H. C. Carter v. Dripping Springs Water Supply Corporation

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 21, 2005
Docket03-03-00753-CV
StatusPublished

This text of H. C. Carter v. Dripping Springs Water Supply Corporation (H. C. Carter v. Dripping Springs Water Supply Corporation) 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
H. C. Carter v. Dripping Springs Water Supply Corporation, (Tex. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-03-00753-CV

H. C. Carter, Appellant

v.

Dripping Springs Water Supply Corporation, Appellee

FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF HAYS COUNTY, 274TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT NO. 02-1912, HONORABLE ROBERT T. PFEUFFER, JUDGE PRESIDING

MEMORANDUM OPINION

H.C. Carter (“Carter”) entered into an agreement with Dripping Springs Water Supply

Corporation (“DSWSC”) in which Carter agreed to sell property to DSWSC for the purpose of

developing a wastewater treatment facility. One of the provisions of the contract allowed Carter to

repurchase the property in question if Drippings Springs was unable to build the treatment facility.

Carter filed suit to enforce the buyback provision, but the district court granted DSWSC’s plea to

the jurisdiction and dismissed the case. Carter appeals the district court’s grant of the plea to the

jurisdiction. We will reverse the order and remand the cause.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Carter is an individual residing in Hays County, Texas. DSWSC is a non-profit

member-owned Texas water-supply corporation with its principal place of business in Dripping Springs, Texas. In February 1997, Carter entered into an unimproved-property purchase contract

with DSWSC for the sale of approximately seventeen acres. DSWSC acquired the property for the

purpose of building a wastewater treatment facility. The contract contained the following buyback

provision:

In the event [DSWSC] is unable to obtain environmental, historical, archeological, permitting or such other clearance or approvals from governmental regulatory agencies after the purchase of the property, or for any other reason [DSWSC]’s wastewater facility cannot go forward, [DSWSC] must hold the property for a period of two years from the date of closing. [DSWSC] must then offer [to] resell the exact same property to [Carter] for $87,500.00 and hold such offer to [Carter] open for six (6) months from date of notice. At anytime after receiving notice to repurchase the land, but not after six months from receipt of notice, [Carter] shall repurchase the land for the sum of $87,500.00, plus the cost of any boundary survey which may be required by [Carter] or any third party lender. [DSWSC] shall furnish a title policy and convey good title by general warranty deed to [Carter] in the event of such repurchase. (altered to substitute “DSWSC” for “Buyer” and “Carter” for “Seller”).

The parties interpret the buyback provision in different ways. Carter takes the

position that the buyback agreement creates a two-year time limit in which DSWSC is required to

obtain all the necessary permits to build the facility and proceed in building the facility. Further,

Carter alleges that when the two-year period of time expired, the contract gave Carter the right to

repurchase the property for six months thereafter. Carter insists that DSWSC did not satisfy the two-

year provision because it did not obtain all the permits necessary to build the facility; he asserts that

DSWSC never applied for nor received a site-development permit from the City of Dripping Springs,

which is necessary for the development of any land that is within the corporate limits of the City of

Dripping Springs or its extraterritorial jurisdiction. See Dripping Springs, Tex., Ordinance No. 52-B

2 § 10A (2001), at p. 13.1 However, DSWSC counters by contending that it has been able to obtain

the necessary permits to proceed with the facility. Specifically, DSWSC insists its proposed

wastewater facility has been permitted by the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (“the

Commission”).2 Further, DSWSC asserts that it has a certificate of convenience and necessity

authorizing it to provide water service in portions of Hays County and a Texas Pollutant Discharge

Elimination System permit, which allows it to provide wastewater treatment and disposal services

in Hays County.

Carter also contends that it is not possible for DSWSC to build the treatment facility

and insists that, as a result, Carter is entitled to repurchase the property. Carter asserts that because

of the passage of an ordinance by the City of Dripping Springs and because of a provision in the

contract requiring DSWSC to construct a 150-foot natural-vegetative buffer along the property

boundary, it is physically impossible for DSWSC to build a treatment facility on the property in

question. The ordinance in question was enacted in May 2001, and the ordinance listed restrictions

for building an organized disposal system within Dripping Springs or within its extraterritorial

jurisdiction. See Dripping Springs, Tex., Ordinance No. 52-D (2001). Specifically, the ordinance

stated that the plans for an organized disposal system will not be approved if any portion of the

1 It is worth noting that the City of Dripping Springs passed an ordinance specifying that the seventeen acres in question lie within the extra-territorial jurisdiction of Dripping Springs. See Dripping Springs, Tex., Ordinance No. 1310.26 (2003). 2 For convenience, we will refer to both the Commission and its predecessor, the Texas Natural Resource Conservation Commission, as the Commission.

3 system’s treatment facilities, storage ponds, or surface irrigation components are located within 500

feet of the boundary of any city park or any land owned by an organization whose purpose is to

protect, promote, maintain, or restore any structure listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

In the ordinance, an organized disposal system is defined as “[a]ny publicly or privately owned

system for the collection, treatment and/or disposal of sewage from more than one residence, duplex

or commercial building that is installed and operated in accordance with the terms and conditions

of a valid permit issued by” the Commission. The facility discussed in the contract was a wastewater

treatment facility that could provide service to 120 single-family lots. Carter claims the seventeen

acres is next to a park and a recorded historical landmark. Therefore, Carter insists the 500-foot

provision applies to the property in question.

DSWSC counters and contends that, under the contract, it has a reasonable amount

of time to exhaust all alternatives, that the buyback provision does not have a two-year time limit,

and that before Carter can seek to repurchase the property, DSWSC must give Carter notice. Further,

DSWSC contends the ordinance does not apply to the property in question, it is not impossible for

DSWSC to build the facility on the property in question, and unless Carter can prove as a matter of

law that it is physically impossible for it to build the facility, then Carter’s claims are not ripe, and

he is not entitled to proceed in district court.

In July 1997, Carter offered to purchase lot twenty, which is another piece of property

owned by DSWSC that was purchased in order to access the original seventeen acres. Carter

contends that the offer did not contain a time limit and that the offer was never revoked. Carter also

alleges the Board of Directors of DSWSC held a meeting and agreed to accept Carter’s offer to

4 purchase lot twenty. In August 1997, Joel Wilkinson, who was an employee of DSWSC, sent Carter

a letter stating that the Board had agreed to grant Carter the first right to purchase the lot at the price

DSWSC had paid in the event the lot and the seventeen-acre tract were not used for developing

wastewater facilities.

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