Elizabeth C. Perez v. Sylvester Turner, Mayor, Karun Sreerama, Director of Public Works and Engineering, and the City of Houston

CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJune 10, 2022
Docket20-0382
StatusPublished

This text of Elizabeth C. Perez v. Sylvester Turner, Mayor, Karun Sreerama, Director of Public Works and Engineering, and the City of Houston (Elizabeth C. Perez v. Sylvester Turner, Mayor, Karun Sreerama, Director of Public Works and Engineering, and the 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
Elizabeth C. Perez v. Sylvester Turner, Mayor, Karun Sreerama, Director of Public Works and Engineering, and the City of Houston, (Tex. 2022).

Opinion

Supreme Court of Texas ══════════ No. 20-0382 ══════════

Elizabeth C. Perez, Petitioner,

v.

Sylvester Turner, Mayor, Karun Sreerama, Director of Public Works and Engineering, and the City of Houston, Respondents

═══════════════════════════════════════ On Petition for Review from the Court of Appeals for the First District of Texas ═══════════════════════════════════════

Argued March 22, 2022

JUSTICE BLACKLOCK delivered the opinion of the Court.

Plaintiff Elizabeth Perez filed this case in 2015 challenging the City of Houston’s assessment, collection, and expenditure of a “drainage fee.” Perez alleged that the ordinance authorizing the drainage fee was invalid because the ordinance was premised on a faulty amendment to the city charter. She sought a variety of relief for herself and a class of similarly situated taxpayers, including a declaration of the drainage fee ordinance’s invalidity, an injunction against the City’s collection of drainage fees, and reimbursement of drainage fees already paid. The nature of this case changed dramatically in November 2018, while the case was on appeal. The City passed a new charter amendment curing many of the defects Perez alleged in the drainage fee ordinance. Although the parties’ briefing is less than clear about the effect on this case of the 2018 charter amendment, Perez conceded at oral argument that the passage of the new charter amendment significantly truncated her original claims. As we construe what remains of this case after the November 2018 amendment, Perez has two ongoing claims—one for reimbursement of the drainage fees she paid prior to 2018, and one for a narrow prospective injunction against the future expenditure of fees collected prior to 2018. As explained below, we affirm the lower courts’ dismissal of these claims, but we remand the case to the district court to allow Perez to replead in light of intervening events. I. In November 2010, voters in the City of Houston approved “Proposition One,” which amended the City’s Charter to allow the City to create a “Pay-As-You-Go” Dedicated Drainage and Street Renewal (DDSR) Fund to pay for drainage projects. See Dacus v. Parker, 466 S.W.3d 820, 822 (Tex. 2015). The 2010 amendment (Charter Amendment) included multiple funding sources for the DDSR Fund— drainage fees assessed on real property, a fixed percentage of property-tax revenue shifted from debt service to the Fund, federal

2 grants, and developer “impact fee” revenue. Perez and two other voters filed an election contest challenging Proposition One’s adoption. See id. With the election contest pending, the City moved forward as planned, enacting the Drainage Fee Ordinance (DFO) in April 2011. The DFO created a new public utility, the Houston Drainage Utility System. DFO § 47-803. The DFO required the City to (1) establish drainage fees “against all real property in the city subject to such charges” and (2) “provide drainage1 for all real property in the city on payment of drainage charges unless the property is exempt.” Id. § 47-801. The DFO based the amount of drainage fees on the benefited property’s type and square footage. Failure to pay drainage fees could result in various penalties, including disruption of utility service and late fees. Id. § 47-842. Beginning in July 2011, the City collected drainage fees from Perez and other property owners. Perez paid $11.38 per month in drainage fees for her primary residence and $3.38 per month for additional property she owned for a time. This fee was added to her utility bill. Perez failed to pay her bill a few times, which resulted in a

1 The DFO defines “drainage” as: streets, curbs, bridges, catch basins, channels, conduits, creeks, culverts, detention ponds, ditches, draws, flumes, pipes, pumps, sloughs, treatment works, and appurtenances to those items, whether natural or artificial, or using force or gravity, that are used to draw off surface water from land, carry the water away, collect, store, or treat the water, or divert the water into natural or artificial watercourses; drainage shall also mean the water so transported. DFO § 47-802, Definitions.

3 $1.13 drainage-fee penalty in addition to a separate penalty for non-payment of other parts of the utility bill. In 2015, we held in Dacus—the election contest challenging the Charter Amendment—that Proposition One’s ballot language misleadingly described the Charter Amendment, rendering the Amendment invalid. We remanded that case to the district court for further proceedings. Dacus, 466 S.W.3d at 828–29. On June 17, 2015, a few days after our decision in Dacus, Perez filed this lawsuit. Perez sought a declaration of the DFO’s invalidity, a prospective injunction, and reimbursement of fees previously collected. She also sought to represent a class of similarly situated taxpayers. Perez’s amended petition alleges that the DFO charge, like the Charter Amendment, is void given this Court’s decision in Dacus. Perez further alleged that City Officials were acting ultra vires by using drainage fees to pay for projects unrelated to drainage and by excluding the fees from the City’s revenue and spending caps, which they lacked authority to do without the recently invalidated Charter Amendment. Perez alleged related state and federal constitutional claims and a claim under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. The City filed a combined plea to the jurisdiction and motion for summary judgment. After a hearing, the district court granted the plea to the jurisdiction on all claims. The court held that Perez’s constitutional claims premised on the Charter Amendment’s invalidity were not ripe because Dacus was still pending when she filed her suit; that Perez lacked standing to challenge the collection of drainage fees under the Charter Amendment or the DFO because she had no

4 particularized injury; that she lacked standing to seek reimbursement of her drainage fees; and that her ultra vires claims were insufficiently pleaded and therefore barred by governmental immunity. Perez appealed. The court of appeals affirmed. 629 S.W.3d 270 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2019). The court of appeals held that Perez’s claims based on the Charter Amendment’s invalidity were not ripe. Id. at 279–80. It further held that Perez had neither pleaded an injury particular to her nor properly invoked taxpayer standing. Id. at 282–83. Having concluded Perez lacked standing, the court of appeals affirmed the district court’s judgment without considering the other issues presented by Perez’s appeal. Id. at 284. Perez petitioned for review in this Court, and we granted the petition. II. In 2018, while Perez’s appeal was pending, the voters of Houston approved a new charter amendment that lacks the infirmity identified in Dacus. As a result, much of the case Perez originally pleaded has been overtaken by events. Taking this development into account, we construe Perez’s briefing in this Court to preserve two remaining theories of liability: (1) a claim for reimbursement of the allegedly illegal drainage fees paid between 2011 and 2018, see Dall. Cnty. Cmty. Coll. Dist. v. Bolton, 185 S.W.3d 868, 877 (Tex. 2005); and (2) an ultra vires claim for prospective injunctive relief prohibiting City Officials from spending any drainage fees collected between 2011 and 2018 that may remain in the City’s accounts.2

2 The City argues that Perez abandoned her reimbursement claims, directing this Court to Perez’s statement in her opening brief in the court of

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Elizabeth C. Perez v. Sylvester Turner, Mayor, Karun Sreerama, Director of Public Works and Engineering, and the City of Houston, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elizabeth-c-perez-v-sylvester-turner-mayor-karun-sreerama-director-of-tex-2022.