Hill v. Lower Colorado River Authority

568 S.W.2d 473, 1978 Tex. App. LEXIS 3496
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 12, 1978
Docket12811
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 568 S.W.2d 473 (Hill v. Lower Colorado River Authority) 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
Hill v. Lower Colorado River Authority, 568 S.W.2d 473, 1978 Tex. App. LEXIS 3496 (Tex. Ct. App. 1978).

Opinion

O’QUINN, Justice.

John L. Hill brought this lawsuit in September of 1977, “individually and as Attorney General of the State of Texas,” against the Texas Water Rights Commission, the Lower Colorado River Authority, and against Houston Lighting and Power Company as Project Manager for the South Texas Nuclear Project.

Hill alleged that suit was brought “ . . .. to seek review of an order by the Texas Water Rights Commission granting a contractual permit” to Houston Lighting and Power Company, based upon a contract between Houston Lighting, as Project Manager for the South Texas Nuclear Project, and the Lower Colorado River Authority. The petition further alleged that suit was brought “pursuant to Section 6.101, Texas Water Code, and Article 6252-13a, Section 19 (The Administrative Procedure and Texas Register Act).”

Twenty-six days after filing suit, and before answer was made by the Texas Water Rights Commission and other defendants, Hill filed an amended petition on September 28 naming as defendant, in lieu of the Water Rights Commission, the Texas Department of Water Resources which had been created by the Legislature, effective September 1, 1977, with contemporaneous abolishment of the Texas Water Rights Commission previously sued.

The Department of Water Resources answered pro se through Charles Nemir, its acting executive director, setting up a plea to the jurisdiction, special exceptions, and a general denial. The Lower Colorado River Authority and Houston Lighting and Power also answered presenting similar defenses, though more extensively alleged, and specific pleas in abatement.

The Attorney General pleaded, as further authority to bring this action in his capacity as the “duly elected Attorney General of Texas,” that “He brings this action pursu *475 ant to his constitutional, statutory, and common law powers individually and on behalf of the people of the State of Texas and its citizens, particularly those in the service area of the South Texas Nuclear Project, who are persons directly affected by the action complained of . . . ” by this suit.

Defendants below joined issue on this claimed authority by the Attorney General and urged their pleas in abatement on the ground that in bringing suit against the Department of Water Resources, to challenge validity of the order made by the Water Rights Commission, the Attorney General in effect abandoned his constitutional and statutory duty to represent the Department of Water Resources in any litigation in which it may be involved, and that such duty to the State and its agencies denied the Attorney General standing in court, individually and as a private citizen, to bring suit against the State agency.

The defendants also filed and urged pleas to the jurisdiction on the ground that the Attorney General failed to sue the proper State agency within the period allowed by statute following the order entered by the Water Rights Commission. The basis for such claim is that suit was filed originally, on September 2, 1977, against an agency (the Texas Water Rights Commission) which no longer existed, by virtue of revision by the Legislature of Title 2 of the Water Code, effective on September 1, 1977. The Attorney General failed to amend and name the proper agency and the correct agent for service until September 28, long after expiration of the time allowed by statute within which to bring suit.

The district court, Judge Ruel C. Walker presiding, overruled the pleas to the jurisdiction, but sustained the pleas in abatement and by order entered February 7, 1978, dismissed the Attorney General’s suit against Texas Department of Water Resources and the other defendants.

The Attorney General has appealed and brings the single point of error that the pleas in abatement were improperly sustained by the trial court “ . . . because the Attorney General of Texas has authority to initiate this action on behalf of the people of the State of Texas to obtain judicial review of the action of the Texas Water Rights Commission.”

We will overrule the point of error and will affirm judgment of the trial court.

The proceedings before the Texas Water Rights Commission, which ultimately reached adoption of the order of June 20, 1977, forming the basis for this litigation, began in January of 1974 with the filing by Houston Lighting and Power of an application for a permit to appropriate public waters of the State from the Colorado River and to construct cooling reservoirs in Matagorda County at the site of an electric generating plant, to be operated by steam generated from nuclear fuel. In filing the application Houston Lighting acted for itself and for electric systems owned by the City of San Antonio, Central Power and Light Company, and the City of Austin. The four electric systems, joined together as tenants in common, would collectively supply an area of south Texas constituting about one-third of the state and serve an estimated 5,000,000 users.

In view of prior water rights held by the Lower Colorado River Authority and to insure “a back-up supply” of water from the Authority’s reservoirs on the Colorado River, Houston Lighting negotiated a contract in the summer of 1974 with the Authority, after the Water Rights Commission had requested the parties to complete a formal contract before hearings on the original application were continued or completed. Subsequently, in January of 1976, Houston Lighting returned to the Commission seeking, under its application, a contractual permit for the water pumped for the project, at which time the Commission expressed concern that the Lower Colorado River Authority was not obligated under the contract with Houston Lighting to supply water stored in the Authority’s upstream reservoirs. Again the parties negotiated and reached further agreement which later met with approval of the Commission. In addition, the Authority voluntarily agreed *476 to abandon its rights to 102,000 acre-feet of water, previously appropriated to the Authority under a permit which authorized impoundment of the water upstream of the project site and the use of such water.

In January of 1977, after the Commission, Houston Lighting, and the Lower Colorado River Authority had agreed upon settlement of the complex issues of this proceeding, the Attorney General made appearance before the Commission and interposed his opposition to the prospective action of the Commission to approve the application as finally reshaped by the parties under guidance of the Commission. Specifically, the Attorney General objected to grant of a contractual permit, and did not oppose the application of Houston Lighting in its initial form. The Commission nevertheless granted the application for a contractual permit based on the amended contract between Houston Lighting and the Lower Colorado River Authority. Concurrently with this action by the Commission, a transfer document, previously authorized and executed on behalf of the several co-owners in the project, was delivered to the Authority. This action transferred to the Authority the project’s interest in the 102,000 acre-feet appropriation acquired under the Houston Lighting permit just granted by the Commission, along with temporary appropriation of 500 acre-feet for use during construction of the plant.

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Bluebook (online)
568 S.W.2d 473, 1978 Tex. App. LEXIS 3496, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hill-v-lower-colorado-river-authority-texapp-1978.