George Alejos v. State

433 S.W.3d 112, 2014 WL 1349018, 2014 Tex. App. LEXIS 3546
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 2, 2014
Docket03-14-00109-CV, 03-14-00139-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 433 S.W.3d 112 (George Alejos v. State) 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
George Alejos v. State, 433 S.W.3d 112, 2014 WL 1349018, 2014 Tex. App. LEXIS 3546 (Tex. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

OPINION

BOB PEMBERTON, Justice.

These consolidated causes are both expedited appeals under chapter 1205 of the Government Code, which creates a special proceeding whereby “issuers” of “public securities” can obtain a declaratory judgment — also expedited — as to the legality or validity of such securities and related official acts. 1 In Cause Number 03-14-00109-CV (the “Judgment Appeal”), George Alejos seeks to appeal a final judgment validating the issuance of approximately $33 million in sales tax revenue-backed bonds by the appellee, VIA Metropolitan Transit Advanced Transportation District (the District). 2 In Cause Numbér 03-14-00139-CV (the “Bond Appeal”), Ale-jos appeals a subsequent order conditioning his continued participation in the litigation on his posting of a $3.6 million bond, the amount the district court found to represent any damage or cost that may occur because of the delay caused by Alejos’s continued participation. 3 For reasons we will explain shortly, we will reverse the district court’s order that is the subject of the Bond Appeal and remand for further proceedings on that issue. In the interim, the Judgment Appeal will remain pending.

THE ISSUES PRESENTED

The Legislature has instructed us that expedited appeals under chapter 1205 are to be even more expedited than the panoply of other expedited appeals that Texas courts of appeals handle nowadays, 4 and thus we will cut to the chase of our analysis without crafting a comprehensive explanation of the case’s underlying facts and procedural history, with which we can assume the litigants and any other interested persons are familiar. We will similarly assume that any readers are conversant with the basic procedural framework prescribed by chapter 1205 and the standards that govern our review. However, we briefly note — because it eventually becomes relevant to our analysis — that this litigation arises in the context of broader public policy disputes concerning the use of public funds to finance the construction of transportation infrastructure in the San Antonio area and, in particular, an ongoing initiative by the metropolitan transit authority serving that area, the VIA Metropolitan Transit Authority, to plan and construct a “modern streetcar” system. The legal dispute is essentially about whether VIA can lawfully tap sales-tax revenues raised by the District — a separate govern *115 mental body formed by VIA with voter approval, and with an identical governing board, that serves as a means of financing certain “advanced transportation” and “mobility enhancement” projects through the imposition of an additional sales tax within the City of San Antonio 5 — to construct “multi-modal” transportation “hubs” that may (or, according to opponents, are intended to) someday serve as components of the streetcar system.

The key events framing the legal issues presented on appeal are these:

• The District resolved to issue approximately $33 million in bonds, backed by the sales tax revenues it receives, 6 to finance projects that included two multi-modal transportation hubs.
• Before issuing the bonds, the District was required to obtain legal approval (also described as “preclearance”) from the Office of the Texas Attorney General. 7 The Attorney General declined to approve the bonds, asserting that such use of the sales-tax revenues raised by the District would violate a binding commitment made by VIA at the time of the District’s formation that those revenues would not be used to finance “light rail projects.”
• The District filed suit under chapter 1205 to obtain a judicial declaration validating the legality of the bonds. 8 The Attorney General answered and disputed the District’s claim. 9
• These parties proceeded to trial, which was concluded with a final judgment in the District’s favor. 10 The Attorney General’s Office ultimately agreed to the final judgment and expressly waived “any right to appeal or otherwise seek relief from this final judgment.”
• Although chapter 1205-compliant notice was provided of their opportunity to do so, no additional parties filed an answer before trial concluded, nor otherwise attempted to participate directly in the proceedings before the district court signed the final judgment. 11
• However, George Alejos, who falls within the mandatory class of “interested persons” who are bound by the final judgment, 12 timely filed a notice *116 of appeal purporting to challenge that judgment. 13 As previously indicated, we docketed this appeal as Cause No. 03-14-00109-CV, i.e., the Judgment Appeal.
• At the inception of its suit, the District had filed a motion invoking chapter 1205’s bond requirement as to any “opposing party or interve-nor” other than the Attorney General. 14 After Alejos filed his notice of appeal, and while the district court still retained plenary power over its judgment, the District filed a motion opposing what it characterized as an intervention by Alejos without the required leave of court 15 and, alternatively, a motion to set bond as a condition for his continued participation in the litigation.
• In response to the District’s motion, Alejos insisted that he was not attempting to intervene in the proceeding before the district court and that he was not required to do so in order to appeal the judgment. He similarly contended that he was not subject to chapter 1205’s bond requirement because it applied only to persons who had answered or intervened in the suit prior to final judgment.
• Still within its plenary power, the district court held a telephonic hearing and signed an Order Setting Bond disposing of the District’s motions. In its order, the court noted that Alejos had not filed a motion to intervene and that his counsel “both disavowed any claim that Mr. Alejos is an intervenor and represented to the court that he would not file a motion to intervene on behalf of Mr. Alejos.” “As neither a named party nor an intervenor,” the district court continued, “Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
433 S.W.3d 112, 2014 WL 1349018, 2014 Tex. App. LEXIS 3546, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/george-alejos-v-state-texapp-2014.