Harris County, Texas v. Park at Westcreek, LP

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 20, 2020
Docket01-18-00343-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Harris County, Texas v. Park at Westcreek, LP (Harris County, Texas v. Park at Westcreek, LP) 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, Texas v. Park at Westcreek, LP, (Tex. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Opinion issued February 20, 2020

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-18-00343-CV ——————————— HARRIS COUNTY, TEXAS, Appellant V. PARK AT WESTCREEK, LP, Appellee

On Appeal from the 80th District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 2016-32867

OPINION

Appellee, Park at Westcreek, LP (Westcreek), sought a declaration of its legal

rights to an easement located in part on land owned by appellant, Harris County (the

County). The County filed a “Cross-Action” against the interested parties, including

PS LPT Properties Investors, PS Texas Holdings, LTD, and PS Texas Holdings II, LTD (collectively, the Public Storage entities), asserting that the County had

adversely possessed the property in question. Westcreek then amended its pleadings

to include a takings claim and to assert that the dispute over the easement constituted

a boundary dispute. The County and the Public Storage entities settled their dispute

and nonsuited all claims between them. The County further filed a plea to the

jurisdiction, asserting that it was immune to Westcreek’s claims. The trial court

denied the plea.

In three issues, the County argues that (1) the trial court erred in denying its

plea because the court lacked jurisdiction to hear Westcreek’s claim; (2) the County

did not waive its immunity by filings its cross-action for adverse possession and later

non-suiting both the adverse possession claim and other interested property owners,

PS LPT Properties Investors, from the suit; and (3) the County is immune from

Westcreek’s inverse condemnation claim because Westcreek failed to allege an

actionable inverse condemnation claim.

We affirm.

Background

The County, Westcreek, and the Public Storage entities own portions of what

was once a single 12.53-acre tract in Harris County, Texas, located east of the Loop

610 West frontage road and north of Westheimer. The prior owners of the 12.53-

acre tract dedicated an easement across the tract in 1973, providing that the easement

2 consisted of a strip of land 40 feet wide, crossing the tract from the Loop 610

frontage road westward over the property (the Easement). In the “declaration and

grant of right-of-way and easement,” the prior owners and their tenants declared

their “desire to dedicate and establish the Subject Property as a private right-of-way

and easement for road purposes for use as such.” The declaration stated that the

parties “do hereby dedicate and establish, and declare the Subject Property to be

subject to, a nonexclusive right-of-way and easement for road purposes which shall

be privately owned and maintained but dedicated to the public use as such.” The

dedication further stated, “If the public ever ceases to use the right-of-way and

easement herein granted for road purposes, such right-of-way and easement shall

thereupon terminate and be of no further force and effect.” The terms of the easement

were binding on successors and assigns.

The County and a Public Storage entity subsequently purchased portions of

the tract fronting the Loop 610 frontage road. In 1993, Westcreek likewise purchased

a portion of the tract situated to the west of the County’s property. Westcreek was

assigned a nonexclusive right to use the Easement, which occupied what is now the

southern 20 feet of the County’s property and the northern 20 feet of the Public

Storage entity’s property. The County’s property is improved with two office

buildings and a four-level parking garage. The property is accessed from the Loop

610 frontage road by a “driveway” that is 23 feet wide and that goes from the

3 frontage road into the parking garage. The County’s property also has a fitness and

recreation park. The Easement encompasses the County’s driveway, parking spaces,

and the fitness and recreation park.

Westcreek has an apartment building on its land, with access from two other

nearby roads. Westcreek sought permission from the County to construct an entrance

and exit road on a portion of the Easement to increase accessibility for apartment

residents. The County denied Westcreek’s requests.

Westcreek filed its original petition against the County on May 19, 2016,

asserting that it purchased its property subject to the right to use the Easement,

stating its understanding that “the legal position of the County is that the Easement

has been abandoned,” and seeking “a declaration of the existence of the Easement.”

Westcreek did not seek any monetary relief.

On October 21, 2016, the County filed its “First Amended Original Answer

and Cross-Action.”1 The County sought a declaration that it was entitled to title and

possession of the Easement through adverse possession, or, alternatively, and to the

extent Westcreek succeeded in its claim, that the County was entitled to recover the

value of its improvements constructed on the Easement. In its Cross-Action, the

1 The County identified its pleading as a “Cross-Action,” but it is more properly a counterclaim as to Westcreek and a third-party claim as to the Public Storage entities. However, we refer to it as a “Cross-Action” in conformity with the County’s terminology. 4 County stated: “Defendant, Harris County, acting now as Cross-Plaintiff, complains

of Park at Westcreek, LP and PS Texas Holding II, LTD, Cross-Defendants,” and

the County identified the “three underlying fee owners to the Subject Property” as

including the County, Westcreek, and the Public Storage entities. The County

alleged that it “entered the real property . . . on May 3, 1993, and has held the land

in peaceable and adverse possession from that date until the present time,” that its

adverse possession “has thus continued for more than 10 years,” and that, “during

this time, Cross-Plaintiff [County] has used and enjoyed the property.”

On November 14, 2016, the Public Storage entities filed an answer as third-

party defendants generally denying the County’s claims and asserting various special

exceptions, verified denials, and affirmative defenses. In relevant part, the Public

Storage entities asserted that PS LPT Properties Investors was a record owner of the

property at issue and asserted its own interest in the Easement.

On March 21, 2017, the Public Storage entities supplemented their answer

and asserted “affirmative claims,” alleging that the “allegations in [the County’s]

Cross Action amount to a ‘taking’ and that [the Public Storage entities] are entitled

to just compensation.” The Public Storage entities alleged in the alternative that the

County is liable for inverse condemnation because the County “intentionally

performed certain acts that resulted in a taking of property for public use from” the

Public Storage entities when it “built improvements and fencing on an easement

5 falling on [PS entities’] fee simple Property.” The Public Storage entities further

sought a declaration of their rights to the Easement and attorney’s fees.

On June 21, 2017, the County filed its plea to the jurisdiction, asserting that

Westcreek “has not pled the necessary legislative waiver and has not and cannot

affirmatively demonstrate that governmental immunity from suit has been waived

for its claim for declaratory relief.” It further asserted that Westcreek did not plead

any waiver of the County’s governmental immunity, and it asserted the Uniform

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Harris County, Texas v. Park at Westcreek, LP, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-county-texas-v-park-at-westcreek-lp-texapp-2020.