Mayor Hector Gonzales, Commissioner Kenneth W. Moon, Commissioner Thomas Trantham and Village of Webberville v. Concerned Citizens of Webberville, David Glass, Ricky Turner, Jeannette Johnston, Robert Coe, James Sansom, Carroll Samsom, Matthew Pond, Weldon R. Johnston

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 28, 2005
Docket03-05-00014-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Mayor Hector Gonzales, Commissioner Kenneth W. Moon, Commissioner Thomas Trantham and Village of Webberville v. Concerned Citizens of Webberville, David Glass, Ricky Turner, Jeannette Johnston, Robert Coe, James Sansom, Carroll Samsom, Matthew Pond, Weldon R. Johnston (Mayor Hector Gonzales, Commissioner Kenneth W. Moon, Commissioner Thomas Trantham and Village of Webberville v. Concerned Citizens of Webberville, David Glass, Ricky Turner, Jeannette Johnston, Robert Coe, James Sansom, Carroll Samsom, Matthew Pond, Weldon R. Johnston) 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
Mayor Hector Gonzales, Commissioner Kenneth W. Moon, Commissioner Thomas Trantham and Village of Webberville v. Concerned Citizens of Webberville, David Glass, Ricky Turner, Jeannette Johnston, Robert Coe, James Sansom, Carroll Samsom, Matthew Pond, Weldon R. Johnston, (Tex. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-05-00014-CV

Mayor Hector Gonzales, Commissioner Kenneth W. Moon, Commissioner Thomas Trantham, and Village of Webberville, Appellants

v.

Concerned Citizens of Webberville, David Glass, Ricky Turner, Jeannette Johnston, Robert Coe, James Sansom, Carroll Sansom, Matthew Pond, and Weldon R. Johnston, Appellees

FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY, 345TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT NO. GN301631, HONORABLE PAUL DAVIS, JUDGE PRESIDING

OPINION

Our disposition of this accelerated interlocutory appeal turns on whether appellees

have standing to challenge the incorporation of a municipality. Because we hold that appellees’

pleadings and the evidence demonstrate that appellees challenge the incorporation as voidable rather

than void, we vacate the denial of the plea to the jurisdiction and dismiss for want of jurisdiction.

BACKGROUND

The underlying dispute in this case concerns whether the village of Webberville was

properly incorporated as a Type C municipality. See Tex. Loc. Gov’t Code Ann. § 8.001 (West

1999). The following facts are undisputed. Webberville is a community located in eastern Travis

County whose historical origins date back to the mid-1830s. On December 2, 2002, appellants Gonzales, Moon, and Trantham filed a petition with the Travis County Judge to incorporate a land

area in and around the Webberville community as a Type C municipality. See id. § 8.002 (West

1999).1 The petition alleged that the community included fewer than 2,000 inhabitants and not more

than two square miles of surface area. See id. § 5.901 (West 1999) (community with fewer than

2,000 inhabitants must have not more than two square miles of surface area); id. § 8.001. The

petition also included a detailed textual statement describing the proposed perimeter boundaries and

a plat providing a graphic illustration of the boundaries. Within the outer perimeter boundaries were

various “holes” that were excluded from the area to be incorporated.2

The petition was signed by more than fifty registered voters residing within the

proposed municipal boundaries.3 See id. § 8.002. Attached to the petition was Trantham’s sworn

statement that the proposed boundaries included more than 201 inhabitants. See id. § 8.001 (area

incorporating as Type C general-law municipality must have between 201 and 4,999 inhabitants).

When a petition for incorporation is filed, the county judge is required to order an

incorporation election if “satisfactory proof is made that the community contains the requisite

number of inhabitants.” Id. § 8.003 (West 1999). The county judge heard evidence on the petition

at a hearing held on December 17, 2002. The evidence included a December 16 memorandum from

1 The record suggests that the incorporation effort was spurred by a land use issue; specifically, certain residents were concerned about gravel mining in the area and had a desire to create a local government that could regulate such activities. We are not asked to address the validity of any regulatory actions in this appeal. 2 In the “excluded properties” section of the statement, the property is listed by description— i.e., “power line easement” or “excluded rectangle”—in addition to the number of acres excluded. 3 Webberville no longer has a United States Post Office; area residents who signed the petition had mailing addresses in Manor and Elgin.

