Mattox v. Grimes County Commissioners Court

305 S.W.3d 375, 2010 WL 308799
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 18, 2010
Docket14-08-00193-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 305 S.W.3d 375 (Mattox v. Grimes County Commissioners Court) 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
Mattox v. Grimes County Commissioners Court, 305 S.W.3d 375, 2010 WL 308799 (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinions

MAJORITY OPINION ON REHEARING

ADELE HEDGES, Chief Justice.

We overrule appellants’ and appellees’ motions for rehearing, vacate and withdraw our majority opinion and judgment dated October 29, 2009, and issue this majority opinion on rehearing and judgment in their place. Appellants, Gregory R. Mattox and Barbara Wilkerson, appeal the trial court’s judgment denying their petition for writ of mandamus to compel appel-lees, Grimes County Commissioners Court, Betty Shiflett, John Bertling, and Pam Finke, to order the cancellation of a roadway dedication. In five issues, appellants argue that: (1) the trial court erred by denying their petition for writ of mandamus; (2) the affidavits attached to appel-lees’ motion for summary judgment were not competent summary judgment evidence; (3) the trial court erred by denying appellants’ motion for summary judgment; (4) the trial court erred by granting appel-lees’ motion for summary judgment; and (5) the trial court erred by denying appellants’ motion for sanctions. We reverse and remand.

I. BACKGROUND

Appellants purchased lots 35 and 36 of the Hill Forest Manor subdivision in May 2005. The two adjoining lots were located in the southwest corner of Hill Forest Manor. After purchasing their lots, appellants learned that a portion of an unpaved roadway dedicated as a county road encroached upon their newly acquired property. The dedicated county road, Hill Forest Lane, ran across the southern border of Hill Forest Manor, and the last 134 feet on the west part of Hill Forest Lane extended across appellants’ property. Appellants sought to cancel the dedication on the 134-foot portion of Hill Forest Lane that extended onto their property by filing an application with the commissioners court pursuant to chapter 232 of the Local Government Code.

A. Proceedings Before Grimes County Commissioners Court

Section 232.008(e) of the Local Government Code mandates a commissioners court to authorize cancellation of “a subdivision or any phase or identifiable part of a subdivision, including a dedicated easement or roadway” upon application by “the owners of 75 percent of the property included in the subdivision, phase or identifiable part.”1 Section 232.008(e) further provides that “if owners of at least 10 [378]*378percent of the property affected by the proposed cancellation file written objection to the cancellation with the court, the grant of an order of cancellation is at the discretion of the court.”2 After appellants filed then* application to cancel the dedication, proper notices were filed, and a hearing was conducted before the commissioners court.

At the hearing, appellants presented their application and argued that cancellation was mandatory under section 232.008(e) because (1) the 134-foot portion of Hill Forest Lane sought to be cancelled was an “identifiable part” of Hill Forest Manor for purposes of subsection (e), (2) appellants owned 100% of this identifiable part, (3) no written objection to the proposed cancellation had been made by owners of at least 10% of the property to be cancelled, and (4) the cancellation did not interfere with the established rights of any owner in Hill Forest Manor.

In response, the county and counsel for Clifford and Eleanor Jackson (collectively “the Jacksons”), adjoining landowners, argued that cancellation was not mandatory, but discretionary under section 232.008(h). Subsection (h) vests a commissioners court with discretion to grant or deny a request to cancel a roadway dedication if “the cancellation will prevent the proposed interconnection of infrastructure to pending or existing development.”3 Relying on subsection (h), the Jacksons argued that they owned land immediately outside of Hill Forest Manor, but adjoining appellants’ lots (“the Jackson property”), and the proposed cancellation would affect any intended, pending, and existing development on the Jackson property. Specifically, the Jacksons argued that they had prepared an unrecorded plat dividing their property into various lots and had been selling those partitioned lots. The Jacksons further claimed that they intended to divide other parts of their property and sell those partitioned parts in the future. However, such development would be vitiated by the proposed cancellation because Hill Forest Lane is the only road that could provide adequate access to developments on the Jackson property. The only other access to the Jackson property was by way of a 36-foot-wide easement, a path that was insufficient to accommodate access to any pending or prospective developments on the Jackson property. Appellants disputed the applicability of subsection (h), contending that there was no evidence in the county records of a pending or existing development on the Jackson property. Appellants further contended that the Jacksons had not sold any part of their property since 1995.

The county argued that Hill Forest Lane was a public road and provided access to other residents. Petitions signed by county residents generally opposing “the closing of any county road” in Grimes County were submitted to the commissioners court for consideration. Additionally, a former county commissioner and local resident both appeared before the commissioners court and expressed their opposition to the proposed cancellation. At the close of the hearing, two of the four county commissioners and the county judge voted to deny appellants’ application to cancel the road dedication. The county judge and two commissioners voting to deny the application are appellees Betty Shiflett, John Bertling, and Pam Finke. Subsequently, appellants challenged the commissioners court’s act by filing a petition for writ of mandamus with the district court.4

[379]*379 tí. Mandamus Proceeding Before the District Court

In their petition for writ of mandamus, appellants asked the trial court to order appellees to cancel the roadway dedication on the portion of Hill Forest Lane that extended onto their property because the commissioners court was required to do so under section 232.008(e). Specifically, appellants argued that they owned 100% of the portion of the roadway sought to be cancelled, and no written objection by owners of at least 10% of the affected property had been filed with the court. Furthermore, appellants argued that the exception under subsection (h) vesting a commissioners court with discretion to deny an application to cancel a roadway dedication did not apply because there were no proposals for interconnecting infrastructure to the Jackson property and no pending or existing developments on the Jackson property. Appellants urged the trial court to grant their writ and mandamus the commissioners court to order cancellation of the 134-foot portion of Hill Forest Lane that encroached upon their property.

Appellees responded to the writ by general denial and, subsequently, by amended answer. In the amended answer, appel-lees specifically denied the allegations set forth in appellants’ petition for writ of mandamus. Appellees contended that subsection (h) authorized the commissioners court to deny appellants’ application to cancel Hill Forest Lane because (1) the proposed cancellation would prevent an interconnection between Hill Forest Manor and the Jackson property and (2) there was pending and existing development on the Jackson property. Thereafter, both parties moved for summary judgment, primarily disputing the applicability of subsection (h).

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Bluebook (online)
305 S.W.3d 375, 2010 WL 308799, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mattox-v-grimes-county-commissioners-court-texapp-2010.