Montrose Management District v. 1620 Hawthorne, Ltd.

435 S.W.3d 393, 2014 WL 2583774, 2014 Tex. App. LEXIS 6217
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 10, 2014
DocketNo. 14-13-00233-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 435 S.W.3d 393 (Montrose Management District v. 1620 Hawthorne, Ltd.) 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
Montrose Management District v. 1620 Hawthorne, Ltd., 435 S.W.3d 393, 2014 WL 2583774, 2014 Tex. App. LEXIS 6217 (Tex. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

OPINION

SHARON McCALLY, Justice.

This is an appeal from the trial court’s denial of a summary judgment motion based on governmental immunity.1 The Montrose Management District (the District), the Public Officials,2 and Executive Director Bill Calderon (collectively, the Appellants) assert that the trial court erred in denying their summary judgment motion on several grounds. In their first issue, which contains several sub-issues, the Appellants assert the trial court erred in denying summary judgment on jurisdictional grounds to the District. In its first sub-issue, the District contends that 1620 [398]*398Hawthorne, Ltd. failed to establish that the District waived its immunity from suit because no waiver of immunity exists for complaints about the District’s application of and actions under the Texas Local Government Code provision regarding dissolving the District or for any challenge to this provision’s constitutionality. Second, the District asserts that Hawthorne did not prove that the District waived immunity from suit based on Hawthorne’s complaint that the assessment order adopted by the West Montrose Management District (the West District) is void because it was not signed by the requisite number of petitioners. The District also argues that Hawthorne’s contention that neither the West District nor the East Montrose Management District (the East District) complied with the provision of the Local Government Code establishing the areas eligible for the creation of municipal management districts provides no basis for a waiver of statutory immunity.

The Appellants assert in their second issue that the trial court erred in denying the Public Officials’ summary judgment on jurisdictional grounds, again including sub-issues. The Public Officials assert two bases for reversing the trial court’s summary judgment: (1) for the same reasons that the District is immune from suit, they are derivatively immune from suit, and (2) Hawthorne failed to establish the existence of a waiver of their immunity from suit based upon viable allegations of ultra vires conduct. Finally, in their third issue, the Appellants assert that District Executive Director Bill Calderon is immune from suit because he is not a member of the District’s board with legal authority to vote on any of the actions about which Hawthorne complained.

After careful review of the summary judgment evidence, we determine that Hawthorne has failed to establish any waiver of governmental immunity for the District. Thus, the trial court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over the District. We likewise conclude that the trial court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over Calderon. We therefore order that all of Hawthorne’s claims against the District and Calderon are dismissed for want of jurisdiction. However, we conclude that Hawthorne raised a fact issue regarding the ultra vires conduct of the Public Officials related to the assessment petition. Because we have concluded that this portion of Hawthorne’s case should not be dismissed, we remand this cause for proceedings consistent with this opinion.

I. BACKGROUND

The District is a municipal management district located in the Montrose area of Houston. It resulted from the 2011 consolidation of the East District, created in 2005.3 and the West District, created in 2009.4 The Texas Legislature created the East and West Districts through special legislation “to promote, develop, encourage, and maintain employment, commerce, transportation, housing, tourism, recreation, the arts, entertainment, economic development, safety, and the public welfare in the area of the district[s].”5 The Public Officials are the volunteer members of the District’s board of directors and Bill Calderon is its executive director.

Hawthorne owns commercial property in the portion of the District formerly known as the West District. In September 2011, Robert Rose, on behalf of Hawthorne, delivered 998 individually signed petitions for [399]*399dissolution (collectively, the “Dissolution Petition”) to the District. The Dissolution Petition from owners of property within the District subject to assessments by the District requested the District’s board of directors — the Public Officials — to immediately dissolve. The Public Officials engaged in public and private meetings and ultimately determined that the Dissolution Petition did not represent the requisite 75% of District property owners for statutory dissolution of the District — in fact, they determined that the validated signers to the Dissolution Petition only represented owners of roughly 13% of the assessed value of property within the District.6 Thus, the Public Officials refused to dissolve the District. By order dated November 14, 2011, following a public meeting, the District adopted an order finding and concluding that the Dissolution Petition was insufficient to meet the statutory requirement for dissolution.7

Hawthorne filed suit against the District on April 5, 2012; it later amended its petition to add claims against the Public Officials and Calderon. In its petition, Hawthorne asserted that it had “been illegally assessed and/or taxed by the District.” It alleged that the 998 signers of the Dissolution Petition, “when added together, constituted more than 75% of the owners within [the District] who were subject to the assessments of [the District and] more than 75% of the assessed value of the property in the District based upon the most recent certified county property tax rolls.” Hawthorne contended that the Appellants refused to comply with “their mandatory and ministerial duty to dissolve” by “interpreting the 75 percent requirement to include the total value of all the properties of all owners of property, both residential and commercial, wherever located in the District.” Hawthorne argued that the 75% requirement for dissolution must only apply “to those commercial landowners who are subject to the assessment and/or tax, such that 75 percent of that group may petition to obliterate the existence of the District if they so choose.” According to Hawthorne, if this requirement were interpreted any other way, it was constitutionally infirm.

Hawthorne further asserted that the West District’s assessment order was void and illegal ab initio. The West District’s board was not permitted to impose an assessment or finance a service or improvement project unless a written petition requesting the improvement or service had been filed with it.8 This petition must have been signed by “at least 25 owners of real property in the district that will be subject to the assessment, if more than 25 persons own real property subject to the assessment in the district according to the most recent certified tax appraisal roll for Harris County.”9 Hawthorne identified three allegedly ineligible petition signers from the August 2009 petition that resulted in the assessment about which it complains.

Finally, Hawthorne contended that, before September 1, 2011, the only areas eligible to become an improvement district [400]*400under statutory authority were those that existed in “an area devoted primarily to commercial development and business activity inside the boundaries of a municipality.” 10

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
435 S.W.3d 393, 2014 WL 2583774, 2014 Tex. App. LEXIS 6217, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/montrose-management-district-v-1620-hawthorne-ltd-texapp-2014.