CMST Development, LLC v. City of Austin

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 16, 2022
Docket03-20-00567-CV
StatusPublished

This text of CMST Development, LLC v. City of Austin (CMST Development, LLC v. City of Austin) 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
CMST Development, LLC v. City of Austin, (Tex. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-20-00567-CV

CMST Development, LLC, Appellant

v.

City of Austin, Appellee

FROM THE 53RD DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY NO. D-1-GN-19-005159, THE HONORABLE CATHERINE MAUZY, JUDGE PRESIDING

MEMORANDUM OPINION

CMST Development, LLC, sued the City of Austin pursuant to Texas Local

Government Code chapter 245 seeking declaratory and injunctive relief related to CMST’s

development of a one-acre tract of land located in the City. See Tex. Loc. Gov’t Code § 245.006

(waiving political subdivision’s governmental immunity from suit in regard to action under

chapter 245). CMST sought a declaration that its development of the tract was subject only

to orders, regulations, ordinances, rules, and requirements in effect on March 10, 1960. After

considering CMST’s motion for partial summary judgment and the City’s motion for summary

judgment, the district court concluded that CMST was not entitled to the declaratory and

injunctive relief sought and rendered judgment in the City’s favor. We will affirm. BACKGROUND

On March 10, 1960, H. E. Eubank filed with the City an application for a

preliminary plan—an initial step in platting a subdivision—for a subdivision called “Eubank

Acres Section Four.” Documents in the record indicate the existence of adjacent subdivisions

called “Eubank Acres Section 1” and “Eubank Acres Section 2.” The preliminary plan

contemplated that Eubank Acres Section Four would be composed of 21 lots located on

12.8 acres of land. The Subdivision Committee of the City’s Planning Commission approved

the preliminary plan on March 28, 1960. The preliminary plan was approved by the full

Planning Commission on April 5, 1960. At that time, the Austin City Code of 1954 governed

development of Eubank Acres Section Four.

In June 1960, Eubank filed with the City’s Planning Commission an application

for a final plat for Eubank Acres Section Four. The boundary of the subdivision depicted on the

final plat excluded six lots that had been identified in the preliminary plan as Lots 16, 17, 18, 19,

20, and 21. Thus, the final plat for Eubank Acres Section Four contemplated that it would be

composed of Lots 1 through 15, and the remaining land initially identified as part of Eubank

Acres Section Four was not included in the final plat. The final plat filed was called “Eubank

Acres Section Four,” not “Eubank Acres Section Four, Lots 1 through 15” or “Eubank Acres

Section Four Phase One.” The final plat did not include anything else to indicate that it was not

the final plat for the entirety of the Eubank Acres Section Four subdivision. This final plat was

accepted and authorized for record by the City’s Planning Commission on October 13, 1960, and

was filed for record with the Travis County clerk. See Tex. Loc. Gov’t Code § 212.004 (plat

must be filed and recorded with county clerk of county in which land is located).

2 Eubank Acres Section Four, consisting of Lots 1 through 15, was developed with

residences and a road that provided access to those residences. The 4.12-acre tract of land that

was originally identified as Lots 16 through 21 in the preliminary plan (the “Elton Tract”) but

excluded from the final plat, was ultimately conveyed to Richard L. Elton and Nancy H. Elton in

August 1973. The warranty deed conveying the Elton Tract to the Eltons includes a metes and

bounds description of the tract that references its location in relation to lots that are part of

Eubank Acres Section Four; specifically Lot 13, Lot 15, and Lot 1, each of which is adjacent to

the Elton Tract. In November 2017, the Eltons conveyed the Elton Tract to CMST. In March

2018, CMST conveyed 1.7581 acres out of the Elton Tract to Brannon and Linda Taylor. The

warranty deed conveying this portion of the Elton Tract includes a metes and bounds description

that references its location in relation to a lot that is part of Eubank Acres Section Four;

specifically the adjacent Lot 15. The metes and bounds description also references the 1.7581-

acre tract’s location relative to lots in Eubank Acres Section 1. CMST conveyed an additional

1.326 acres out of the Elton Tract to Thomas Nilles and Jennifer Bristol and the warranty deed

conveying this portion of the Elton Tract also includes a metes and bounds description that

references its location in relation to Lot 15 of Eubanks Acres Section Four and to a lot in Eubank

Acres Section 2. After making these conveyances, CMST owned the remainder of the Elton

Tract, consisting of a 1.0359-acre tract (the “CMST Property”).

In February 2018, CMST submitted a “Revised Preliminary Plan” for a

development it called “Eubanks Acres Section Four Lots 16-21” on the Elton Tract. At the time

CMST submitted the plan, it still owned the entire Elton Tract but one month later it had

conveyed away all but the 1.0359-acre CMST Property. CMST also submitted a vested-rights

petition seeking a determination by the City that the development of the Elton Tract would be

3 governed by the regulations and ordinances in effect in March 1960. See Tex. Loc. Gov’t Code

§§ 245.001-.007; Harper Park Two, LP v. City of Austin, 359 S.W.3d 247, 248 (Tex. App.—

Austin 2011, pet. denied) (“Under chapter 245 of the local government code, once an application

for the first permit required to complete a property-development ‘project’ is filed with the

municipality or other agency that regulates such use of the property, the agency’s regulations

applicable to the ‘project’ are effectively ‘frozen’ in their then-current state and the agency is

prohibited from enforcing subsequent regulatory changes to further restrict the property’s use.”).

CMST asserted that development of the Elton Tract is part of the original Eubank Acres Section

Four project such that vested rights should attach under chapter 245 and that the regulations

and ordinances that were in effect in 1960, when Eubank Acres Section Four was approved by

the City’s Planning Commission, should apply to its development of the Elton Tract nearly

sixty years later. The City denied CMST’s application for vested rights and determined that

development of the Elton Tract must be done in compliance with the ordinances and regulations

in effect in February 2018, when CMST submitted its plan for development of the Elton Tract.

The City reasoned that after the preliminary plan for Eubank Acres Section Four was approved

by the Planning Commission in 1960, Eubank submitted and received acceptance of a plat

for Lots 1 through 15 but never submitted a plat that included Lots 16 through 21. The City

maintained that no plat for Lots 16 through 21 satisfied “the applicable deadlines in effect at that

time under [the City Code] for the entirety of the preliminary plan application.” The City also

determined that “[t]he subsequent plat for this area known as Eubanks [sic] Acres, Sec 4,

approved on Oct. 13, 1960,1 does not include the lots for which Chapter 245 rights are now

1 This is a reference to the final plat that Eubank submitted that platted Lots 1 through 15 and that was filed for record with the Travis County clerk. 4 claimed, nor was a separate plat for these lots ever filed in connection with the ‘preliminary’

within six months as required under [the City Code.]”

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