The area involved is generally southeast of Houston and south of Pasadena. In June of 1962 the two cities resolved their differences by an agreed judgment. The judgment recognized Pasadena’s annexation of the territory which was adjacent to and north of the Genoa-Red Bluff Road. The judgment also declared that Houston, by its 1960 Ordinance 60-989, 1 had effectively pre-empted and had exclusive annexation jurisdiction over all unannexed territory in Harris County at the time of the judgment. Ordinance 60-989 was an annexation ordinance which was designed to annex the whole of Harris County which was not then included in some other municipality. The ordinance, at the time of the judgment, had passed only on first reading.

The 1962 Houston Ordinance (62-1766)

On December 5, 1962, after the agreed judgment was entered, Houston passed Ordinance 62-1766 on first reading and finally passed the ordinance on January 6, 1963. By force of Ordinance 60-989 and the agreed judgment, Houston then had the exclusive jurisdiction to annex the territory described in its ordinance. Our only question is whether Houston validly exercised the power which the judgment preserved to it. Pasadena attacked the validity of the 1962 ordinance because it annexed territory which was not “lying adjacent to said city * * as required by Section 2, Article 1175, Vernon’s Ann. Tex.Civ.Stats. The courts below have rejected this contention and have upheld the validity of the ordinance.

The property described in Ordinance 62-1766 was a long meandering strip of land *327 which was ten feet wide. Commencing at Point A, which we have designated on the accompanying illustrative drawing, the strip touches ten feet of the Houston boundary

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Bluebook (online)
442 S.W.2d 325, 12 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 432, 1969 Tex. LEXIS 302, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-pasadena-v-state-ex-rel-city-of-houston-tex-1969.