Harris County Flood Control District v. Kerr, Edward A. and Normal

445 S.W.3d 242, 2013 WL 842652
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 7, 2013
Docket01-11-00014-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 445 S.W.3d 242 (Harris County Flood Control District v. Kerr, Edward A. and Normal) 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
Harris County Flood Control District v. Kerr, Edward A. and Normal, 445 S.W.3d 242, 2013 WL 842652 (Tex. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinions

OPINION

JIM SHARP, Justice.

This is an inverse condemnation and nuisance case brought by appellees Edward A. and Norma Kerr, and over 200 other parties (the Kerrs or appellees) whose properties were damaged by flooding in the White Oak Bayou watershed.1 In four issues, appellants, Harris County Flood Control District (HCFCD) and Harris County, Texas (Harris County; collectively, appellants) contend that in its denial of their combined plea to the jurisdiction and motion for summary judgment upon its mistaken belief that the law of the case compelled denial of the plea, the trial court erred. Appellants further contend that the appellees failed to raise a question of fact with regard to each of the three elements of their takings claim, thus defeating both their takings and nuisance claims. We affirm the trial 'court’s order denying appellants’ plea to the jurisdiction.

Background

Appellees own, or formerly owned, real property in several subdivisions located in the upper White Oak , Bayou watershed. Most of these properties are homes built in the 1970s and early 1980s. Although most had never previously flooded, appellees’ properties flooded one or more times over a five-year period as a result of three severe storms: (1) Tropical Storm Frances in 1998, (2) Tropical Storm Allison in 2001, and (3) and an unnamed storm in 2002. Appellees contend that the cause of the flooding was unmitigated upstream development, coupled with appellants’ flood-con[248]*248trol measures in the White Oak Bayou watershed during the years before these storms.2

A. Brief Overview of White Oak Bayou Flood-Control Measures

White Oak Bayou is a major tributary in the Buffalo Bayou system that drains the City of Houston and the majority of Harris County, Texas. In the late 1950s and early 1960s the United States Army Corps of Engineers began planning and designing a flood-control project for the lower, more heavily populated, 10.7 miles of White Oak Bayou. The project, which entailed enlarging and lining the bayou with concrete, was not completed until the mid-1970s.

Due of severe urban flooding conditions in the remaining upstream portions of the watershed, the Corps, beginning in the early 1970s, investigated the feasibility of extending the project to the upper portion of the watershed. In 1976, the Corps produced the “Interim Report on Upper White Oak Bayou summarizing its findings as to the watershed’s recurring flooding problems and proposed a mitigation plan. This report was coordinated with the Harris County Commissioners Court (HCCC) and HCFCD.

The 1976 Corps Report confirmed the upper watershed to be prone to flooding primarily due to “the lack of adequate [bayou] capacity to carry excessive rainfall runoff away from the area without causing flooding.” Noting that the appellants had approved new development without on-site mitigation and would continue to do so, the report acknowledged these problems were further compounded by inadequate storm sewers and street drainage in the neighborhoods surrounding the upper bayou and concluded that continued upstream development would substantially increase flooding in the upper bayou watershed. Appellants concurred with the Corps’ findings and its recommendation for a major flood-control project and agreed to act as the local sponsor of such a project. Thereafter, federal funding for this project was pursued but was slow to materialize, and in November 1980, Harris County, acting through the HCCC, authorized HCFCD to implement an interim storm-water management policy that, inter alia, required all new developments in the upper bayou watershed to provide on-site storm-water detention basins. By 1988, HCFCD had completed its own “Flood Hazard Study” in which it analyzed the effects of urbanization and defined the limits of the 100-year floodplain in Harris County, Texas.

In response to the Corps’ delay in implementing its flood-control plan for upper White Oak Bayou, Harris County commissioned Pate Engineers to develop its own plan to eliminate the existing 100-year floodplain along the bayou while also providing sufficient capacity to handle addi[249]*249tional water from future development throughout the watershed. In 1984, Harris County, acting through the HCCC, formally approved the “White Oak Bayou Regional Flood Control Project” and authorized HCFCD to implement the plan (the Pate Plan). The Pate Plan was based in significant part upon HCFCD’s 1988 Flood Hazard Study, as well as FEMA floodplain maps that were also based on the 1983 study.3

The purpose of the Pate Plan was to eliminate flooding along the upper bayou, including in the vicinity of appellees’ properties, for floods up to and including a 100-year event, by expanding the bayou’s capacity to handle storm water runoff produced from existing and expected future development in the upper White Oak Bayou watershed. Because of the uncertainty of future federal funding and the current unavailability of such funding, the Pate Plan was to be funded solely through local taxes and “impact fees.” Specifically, small developments (i.e., of less than ten acres) that opted not to construct onsite detention basins were to pay $3,000 per acre “impact fees” to fund the construction of regional detention basins.

The Pate Plan was multi-phased, with the initial phase providing the necessary mitigation to prevent flooding of the developed portion of the upper bayou watershed by construction of channel improvements, including along appellees’ subdivisions, and the acquisition of regional detention sites. The plan, once fully implemented, was intended to “maintain 100-year flood protection on White Oak Bayou as future development occur[ed].”

In 1988, HCFCD informed the Corps that appellants were no longer interested in the federal flood-control project because they had developed their own. plan that would be implemented quickly with local funds.

When flooding occurred along upper White Oak Bayou in 1989, however, homeowners contacted HCFCD concerned that appellants had yet to construct any of the channel improvements called for under the Pate Plan. In response to one homeowner’s letter, HCFCD’s then-Director, James Green, acknowledged that HCFCD was “very aware of the house flooding potential in Creekside Estates South and many other subdivisions along White Oak Bayou.” Green also acknowledged that they were in the process of implementing the Pate Plan that would protect the homeowner’s subdivision from 100-year flood events and cited on-going condemnation proceedings as the reason for the delay in implementation.

According to appellants, it was during this time that HCFCD discovered that the engineering analysis used in developing the Pate Plan was either inadequate or inaccurate and, in 1990, the engineering firm Klotz Associates (Klotz), was commissioned for a new multi-phase study of existing White Oak Bayou watershed conditions. Tasked with compiling the best information, Klotz evaluated the base models and found the information in many areas to significantly differ from the FEMA floodplain maps that were based upon the 1983 Flood Hazard Study. After including new upstream development, Klotz determined that the flood flows and flood levels along the bayou were much higher than the Pate Plan showed4.

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Bluebook (online)
445 S.W.3d 242, 2013 WL 842652, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-county-flood-control-district-v-kerr-edward-a-and-normal-texapp-2013.