Kathleen Powell and Paul Luccia v. City of Houston, Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 25, 2019
Docket01-18-00237-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Kathleen Powell and Paul Luccia v. City of Houston, Texas (Kathleen Powell and Paul Luccia v. City of Houston, 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
Kathleen Powell and Paul Luccia v. City of Houston, Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Opinion issued June 25, 2019

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-18-00237-CV ——————————— KATHLEEN POWELL AND PAUL LUCCIA, Appellants V. CITY OF HOUSTON, TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the County Civil Court at Law No. 1 Harris County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 1043863

OPINION

The appellants, Kathleen Powell and Paul Luccia (collectively, the

Homeowners), own homes in a designated historic district, the Heights East area of

the City of Houston (the City). The Homeowners sued the City, asserting that the

City’s Historic Preservation Ordinance (HPO) violated the Houston City Charter’s prohibition against zoning regulations. Following a bench trial, the trial court

rendered a take-nothing judgment in favor of the City on the Homeowners’ claims.

In three issues on appeal, the Homeowners argue that: (1) the City’s HPO and

regulations for geographic historic district and land use constitute zoning; (2) the

City’s historic district zoning laws violate the Houston City Charter; and (3) the

City’s historic district zoning laws violate the Texas Legislature’s Zoning Enabling

Act.

Because we conclude that the HPO does not constitute a zoning measure, we

affirm the trial court’s take-nothing judgment in favor of the City.

Background

The City is a home-rule city. In 1994, the City amended the City Charter to

provide that it may only adopt zoning ordinances after it publishes any proposed

ordinance for public hearings and debate during a six-month waiting period and

then holds a binding referendum at a regularly scheduled election. Specifically, the

Charter was amended to provide:

The City of Houston shall have the power to adopt a zoning ordinance only by: (a) allowing a six month waiting period after publication of any proposed ordinance for public hearings and debate and (b) holding a binding referendum at a regularly scheduled election. Any existing zoning ordinance is hereby repealed.

2 The Charter does not define what constitutes a zoning ordinance. The Charter

further provides that “no ordinance shall be enacted inconsistent with the

provisions of this charter.”

In 1995, the City Council adopted the HPO. This ordinance provided for the

creation of historic districts and required that property owners in those designated

historic districts must apply to the Houston Archeological and Historical

Commission (HAHC) for a “certificate of appropriateness” before demolishing,

modifying, or developing property situated within a historic district. However, if

the HAHC denied a certificate of appropriateness, after a waiting period of ninety

days, the property owner was entitled to a “90-day waiver certificate” allowing the

owner to make the proposed changes to the property located within the designated

historic district without further approval from the HAHC. The HPO was

subsequently amended in 2005 to limit the availability of 90-day waiver

certificates in certain instances.

The Homeowners own property in Heights East, which was designated as a

historic district by a resolution of the City Council on February 19, 2008.

In 2010, the City again amended the HPO (the 2010 amendments). The 2010

amendments included provision that eliminated property owners’ right to obtain

“90-day waiver certificates” for any property located in a designated historic

district and updated guidelines regarding new construction and alteration to both

3 historic and non-historic structures in the designated historic district, including

Heights East.

Also in 2010, the City passed an ordinance (the Transition Ordinance)

establishing a one-time “process for the reconsideration of the designation of

historic districts,” which provided a process for reconsidering whether districts

previously designated as historic districts under the rules prior to the 2010

amendments should continue to be governed by the HPO as amended. The

reconsideration process was triggered when more than 10% of a historic district’s

property owners joined in the request, requiring the City’s Director of City

Planning and Development Department (Director) to consider the request in light

of several factors such as the criteria for designation of the historic district, any

changed circumstances identified in the request for reconsideration, and the current

level of support for the designation of the historic district. The Director was then

required to make a recommendation to the City Council, including recommending

that the City Council take no action with respect to the designation of the historic

district, that it repeal the resolution creating the historic district if the owners of 51

percent of the tracts in the designated historic district indicated that they do not

support the continued designation, or that it amend the resolution designating the

historic district to reduce its boundaries. The Transition Ordinance further provided

that the City Council would consider the Director’s recommendation and the

4 criteria considered by the Director in making the recommendation and then decide

whether to accept the Director’s report and take the recommended action. The

Transition Ordinance stated that the City Council’s decision shall be final.

Shortly after the Director made the reconsideration form available, more

than 10% of property owners in Heights East moved for reconsideration of the

neighborhood’s status as a designated historic district. The Planning Department

mailed each property owner in Heights East notice of a public meeting and a

survey regarding whether they supported repeal of Heights East’s designation as a

historic district. After the deadline for returning the survey had passed, the

Director found that, of the 780 tracts in Heights East, only 193 requested repeal of

the historic designation. The Director prepared a recommendation to the City

Council that it “tak[e] no action with respect to the designation of the historic

district.” The City Council, in an 8-7 vote, rejected the Director’s recommendation

as to the Heights East district, but the City Council nevertheless failed to pass any

further ordinances or resolutions with respect to Heights East’s status as a

designated historic district. Thus, the City has continued to apply the HPO, as

amended by the 2010 amendments, to Heights East.

In 2014, the Homeowners filed suit seeking a declaratory judgment that the

HPO is void and unenforceable because it violates the City Charter’s prohibition

5 against zoning and that the HPO violates provisions authorizing municipal zoning

as set out in Texas Local Government Code chapter 211.1

The case was tried to the bench in February 2018, with the parties noting

that the “facts are undisputed and the case concerns pure questions of law.” The

Homeowners argued that the HPO, as amended in 2010, “is a zoning law that

regulates the use of property in designated geographical districts” and, thus, is void

because the City Charter prohibits the City from passing “zoning ordinances”

except under limited circumstances that the parties agree did not occur here. The

Homeowners also asserted that the HPO failed to comply with the requirements of

Texas Local Government Code chapter 211.

The Homeowners presented evidence that the City of Houston adopted a

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