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

CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJune 4, 2021
Docket19-0689
StatusPublished

This text of Kathleen Powell & Paul Luccia v. City of Houston, Texas (Kathleen Powell & Paul Luccia v. City of Houston, Texas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kathleen Powell & Paul Luccia v. City of Houston, Texas, (Tex. 2021).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TEXAS ════════════ NO. 19-0689 ════════════

KATHLEEN POWELL & PAUL LUCCIA, PETITIONERS,

v.

CITY OF HOUSTON, TEXAS, RESPONDENT

═══════════════════════════════════════════ ON PETITION FOR REVIEW FROM THE COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FIRST DISTRICT OF TEXAS ═══════════════════════════════════════════

JUSTICE BLAND, joined by JUSTICE DEVINE, JUSTICE BLACKLOCK and JUSTICE HUDDLE, concurring.

The City of Houston offers a litany of reasons that its historic preservation ordinance is not

zoning but is something else entirely. Why? Because the City cannot zone. Its Charter expressly

forbids it.

Some voters favor robust private property rights while others favor stricter land-use

regulation. And a voter may think differently about a zoning restriction depending on whose land

it regulates and how. This debate plays out in representative forums—city councils and state

legislatures—resulting sometimes in land-use restrictions and sometimes in land-use protections.

The Court takes no side in the debate other than to enforce the United States and Texas

Constitutions and laws as written. In enforcing those laws, however, we must consistently apply land-use terminology so that

one side cannot evade existing protections by redefining what is protected. Legal protections

afforded to private property ownership lose their value if a governing body evades them merely

by recharacterizing a zoning ordinance as “not” zoning.

The City’s Historic Preservation Ordinance stands perilously close to the line of traditional

zoning. I agree with the Court that the Ordinance stops short of zoning under the common-law

definition because the restrictions it imposes within its regulated districts are not uniform—they

vary from house to house, street to street, and district to district. The Ordinance also does not have

the geographic reach of traditional zoning—it does not partition the City. Either would place the

Ordinance on the other side of the line.

In concluding that the City’s Ordinance is not traditional zoning, however, the Court

reaches beyond these two considerations. 1 It examines the Ordinance’s historic-preservation goals

and ignores the implications of the City’s Charter in suggesting that the City may create uniform

historic-preservation districts. 2 We instead should evaluate the Ordinance’s text to determine

whether it meets the definition of zoning according to its ordinary meaning when the City’s voters

chose not to permit it absent a referendum.

I further disagree with the Court’s conclusion that the Ordinance is not a land-use

regulation. 3 One predominant use of land is to develop it and affix structures to it. The Ordinance

1 See ante at 16–19. 2 Ante at 18–19; see ante at 6, 12–14. 3 See ante at 16 (“Significantly, the Ordinance does not regulate the purposes for which land can be used.”). 2 plainly restricts development, as well as the alteration, rehabilitation, and restoration of existing

structures within historic districts, and the relocation of any structure within, into, or out of them.

The Court holds that an ordinance must expressly regulate an activity other than property

development to qualify as zoning. But limits on construction and development are strong indicia

of zoning.

Because we should not so narrow the traditional definition of “zoning” as to deprive it of

its ordinary meaning, and the Court does, I respectfully concur.

I

Houston voters have consistently rejected efforts to establish zoning in the City, to both

acclaim and criticism. One commentator summarizes the City’s unique history and approach to

land-use regulation:

In November 1993 voters in Houston narrowly rejected a referendum to establish zoning in that city. This was the third time in a half-century that Houston voters had rejected zoning. Thus Houston remains the only major city in the United States without zoning. To zoning’s supporters, Houston represents an unenlightened backwater that has stubbornly resisted the tide of twentieth century land use regulation. To zoning’s critics, Houston stands as a lonely beacon of economic rationality, or at least a living laboratory in which alternatives to zoning can be fairly tested. 4

4 Bradley C. Karkkainen, Zoning: A Reply to the Critics, 10 J. LAND USE & ENV’T L. 45, 45 (1994) (citations omitted); see also Bernard H. Siegan, Non-Zoning in Houston, 13 J. L. & ECON. 71, 75 (1970) (observing that, “[a]lthough Houston has no zoning ordinance, it has adopted some controls over land uses that are ordinarily found in zoning ordinances,” and noting land-use controls are “extremely modest when compared to what is contained in most zoning ordinances”); Bernard H. Siegan, Conserving and Developing the Land, 27 SAN DIEGO L. REV. 279, 295–305 (1990) (suggesting that commingling of land uses in Houston is “more than offset by the economic and social rewards emanating from the absence of unnecessary government restraints over the development of property”). Instead of a comprehensive zoning plan, the City relies on deed and plat restrictions and other non-comprehensive land-use regulations. See TEX. LOC. GOV’T CODE §§ 211.001–.033 (setting forth limits on municipal land-use regulations, including those for historic preservation). 3 After the City’s residents voted to reject zoning, the City amended its Charter to forbid it

unless the City’s voters permit it by referendum:

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. 5

After the voters revoked the City’s authorization to zone, the Houston City Council adopted

its Historic Preservation Ordinance, providing “for the recognition, protection, enhancement,

perpetuation and use of sites, landmarks and areas of historical or archeological interest within the

City.” The Ordinance establishes a process for the creation of historic districts. 6 Once created, a

landowner must apply to the Houston Archaeological and Historical Commission for a “certificate

of appropriateness” to demolish, modify, relocate, or develop property situated within the district.7

In its original form, the Ordinance was essentially advisory. After applying for a certificate

of appropriateness, the Ordinance subjected landowners in historic districts to a ninety-day waiting

period to allow a planning director to review a landowner’s proposed project. Once the ninety-day

period passed, however, the landowner was automatically entitled to a “waiver certificate,” which

allowed the owner to proceed with development plans without Commission approval.

In June 2010, however, the City Council placed a moratorium on these waiver certificates.

The Council then amended the Ordinance to eliminate the waiver altogether. The Council also

established more restrictive guidelines for the construction or alteration of structures within

5 HOUSTON, TEX., CHARTER, art. VII-b, § 13 (added by amendment on January 15, 1994). 6 HOUSTON, TEX., CODE OF ORDINANCES, ch. 33, art. VII, § 33-225 (2021); see id. §§ 33-221, 33-221.1. 7 See id. §§ 33-236, 33-239. 4 historic districts. Now, with limited exemptions, 8 a landowner cannot demolish or modify an

existing structure or otherwise develop property situated within a historic district absent a

certificate. 9 The amended Ordinance also tethers the certificate to a landowner’s adherence to style

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