In Re Bexar Medina Atascosa Counties Water Control and Improvement District Number One; George Weimer, President; Bob Roberts Jr., Vice President; Christopher Friesenhahn, Secretary/Treasurer; Dustin Navarro, Board Member; Garrett Wilson, Board Member; Morris Salzman, Board Member; Gordon Hitzfelder, Board Member; Brian Sullivan, Operations Manager; And Bonnie Tapp Sallee, Office Manager v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 12, 2025
Docket04-24-00538-CV
StatusPublished

This text of In Re Bexar Medina Atascosa Counties Water Control and Improvement District Number One; George Weimer, President; Bob Roberts Jr., Vice President; Christopher Friesenhahn, Secretary/Treasurer; Dustin Navarro, Board Member; Garrett Wilson, Board Member; Morris Salzman, Board Member; Gordon Hitzfelder, Board Member; Brian Sullivan, Operations Manager; And Bonnie Tapp Sallee, Office Manager v. the State of Texas (In Re Bexar Medina Atascosa Counties Water Control and Improvement District Number One; George Weimer, President; Bob Roberts Jr., Vice President; Christopher Friesenhahn, Secretary/Treasurer; Dustin Navarro, Board Member; Garrett Wilson, Board Member; Morris Salzman, Board Member; Gordon Hitzfelder, Board Member; Brian Sullivan, Operations Manager; And Bonnie Tapp Sallee, Office Manager v. the State of Texas) 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
In Re Bexar Medina Atascosa Counties Water Control and Improvement District Number One; George Weimer, President; Bob Roberts Jr., Vice President; Christopher Friesenhahn, Secretary/Treasurer; Dustin Navarro, Board Member; Garrett Wilson, Board Member; Morris Salzman, Board Member; Gordon Hitzfelder, Board Member; Brian Sullivan, Operations Manager; And Bonnie Tapp Sallee, Office Manager v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Fourth Court of Appeals San Antonio, Texas

OPINION No. 04-24-00538-CV

IN RE BEXAR MEDINA ATASCOSA COUNTIES WATER CONTROL AND IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT NUMBER ONE; George Weimer, President; Bob Roberts Jr., Vice President; Christopher Friesenhahn, Secretary/Treasurer; Dustin Navarro, Board Member; Garret Wilson, Board Member; Morris Salzman, Board Member; Gordon Hitzfelder, Board Member; Brian Sullivan, Operations Manager; and Bonnie Tapp Sallee, Office Manager; Relators

Original Mandamus Proceeding 1

Opinion by: Adrian A. Spears II, Justice

Sitting: Rebeca C. Martinez, Chief Justice Adrian A. Spears II, Justice H. Todd McCray, Justice

Delivered and Filed: February 12, 2025

PETITION FOR WRIT OF MANDAMUS CONDITIONALLY GRANTED

Bexar Medina Atascosa Counties Water Control and Improvement District Number One

(“BMA”) and its directors and employees named in the underlying suit (collectively, “relators”)

seek a writ of mandamus directing the trial court to withdraw its rulings continuing a hearing on

their plea to the jurisdiction for the purpose of allowing discovery. Because we conclude the trial

1 This proceeding arises out of Cause No. 2023CI11920, styled San Antonio Water System, an agency of the City of San Antonio v. Bexar Medina Atascosa Counties Water Control and Improvement District Number One; George Weimer, President; Bob Roberts Jr., Vice President; Christopher Friesenhahn, Secretary/Treasurer; Dustin Navarro, Board Member; Garret Wilson, Board Member; Morris Salzman, Board Member; Gordon Hitzfelder, Board Member; Brian Sullivan, Operations Manager; and Bonnie Tapp Sallee, Office Manager; each in their official capacities, pending in the 407th Judicial District Court, Bexar County, Texas, the Honorable Rosie Alvarado presiding. 04-24-00538-CV

court abused its discretion and relators’ appellate remedy is inadequate, we conditionally grant

mandamus relief.

BACKGROUND

SAWS filed a declaratory judgment suit against relators, seeking a declaration that a water

supply agreement between the parties was void. SAWS’s live pleading, its first amended petition,

alleged that the agreement violates the “gift clause” in the Texas Constitution because it requires

SAWS to pay for water it is not receiving, even when BMA does not have sufficient quality water

to comply with the agreement. As to subject matter jurisdiction, the amended petition alleged the

trial court had “jurisdiction to compel compliance with statutory or constitutional provisions, and

to enjoin public officials from expending public funds under a contract that is void or illegal.” It

further alleged that BMA’s directors and managers, who were sued in their official capacities, were

violating the Texas Constitution “by continuing to enforce” the parties’ water supply agreement

“and approve expenditures of SAWS ratepayer funds obtained under the [a]greement.” It added:

“These acts are pursuant to an unlawful agreement, are ultra vires acts outside of their authority,

and must be enjoined.” Finally, the amended petition alleged: “Governmental immunity is not

implicated, or, in the alternative, is waived.”

