Jack Weatherford v. the City of San Marcos, Texas David Chiu Jane Hughson Louis Doiron, Jr. Earl Moseley, Jr. Joe B. Cox, Jr. Paul Mayhew And Martha Castex Tatum

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 9, 2004
Docket03-03-00350-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Jack Weatherford v. the City of San Marcos, Texas David Chiu Jane Hughson Louis Doiron, Jr. Earl Moseley, Jr. Joe B. Cox, Jr. Paul Mayhew And Martha Castex Tatum (Jack Weatherford v. the City of San Marcos, Texas David Chiu Jane Hughson Louis Doiron, Jr. Earl Moseley, Jr. Joe B. Cox, Jr. Paul Mayhew And Martha Castex Tatum) 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.

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Jack Weatherford v. the City of San Marcos, Texas David Chiu Jane Hughson Louis Doiron, Jr. Earl Moseley, Jr. Joe B. Cox, Jr. Paul Mayhew And Martha Castex Tatum, (Tex. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-03-00350-CV

Jack Weatherford, Appellant

v.

The City of San Marcos, Texas; David Chiu; Jane Hughson; Louis Doiron, Jr.; Earl Moseley, Jr.; Joe B. Cox, Jr.; Paul Mayhew; and Martha Castex Tatum, Appellees

FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF HAYS COUNTY, 22ND JUDICIAL DISTRICT NO. 2001-0406, HONORABLE WILLIAM E. BENDER JUDGE PRESIDING

OPINION

In this cause, we are confronted with a dispute between a property owner, his

neighbors, and a city over the property owner’s attempts to develop his property for commercial

purposes. The property owner, Jack Weatherford, his neighbors, and the City of San Marcos met,

negotiated, and agreed in principle that some commercial development of Weatherford’s property

was possible. Weatherford’s subsequent rezoning requests, however, were denied. He sued the City

of San Marcos and the City Council (collectively, the “City”), claiming their denials violated his

rights to due process and equal protection, violated chapter 245 of the government code, constituted

a regulatory taking, and were proprietary in nature and thus subject to estoppel. The City moved for

summary judgment arguing that the negotiated land-use plan established only the basic framework for future development and did not formally vest in Weatherford the right to develop his property

commercially. The district court granted summary judgment for the City, and we affirm.

Procedural and Factual Background

Weatherford owns about fifty acres in the City of San Marcos. He bought a large tract

in the early 1960s, and two smaller tracts in about 1981 and 1995. When Weatherford bought the

first tract of land, the property was not within the City’s boundaries and was not subject to zoning.

The property was annexed and brought into the City in the early 1970s, and since being annexed has

always been zoned for single-family residential use. The property adjoins and is surrounded by other

single-family tracts, and nearby subdivisions are low-density developments. For the past several

years, Weatherford has sought on numerous occasions to have portions of his property rezoned to

allow for the development of multi-family residential and commercial projects. His neighbors have

consistently opposed these efforts. During this time, the City was in the process of updating its

comprehensive land-use plan.1 The updates set out guidelines for the future development of all

property located in the City, which was divided into eight sectors. Weatherford’s property lay in

Sector II, which encompassed approximately 800 acres. Because the use of Weatherford’s property

needed to be addressed before a development plan for Sector II was designed, the City hired a neutral

third party to facilitate negotiations between Weatherford and his neighbors, and in November 1997,

Weatherford, the Director of the City’s Planning and Zoning Commission (“the Commission”),

1 The purpose of a comprehensive land-use plan is to provide for the “long-range development of the municipality” and may be “used to coordinate and guide the establishment of development regulations.” Tex. Loc. Gov’t Code Ann. § 213.002 (West Supp. 2004-05).

2 Commission staffers, urban planners, neighborhood residents, and several other participants attended

a “mediated design workshop.” Those opposing any future development of Weatherford’s property

were concerned that the development would create more traffic and change the character of the

neighborhood. The workshop resulted in a written agreement, the “Mediated Resolution,”

contemplating some future multi-family and commercial development of Weatherford’s property.

In December 1997, the City adopted the “Sector II Plan” (the “Plan”), which

incorporated the Mediated Resolution. See City of San Marcos, Tex., Code of Ordinances No. 1997-

74 (1997). The Plan stated several objectives, including the development of “a future land use map

for the area” and guidelines to ensure that development would be sensitive to existing uses, and the

strengthening of community relations “by fostering a partnership between the City and neighborhood

residents, property owners, institutions and businesses.” Id. One part of the Plan was devoted

entirely to Weatherford’s property, but all development was to proceed through the normal zoning

process and Weatherford was required to submit Planned Development District (PDD) zoning

applications before any development could begin.2 Id.

2 The Plan does not define “Planned Development District,” and there is nothing in the record to show whether the phrase was defined at the time the Plan was enacted. We note generally, however, that cities use planned development districts as an alternative to traditional zoning:

PDD procedures allow developers to obtain site-specific approval for developments that may not fit standard area and use zoning categories and that require specific negotiation to ensure that community interests are protected. PDDs conventionally accommodate designated types of major development, such as apartment projects, cluster housing, office developments, shopping centers, and hospital facilities.

John Mixon, James L. Dougherty, Jr. & Brenda N. McDonald, Texas Municipal Zoning Law, § 7.100 (3d ed. 1999).

3 Over the next few years, Weatherford filed several PDD applications with the

Commission to develop his property pursuant to the Plan. The first PDD application was submitted

about twenty months after the Plan was enacted and requested the rezoning of 30.66 acres from

residential to commercial, multi-family, and duplex residential. The Commission’s Assistant

Director of Planning recommended approval of the application, stating:

The requested land use acreages and densities were established as a result of the mediated workshop settlement during the sector two planning process. . . . The proposed PDD plan appears consistent with the land uses indicated in the mediated settlement with one exception. The PDD plan indicates 3.8 acres of duplex development. While [duplex development] is consistent with the 7 acres of 6-12 units per acre density allowance, duplex was not indicated as a future use on the settlement plan.

In September 1999, the Commission considered Weatherford’s first PDD application.

There was public opposition, and the Commission recommended denial of the application.3 In

December 1999, the City Council heard arguments for and against Weatherford’s application.

Opponents voiced the same concerns raised at the workshop in 1997, that the development would

lead to substantial increases in traffic and an undesirable change in the character of the

neighborhood, and Weatherford’s first PDD application was denied.

In February 2000, Weatherford filed a standard, non-PDD application seeking the

rezoning of 18.6 acres (hereafter “first rezoning application”). After the Commission recommended

3 The Commission’s role is to hold public hearings and make a final report to the governing municipal body. See Tex. Loc. Gov’t Code Ann. § 211.007(b) (West 1999). The governing body can require that it may only overrule the Commission’s negative recommendation by a vote of three- fourths of the governing body’s members. See id. § 211.006 (West 1999).

4 its denial, Weatherford requested to withdraw the application. The Commission honored his request

and the application was withdrawn. In July 2000, Weatherford filed a second PDD application, and

the Commission recommended approval.

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Jack Weatherford v. the City of San Marcos, Texas David Chiu Jane Hughson Louis Doiron, Jr. Earl Moseley, Jr. Joe B. Cox, Jr. Paul Mayhew And Martha Castex Tatum, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jack-weatherford-v-the-city-of-san-marcos-texas-david-chiu-jane-hughson-texapp-2004.