Harris County Fresh Water Supply District No. 61 v. Magellan Pipeline Company, L. P. and V-Tex Logistics LLC

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 19, 2022
Docket01-20-00805-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Harris County Fresh Water Supply District No. 61 v. Magellan Pipeline Company, L. P. and V-Tex Logistics LLC (Harris County Fresh Water Supply District No. 61 v. Magellan Pipeline Company, L. P. and V-Tex Logistics LLC) 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 Fresh Water Supply District No. 61 v. Magellan Pipeline Company, L. P. and V-Tex Logistics LLC, (Tex. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Opinion issued April 19, 2022

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-20-00805-CV ——————————— HARRIS COUNTY FRESH WATER SUPPLY DISTRICT NO. 61, Appellant V. MAGELLAN PIPELINE COMPANY, L.P. AND V-TEX LOGISTICS, LLC, Appellees

On Appeal from the County Civil Court at Law No. 3 Harris County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 1118537

OPINION

In this case, we must decide whether a governmental entity is immune from a

suit to condemn a portion of its property for an easement through which to build a

common-carrier pipeline. Appellees, Magellan Pipeline Company, L.P. and V-Tex

Logistics, LLC (collectively, “the Pipeline”), filed a condemnation proceeding against appellant, Harris County Fresh Water Supply District No. 61 (“the District”),

seeking an easement for the purpose of installing a pipeline1 underneath the

District’s property. After the administrative phase of the condemnation2 proceeding

concluded, the Special Commissioners awarded the District an additional $160,000

over amounts it had already been paid by the Pipeline. Unhappy with the award, the

District filed a Plea to the Jurisdiction3 and Objections to the Award of Special

Commissioners, arguing that the award “fails to award the District adequate

compensation for [Appellees’] acquisition of the Easements.” After a partial

summary judgment and a nine-day bench trial, the trial court entered a Final

Judgment that granted the Pipeline a permanent easement, awarded the District the

$160,000 additional compensation approved by the Special Commissioners, and

denied all of the District’s request for additional compensation. On appeal, the

1 The pipeline has already been constructed and put into operation. 2 In Texas, condemnation proceedings are conducted in two phases—an administrative phase, and, if necessary, a judicial phase. City of Tyler v. Beck, 196 S.W.3d 784, 786 (Tex. 2006) (per curiam). A proceeding is administrative in nature from the filing of the condemnation petition through the entry of an award of compensation by the court-appointed Special Commissioners. Id. Any party dissatisfied with that award may file an objection, which begins the judicial phase of the proceeding. Id. 3 We note that the Plea to the Jurisdiction was not based on the doctrine of governmental immunity but argued that the condemnation was not authorized because (1) it would destroy the public use for which the property was already dedicated, and (2) that the Pipeline was not a common-carrier pipeline and did not serve a public purpose or use. 2 District argues for the first time that the condemnation suit should be dismissed

because the District has governmental immunity. Alternatively, the District contends

that the condemnation suit should be dismissed because the Pipeline did not prove

that it had the required condemnation power. We affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

A. The Pipeline Project

Magellan Pipeline Company, LP and V-Tex Logistics, LLC are pipeline

companies, and each owns its own pipeline system. Third-party shippers pay a fee

to transport their products to destinations on their pipeline systems.

Magellan and V-Tex entered an agreement to develop a pipeline from east

Houston to Hearne in Robertson County. The pipeline transports gasoline, diesel

fuel, jet fuel, and other refined petroleum products for third parties. To complete the

construction, the Pipeline needed to acquire easement rights across approximately

600 parcels of land owned by approximately 300 landowners. One of these parcels

was a 30-acre tract of land owned by the District.

The District is a special purpose district under Article XVI, Section 59 of the

Texas Constitution, and a fresh water supply district and municipal utility district

under Chapters 49, 53, and 54 of the Texas Water Code. See, e.g., TEX. WATER

CODE § 54.011. Among other activities, the District conserves, transports, and

distributes water for domestic and commercial purposes, id. § 53.101, and controls,

3 stores, preserves, and distributes storm water and flood water. Id. § 54.012. One of

the stormwater-detention ponds that the District operates is the Hendricks detention

pond, which is located on the property through which the Pipeline sought an

easement.

B. The Parties Negotiate the Sale of an Easement

In late 2017, the Pipeline advised the District of the pipeline project and the

two parties began negotiating for the transfer of an easement. Unable to reach an

agreement on the terms of the transfer, counsel for the Pipeline and counsel for the

District began discussing how to advance the process in the late summer of 2018.

One of the ideas that the parties’ counsel discussed was the payment of an

initial sum to the District by the Pipeline, with a condemnation proceeding to resolve

the District’s right to further compensation over and above the initial payment.

In furtherance of this idea, the Pipeline’s counsel summarized his

understanding of the proposed agreement in a September 3, 2018 email to the

District’s counsel, which provided as follows:

Condemnation. Based on our last discussion, we understand that it is the District’s preference that Magellan/V-Tex initiate a condemnation proceeding to assure there is a process by which the District can pursue the scheduling of a Special Commissioners hearing following the parties’ execution of a right of entry agreement. We are preparing the proceeding for filing.

The District’s counsel responded in a September 4, 2018 email, stating, “Very

good. Thank you.” 4 The email exchange also discussed that the parties would enter a right-of-entry

agreement. Pursuant to this proposed agreement, the Pipeline would pay an initial

payment if the District (1) granted a right of entry and (2) did not dispute the Pipeline’s

right to acquire the easement.

C. The Pipeline Files This Condemnation Proceeding

As contemplated by the parties’ September emails, on October 1, 2018, the

Pipeline filed its Petition and Statement in Condemnation, which was assigned to

County Civil Court at Law No. 3.4 In an amended petition, the Pipeline stated that

the acquisition of the easement rights was a public necessity and necessary for the

construction of a common-carrier pipeline, and that it intended to exercise its

eminent domain powers to acquire such easement. A November 21, 2018 First

Amended Petition and Statement in Condemnation modified the description to

include an additional easement across District-owned land.

D. The Right-Of-Entry Agreements

On December 12, 2018, the parties executed an agreement entitled “Right of

Entry and Possession,” which stated that the parties “have agreed on terms for a

partial settlement of the acquisition of the Easements.” In the contract, the parties

provided that:

4 No Original Petition and Statement in Condemnation is included in the clerk’s record, but other documents in the clerk’s record indicate that the Pipeline filed it on October 1, 2018.

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Harris County Fresh Water Supply District No. 61 v. Magellan Pipeline Company, L. P. and V-Tex Logistics LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-county-fresh-water-supply-district-no-61-v-magellan-pipeline-texapp-2022.