In response, relators filed an answer denying SAWS’s allegations and a plea to the

jurisdiction arguing the trial court lacked subject matter jurisdiction because “(1) BMA has

governmental immunity; (2) the BMA directors are immune because SAWS has not properly pled

any ultra vires claims; and (3) the PUC [Public Utility Commission] has exclusive jurisdiction

over SAWS[’s] claims.”

On May 31, 2024, SAWS served relators with twenty-six requests for production and four

interrogatories. Relators objected to the discovery on grounds it was merits-based and irrelevant

to the preliminary jurisdictional issue raised in their plea to the jurisdiction.

-2- 04-24-00538-CV

Relators’ plea to the jurisdiction was set for a hearing on August 7, 2024. However, about

three weeks before the plea to the jurisdiction hearing, SAWS filed a motion to continue the

hearing and compel relators to answer its discovery.

On July 31, 2024, the trial court held a hearing on the motion to continue/compel. At the

beginning of the hearing, SAWS asked the trial court to postpone the plea to the jurisdiction

hearing until twenty-one days after relators answered discovery. Later in the hearing, SAWS and

relators provided dramatically different views of the jurisdictional issues presented and the

propriety of allowing discovery at this stage in the proceedings.

SAWS argued the trial court had jurisdiction over its suit “pursuant to Article 3, Section

52, which is the gift clause, as well as Article 5, Section 8 of the Texas Constitution.” Additionally,

SAWS maintained that it needed discovery “on the availability of water and on the quality of that

water from Medina Lake directly from BMA” and “BMA’s methods for calculating the availability

to determine whether or not there’s a violation of the gift clause. Put simply, Your Honor, if there’s

a violation of the gift clause, you have jurisdiction to hear it.”

Relators argued SAWS was not entitled to any discovery at this preliminary stage because:

Again, we did not attach evidence [to our plea to the jurisdiction], nor did we contest a single fact in the petition filed by [SAWS]. So we accepted all of their facts as true. So we are under the Miranda standard, where it’s moving solely on the pleadings. ...

[M]y client, BMA, is a governmental entity . . . . And we have said [in our plea to the jurisdiction] that the declaratory judgment suit is barred by governmental immunity . . . . We also argued the individual defendants have governmental immunity and that SAWS failed to allege ultra vir[e]s actions under the applicable legal standard. And then we also made the argument that the Texas Water Code provides the PUC . . . with exclusive jurisdiction over water contract disputes like this one. These are all legal challenges. There is no factual dispute identified in our plea to the jurisdiction. We moved solely on the pleadings.

After both sides presented their arguments, the trial court announced its rulings:

-3- 04-24-00538-CV

Okay. I think I’ve heard enough on the issue.

I am going to grant [the motion] . . . .

I do believe some of [the discovery requested] gets into the merits specifically. And I understand [SAWS’s] argument. It’s a novel argument. . . .

But I’m going to have y’all confer. I’m going to give you two weeks to get this narrowed down and tailored to the jurisdictional limitations, because we didn’t go line by line on 26 requests for production and four interrogatories. ....

I will grant the continuance in the interim, and it will be from 21 days from getting the order entered on this discovery issue. That way it’s not 21 days from today; it’s 21 days from order entry as to the limited discovery on the motion to compel. ....

What I’m allowing right now is for limited discovery on these jurisdictional issues. And I’m going to have you-all confer, because there’s a substantive amount here.

When relators asked the trial court for further guidance, the trial court stated that the discovery

should be limited to “the availability of the water; the methods of calculation; [and] the quality of

the water.”

On August 9, 2024, relators filed the instant mandamus petition, arguing (1) the trial court

abused its discretion by continuing the plea to the jurisdiction hearing and ordering discovery

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In Re Bexar Medina Atascosa Counties Water Control and Improvement District Number One; George Weimer, President; Bob Roberts Jr., Vice President; Christopher Friesenhahn, Secretary/Treasurer; Dustin Navarro, Board Member; Garrett Wilson, Board Member; Morris Salzman, Board Member; Gordon Hitzfelder, Board Member; Brian Sullivan, Operations Manager; And Bonnie Tapp Sallee, Office Manager v. the State of Texas, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-bexar-medina-atascosa-counties-water-control-and-improvement-district-texapp-2025.