City of San Benito, Texas v. Cameron County Drainage District No. 3 and Cameron County Irrigation District No. 2, James D. Penny and Larry Garcia

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 24, 2020
Docket13-19-00194-CV
StatusPublished

This text of City of San Benito, Texas v. Cameron County Drainage District No. 3 and Cameron County Irrigation District No. 2, James D. Penny and Larry Garcia (City of San Benito, Texas v. Cameron County Drainage District No. 3 and Cameron County Irrigation District No. 2, James D. Penny and Larry Garcia) 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 San Benito, Texas v. Cameron County Drainage District No. 3 and Cameron County Irrigation District No. 2, James D. Penny and Larry Garcia, (Tex. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

NUMBER 13-19-00194-CV

COURT OF APPEALS

THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

CORPUS CHRISTI – EDINBURG

CITY OF SAN BENITO, TEXAS, Appellant,

v.

CAMERON COUNTY DRAINAGE DISTRICT NO. 3 AND CAMERON COUNTY IRRIGATION DISTRICT NO. 2, JAMES D. PENNY AND LARRY GARCIA, Appellees.

On appeal from the 103rd District Court of Cameron County, Texas

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Chief Justice Contreras and Justices Benavides and Longoria Memorandum Opinion by Justice Benavides

Appellant, the City of San Benito (City), appeals an order denying its plea to the

jurisdiction. We reverse and remand. I. BACKGROUND

The Cameron County Drainage District No. 3 (Drainage District), the Cameron

County Irrigation District No. 2 (Irrigation District), James D. Penny, and Larry Garcia filed

suit against the City. According to the “Plaintiffs’ First Amended Petition for Injunction and

Other Relief,” Penny and Garcia are owners of a tract of land within the limits of the City

and within the boundaries of the Drainage District and Irrigation District. Penny and Garcia

are subdividing this land as Strawberry Fields Subdivision. The petition alleged:

Since about 1983, Cameron County has required that subdivision plats be submitted to irrigation and drainage districts for approval. Under Cameron County’s subdivision regulations, proof that a district has reviewed and approved the plat “may be noted on the face of the plat . . . .” Since about 1983, subdividers have submitted to [the City] subdivision plats of land within [the City’s] limits and extra-territorial jurisdiction with Plaintiff Drainage District’s and Plaintiff Irrigation District’s approval noted on the face of the plats.

According to the first amended petition, the Drainage District and Irrigation District

both use a “sign-off paragraph” or “signature block” on the face of a plat to indicate that

they approve the plat with certain specified limitations. The first amended petition alleged

that “[i]nitial purchasers and their successors-in-title acquire title subject to all matters

shown and stated on the subdivision plat” and that each district “has a legitimate,

governmental purpose of not only putting purchasers on notice” that each district “has

reviewed and approved the plat, but more importantly, the terms, conditions, and

limitations of said approval.”

The first amended petition stated that the City had accepted plats including the

districts’ sign-off paragraphs since approximately 1983; however, in 2018, the City began

telling subdividers that it would not approve subdivision plats that included the districts’

sign-off paragraphs. The districts protested, and the City continued to approve plats that

2 included the sign-off paragraphs for some indeterminate period. However, in December

2018, the City refused to consider two plats, including the Strawberry Fields plat, unless

the districts’ sign-off paragraphs were removed.

The first amended petition further alleged, in relevant part:

At the hearing held in this cause held on February 26, 2019, [the City] announced in open court that it only intends to require the removal of Plaintiff Drainage District’s sign-off paragraph and Plaintiff Irrigation District’s sign-off paragraph on plats subdividing land entirely within its limits. That is, it concedes that [it] cannot order the removal of Plaintiff Drainage District’s sign-off paragraph and Plaintiff Irrigation District’s sign- off paragraph from subdivision plats of land that in whole or in part [are] within [the City’s] extra-territorial jurisdiction and, since the City of Harlingen also requires subdivision plats to be submitted to drainage and irrigation district[s], land that straddles the common limits of the City of Harlingen and [the City].

In their pleading, the plaintiffs asserted that the City could only apply those

ordinances, rules, and regulations that it has adopted in accordance with Texas Local

Government Code § 212.002; that the City had not adopted any ordinance, rule, or

regulation prohibiting the sign-off paragraphs; and that there was no rational relationship

between the City’s refusal to entertain the sign-off paragraphs and a “legitimate

governmental purpose.” See TEX. LOC. GOV’T CODE ANN. § 212.002 (allowing the

governing body of a municipality to “adopt rules governing plats and subdivisions of land

within the municipality’s jurisdiction to promote the health, safety, morals, or general

welfare of the municipality and the safe, orderly, and healthful development of the

municipality”). The plaintiffs further alleged that there was “no law authorizing” the City “to

negate and require non-compliance with the rules and regulations” of the districts, and

that the City’s actions have placed subdividers in the position of either bypassing the

districts, that is, failing to follow the districts’ rules regarding plats, or having the City refuse

3 to approve a proposed plat. The plaintiffs alleged that the districts’ approval of a plat on

its face “is not inconsistent with, and does not usurp, the City’s subdivision ordinances,

rules and/or regulations” and each district “has a legitimate need and purpose to review

subdivision plats [and] evidence their approval on the face of the plats.”

The plaintiffs alleged that they had been damaged by the City’s requirement that

subdividers “bypass” the districts in order to obtain approval of their subdivision plats and

that the plaintiffs lacked an adequate remedy at law to remedy this harm. In terms of relief,

the plaintiffs sought mandamus relief and a mandatory injunction preventing the City, “its

Mayor, City Commission, Planning and Zoning Commission, any other commissions,

employees, committees, agents, and servants, directly or indirectly” from requiring the

districts to remove their sign-off paragraphs and from refusing to approve plats that

include their sign-off paragraphs. The plaintiffs further sought a declaratory judgment

providing that the City had no legitimate, rational, governmental purpose in prohibiting the

use of sign-off paragraphs in subdivision plats. The plaintiffs requested temporary and

permanent injunctions restraining the City and its agents from requiring the removal of

the sign-off paragraphs or refusing to approve plats including the sign-off paragraphs.

Finally, they sought costs of suit, including attorney’s fees, and “all relief, both general

and special, at law and in equity,” to which they were entitled.

The City filed a “Plea to the Jurisdiction and Subject Thereto, its Motion to Dismiss,

Original Answer, and Motion for Special Exceptions.” The plea to the jurisdiction

comprises one paragraph and states:

[The City] has since its original pleading, raised the jurisdictional defense of “governmental immunity from suit.” On March 13th, 2019 the [plaintiffs] filed their First Amended Petition in which they named two additional plaintiffs. [The City] would show that despite this opportunity to replead, the [plaintiffs]

4 have still failed to show why [the City] does not have governmental immunity from suit. The [plaintiffs] have also failed to point to any specific waiver of legislative immunity in their Petition. The Court should dismiss this case for lack of subject matter jurisdiction or, in the alternative, give [the plaintiffs] an opportunity to file an amended petition under the fair notice standards of TRCP 45 and 47, alleging a claim under an applicable statute which contains a legislative waiver of immunity thereby making their claim viable.

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Bluebook (online)
City of San Benito, Texas v. Cameron County Drainage District No. 3 and Cameron County Irrigation District No. 2, James D. Penny and Larry Garcia, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-san-benito-texas-v-cameron-county-drainage-district-no-3-and-texapp-2020.