2 Joseph P. Gieselman, Executive Manager of the Travis County Transportation and Natural Resources

Department. The Gieselman memorandum states that “through aerial photography we have been

able to verify that there are 215 houses in the proposed areas. With a household size of 2.47 for

Travis County (U.S. Census), multiplied by the number of houses would equal approximately 530

persons.” Reviewing the statutory requirements for a Type C general law municipality, Gieselman

stated that the department “has now determined that the area is 1.98 square miles” and that

“petitioners have therefore met the statutory requirements of the law under criteria #(1) [local

government code section 5.901(1)] and as a Type C General-Law municipality.”

The county judge then found satisfactory proof that the statutory requirements had

been met, including that the “area to be incorporated contains fewer than 2,000 inhabitants and does

not have more than two square miles of surface area, therefore satisfying the requirements of Texas

Local Government Code, § 5.901.” Thus, he ordered an election on Saturday, February 1, 2003, in

which the voters residing within the proposed village of Webberville would decide whether to

incorporate that entity. The incorporation election was closely contested; the vote in favor of

incorporation was ninety-four to eighty-seven. Concurrently, the voters elected Gonzales as mayor

and Moon and Trantham as commissioners. See id. § 8.001(b). Appellees have not contested the

results of this election.

On February 18, the county judge ordered the community of Webberville, as

contained within the territory and boundaries identified in the petition, incorporated as a Type C

General Law Municipality. In the order, Gonzales was declared mayor and Moon and Trantham

commissioners. The new village government then adopted various ordinances in March, including

3 a right-of-way management ordinance, an ordinance creating a municipal court, an ordinance

granting a utility franchise, a traffic-regulation ordinance, and a flood damage prevention ordinance.

Additionally, moratoriums on subdivisions, excavations, and buildings were adopted. On May 3,

the voters approved a sales and use tax of 1.75% in a special election.

On May 20, 2003, appellees filed suit against Gonzales, Moon, Trantham, and the

City of Webberville seeking a permanent injunction prohibiting the sales tax and enforcement of the

ordinances and moratoriums. While the suit was pending, on May 15, 2004, Gonzales, Moon, and

Trantham were each re-elected to their village government posts.4 In June, both sides filed motions

for summary judgment, and appellants filed a plea to the jurisdiction. After hearing evidence,5 which

included the Gieselman memorandum, the district court denied the plea to the jurisdiction and both

motions for summary judgment. Appellants then brought this interlocutory appeal from the denial

of their plea to the jurisdiction. See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code Ann. § 51.014 (West Supp. 2004-

05).

DISCUSSION

Appellants present three issues on appeal that challenge the district court’s denial of

their plea to the jurisdiction. They urge that private parties like appellees lack standing to challenge

a municipal incorporation that is not void ab initio; that only the State, through a quo warranto

action, can bring such a challenge against a de facto municipality; and that private parties may not

4 Gonzales ran unopposed. Moon defeated appellee Weldon Johnston, and Trantham defeated Stephen Turner, son of appellee Ricky Turner. 5 See Texas Parks & Wildlife v. Miranda, 133 S.W.3d 217, 227-28 (Tex. 2004).

4 collaterally attack a municipal incorporation where municipal boundaries, as drawn, comply with

statutory limits on surface area.

Appellees concede the legal principles that private parties lack standing to challenge

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Mayor Hector Gonzales, Commissioner Kenneth W. Moon, Commissioner Thomas Trantham and Village of Webberville v. Concerned Citizens of Webberville, David Glass, Ricky Turner, Jeannette Johnston, Robert Coe, James Sansom, Carroll Samsom, Matthew Pond, Weldon R. Johnston, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayor-hector-gonzales-commissioner-kenneth-w-moon-commissioner-thomas-texapp-2005.