Mountain Peak Special Utility District v. Public Utility Commission of Texas and the City of Midlothian

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 2, 2017
Docket03-16-00796-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Mountain Peak Special Utility District v. Public Utility Commission of Texas and the City of Midlothian (Mountain Peak Special Utility District v. Public Utility Commission of Texas and the City of Midlothian) 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
Mountain Peak Special Utility District v. Public Utility Commission of Texas and the City of Midlothian, (Tex. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-16-00796-CV

Mountain Peak Special Utility District, Appellant

v.

Public Utility Commission of Texas and The City of Midlothian, Appellees

FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY, 200TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT NO. D-1-GN-15-002843, HONORABLE ORLINDA NARANJO, JUDGE PRESIDING

MEMORANDUM OPINION

The Public Utility Commission of Texas (the Commission) granted the petition of

the City of Midlothian (the City) for expedited release of a portion of property it owned from the

certificated service area of Mountain Peak Special Utility District (Mountain Peak). See Tex. Water

Code § 13.254(a-5) (providing for expedited release of property not receiving water or sewer service

from certificate holder). In its suit for judicial review of the Commission’s order, Mountain Peak

contended that the Commission erred in granting the City’s petition for decertification because

the statutory requirements for expedited release pursuant to section 13.254(a-5) were not met.

Specifically, Mountain Peak argued that the property the City sought to have decertified was in fact

“receiving water service” from Mountain Peak and thus was not eligible for expedited release under

section 13.254(a-5). Mountain Peak also asserted that the decertification petition should not have

been approved because the City excluded from its request for expedited release a 6.7-acre piece of property that it owned within Mountain Peak’s certificated service area. In addition, Mountain Peak

asserted that the Commission’s approval of the petition for decertification should be set aside

because federal law preempted the decertification of any of Mountain Peak’s certificated service

area. After a hearing, the district court affirmed the Commission’s order granting the City’s petition

for decertification. We will affirm the district court’s judgment.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Mountain Peak is a conservation and reclamation district operating as a special

utility district created under Article XVI, Section 59, of the Texas Constitution and regulated by the

Commission. See Tex. Const. art. XVI, § 59; Act of May 13, 2013, 83d Leg., R.S., ch. 170, § 2.96,

2013 Tex. Gen. Laws 725, 769 (transferring to Public Utility Commission powers, duties, functions,

programs, and activities of Texas Commission on Environmental Quality relating to economic

regulation of water and sewer service); see also Tex. Water Code §§ 13.002-.515 (establishing

comprehensive regulatory system to regulate retail public utilities), .002(19) (“retail public utility”

includes political subdivision operating, maintaining, or controlling facilities for providing potable

water service for compensation). Mountain Peak holds a certificate of convenience and necessity

(CCN) that authorizes it to be the exclusive water-service provider within a specifically defined

territory, which is referred to as its “certificated area.” See Tex. Water Code § 13.244 (setting forth

requirements for application for CCN).

The City owns approximately 104 acres of land in Ellis County that was located

within Mountain Peak’s certificated area. The City filed a petition with the Commission seeking to

remove the 104 acres from Mountain Peak’s certificated area pursuant to Texas Water Code section

2 13.254(a-5). Section 13.254(a-5) provides that the owner of a tract of land that is 25 acres or larger

and located in certain counties, including Ellis County, may petition for, and is entitled to, expedited

release of that tract from a certificated area if the tract is “not receiving water service.” Id.

§ 13.254(a-5).1 In its petition, the City stated that the 104-acre property was not receiving water or

sewer service from Mountain Peak. The petition was supported by the affidavit of Michael G. Adams,

the City’s Executive Director of Engineering and Utilities, in which he averred that the 104-acre

property “currently is not receiving potable water service, or water of any type from [Mountain

Peak],” that the City “has not requested water service from Mountain Peak,” and “[i]f Mountain Peak

has any water facilities near or adjacent to the [104-acre property], those facilities were installed

and are used to provide water service to property other than the [104-acre property].”

Mountain Peak filed a motion to intervene and opposed the petition. Mountain Peak

asserted that the petition seeking decertification of a part of Mountain Peak’s certificated area

was in conflict with a contractual commitment between the City and Mountain Peak that had been

approved by the Commission’s predecessor agency, the Texas Natural Resources Conservation

Commission (TNRCC), in 1997. Mountain Peak also asserted that the 104-acre property was

“receiving water service” from Mountain Peak because there was a sewer lift station owned and

operated by Mountain Peak located on the north part of the property. According to Mountain Peak,

there was a two-inch water line running 200 to 300 yards from a connection to a 12-inch water main

1 A landowner may not seek expedited release of such a tract if it is located (1) within the boundaries of any municipality or the extraterritorial jurisdiction of a municipality with a population of more than 500,000 and the municipality or retail public utility owned by the municipality is the holder of the CCN or (2) in a platted subdivision “actually receiving water or sewer service.” See Tex. Water Code § 13.254(a-2).

3 owned and operated by Mountain Peak and terminating inside a meter box with an angle-stop valve

on the 104-acre property next to the lift station. Mountain Peak stated that the two-inch water line

supplied water from Mountain Peak’s public water system to the City for use at the lift station such

that the 104-acre property was “receiving water service” from Mountain Peak. Finally, Mountain

Peak asserted that the City’s petition was not administratively complete because it did not include

“evidence that the owner of the tract of land in question—the City of Midlothian—authorized and

approved” the petition.2

The Commission’s Staff reviewed the petition and Mountain Peak’s response and

recommended that Mountain Peak’s petition be deemed deficient until the City provided proof that

(1) the request did not seek to violate currently applicable contract terms, and (2) the City did not

seek approval of an application that would violate Texas Water Code section 13.254(a-5). The

Commission then issued an order directing the City to amend its application to cure the deficiencies

identified by the Commission’s Staff. The City filed its response arguing that Mountain Peak’s bare

allegations of a contractual impediment to the decertification request did not render its petition

administratively incomplete. Additionally, while maintaining its position that the existence of an

unmetered water line to the lift station did not cause the 104-acre property to be “receiving water

service” such that it was disqualified from expedited decertification pursuant to section 13.254(a-5),

in order to eliminate any question in that regard, the City amended its petition to seek decertification

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