Hirtz v. State of Tex.

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedOctober 8, 1992
Docket91-6145
StatusPublished

This text of Hirtz v. State of Tex. (Hirtz v. State of Tex.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hirtz v. State of Tex., (5th Cir. 1992).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals,

Fifth Circuit.

No. 91–6145.

Ted HIRTZ, et al., Plaintiffs–Appellees,

John M. Arrington, Catherine Cash, John Posey, and Edward Holland, Plaintiffs–Appellants,

v.

The STATE OF TEXAS, Defendant–Appellee–Appellant.

Oct. 14, 1992.

Appeals from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Texas.

Before KING, WILLIAMS, and SMITH, Circuit Judges.

JERRY E. SMITH, Circuit Judge:

I.

The plaintiffs own beachfront property on the Texas Gulf coast. Along that shoreline, the

state owns the land between the line of mean low tide and the line of mean high tide. The public has

an easement between the line of mean high tide and the line of vegetation, acquired under common

law principles of dedication, prescription, and/or custom. Because of the peculiar definition of this

type of easement, the location of the easement shifts as the vegetation line shifts.

Hurricane Alicia in 1983 and fierce spring storms in 1988 caused radical shifts in the

vegetation line along portions of the coast. The state then brought enforcement proceedings under

the Texas Open Beaches Act (the "Act") against plaintiffs and others and obtained an injunction

preventing plaintiffs from rebuilding or repairing their homes or improving their vacant lots, as such

construction would interfere with the public's easement in the beaches. See TEX. NAT. RES. CODE

ANN. § 61.013 (West Supp.1992).

II.

On July 11, 1988, certain of the plaintiffs, to-wit, Ted Hirtz, Pete Anselmo, Paul Force, Harold Flatt, and their wives filed suit against the Attorney General of Texas in federal district court,

seeking a declaration that the Act, TEX. NAT. RES. CODE ANN. §§ 61.001–.026 (West 1978 &

Supp.1992), violates the takings clause of the Fifth Amendment. On August 15, 1988, the attorney

general moved to dismiss on the ground of abstention. The district court denied that motion on

September 14, 1988.

On October 24, 1988, the district court sua sponte substituted, as defendant, the State of

Texas for the attorney general. Plaintiffs, without objection, filed an amended complaint naming only

the state as defendant and adding six new plaintiffs: John Arrington, Catherine Cash, Edward

Holland, Dallas Pittman, John Posey, Jr., and Chapoton/Ramsey Ltd. Partners. Prior to filing the

amended complaint, plaintiffs Anselmo and Flatt and their wives agreed to dismiss their claims.

On April 13, 1989, the state moved to dismiss the complaint on the basis of Elevent h

Amendment immunity, lack of standing, and lack of subject matter jurisdiction. The state also moved

to dismiss the claims of the six plaintiffs added in the amended complaint on a number of grounds,

including res judicata based upon prior state litigation involving those plaintiffs. On June 26, 1989,

the district court dismissed Arrington, Cash, Holland, and Posey as plaintiffs without specifying the

grounds. The co urt allowed Cash and Posey to amend their complaint but later dismissed their

amended pleadings as well, again without specifying the grounds.

The state and the plaintiffs moved for summary judgment. On April 30, 1991, 773 F.Supp.

6, the district court granted in part both motions. Under the court's judgment, the migration of the

public easement does not constitute a taking; as a result, Hirtz, Force, Pittman, and

Chapoton/Ramsey Ltd. Partners took nothing against the state; the state was enjoined from forcing

the plaintiffs to remove their existing structures and from preventing them from maintaining those

structures. Arrington, Cash, Posey, and Holland appeal, challenging the order of dismissal; the state

appeals, attacking the injunction and asserting that the court should have dismissed the case on the

ground of either Eleventh Amendment immunity or abstention. Because we hold that the Eleventh

Amendment bars plaintiffs' suit, we do not reach the merits of their Fifth Amendment claim or the

abstention or res judicata issue.

III.

The Eleventh Amendment issue in this case arises from rather extraordinary circumstances.

The suit began like most federal actions seeking an injunction against enforcement of an

unconstitutional state statute—the plaintiffs sued the attorney general. On October 24, 1988, District

Judge Hughes, without reference to the Eleventh Amendment or the line of cases following the

landmark decision of Ex parte Young, 209 U.S. 123, 28 S.Ct. 441, 52 L.Ed. 714 (1908), sua sponte

ordered the state subst ituted for the attorney general as defendant. In his order, Judge Hughes

substituted the State of Texas in the caption and warned the parties that "[f]ailure to place the name

of the proper party in the style of any further pleading will result in that pleading [sic] being

disregarded."

Surprisingly, the plaintiffs failed to object to this unusual order. The state did not object either

but, instead, added the following footnote to the front page of its subsequent pleadings:

The State of Texas is listed as the defendant in the style of this case pursuant to the October 24, 1988 order of this Court. However, the Attorney General of Texas maintains that he is the proper party to this case, because he represents the public, individually and collectively, under the Texas Open Beaches Act, TEX.NAT.RES.CODE §§ 61.001–61.025....

Apparently, Judge Hughes became annoyed with this footnote, as, without warning, he signed an

order on February 28, 1989, striking eleven of the state's pleadings containing it.

The state complied with the order and finally filed a motion to dismiss on Eleventh

Amendment and other grounds on April 13, 1989. Apparently, the state's Eleventh Amendment argument fell on deaf ears, as the district court rendered judgment on May 2, 1991, without

mentioning the Eleventh Amendment.

It is not entirely evident why Judge Hughes sua sponte ordered the substitution of the state

for the attorney general. The record does provide some evidence of his reasoning, however. During

a September 14, 1988, hearing, Judge Hughes sua sponte raised the notion of that substitution and

mentioned that he had required the same change when he was a state district judge. Of course, the

Eleventh Amendment does not apply in state court but, in this federal case, becomes the central issue.

During the September 14 hearing, Judge Hughes also spoke of what he saw as the attorney

general's desire to see "his name in print." Later, in a memorandum accompanying his order striking

the state's pleadings, Judge Hughes again raised this concern, as follows:

The attorneys for Texas persist in intruding the attorney general into the party defendant's role. The pleadings filed with the attorney general's impertinent footnote or other self-aggrandizing intrusion will be struck.

These excerpts from the record, we think, demonstrate why Judge Hughes substituted the state as

a party: He seems to think the attorney general likes to appear as a party for the purpose of

self-promotion.

Even if—which we do not decide—there were some truth to this assertion, we do not see

how it could apply in this case. After all, the Attorney General did not bring this action; he was sued.

The Constitution provides the more salient reason why the plaintiffs sued the attorney general—the

Eleventh Amendment bars suits against the state.

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