Railroad Commission of Texas and Dos Republicas Resources Co., Inc. v. Theodosia Coppock, Juanita Alvarado, Guadalupe Davila, and Kickapoo Traditional Tribe of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 1, 2007
Docket03-05-00097-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Railroad Commission of Texas and Dos Republicas Resources Co., Inc. v. Theodosia Coppock, Juanita Alvarado, Guadalupe Davila, and Kickapoo Traditional Tribe of Texas (Railroad Commission of Texas and Dos Republicas Resources Co., Inc. v. Theodosia Coppock, Juanita Alvarado, Guadalupe Davila, and Kickapoo Traditional Tribe of Texas) 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.

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Railroad Commission of Texas and Dos Republicas Resources Co., Inc. v. Theodosia Coppock, Juanita Alvarado, Guadalupe Davila, and Kickapoo Traditional Tribe of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN



ON MOTION FOR REHEARING



NO. 03-05-00097-CV

Railroad Commission of Texas and Dos Republicas Resources Co., Inc., Appellants



v.



Theodosia Coppock, Juanita Alvarado, Guadalupe Davila, and Kickapoo Traditional Tribe of Texas, Appellees



FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY, 201ST JUDICIAL DISTRICT

NO. GN401227, HONORABLE SCOTT H. JENKINS, JUDGE PRESIDING

O P I N I O N

Our opinion and judgment issued on December 29, 2006, are withdrawn, and the following opinion is substituted.

Dos Republicas Resources Co., Inc. ("Dos Republicas") asked the Railroad Commission of Texas (the "Commission") to extend its surface coal mining permit under the provisions of the Texas Surface Coal Mining and Reclamation Act codified in the natural resources code, but Theodosia Coppock, Juanita Alvarado, Guadalupe Davila, and Kickapoo Traditional Tribe of Texas (the "appellees") opposed the extension. Ultimately, the Commission granted the extension, and the appellees appealed the Commission's decision. The district court concluded that the Commission's basis for granting the extension, namely the lack of a market for Dos Republicas to sell its coal, was not authorized under the natural resources code. See Tex. Nat. Res. Code Ann. § 134.072 (West 2001). Dos Republicas and the Commission appeal the district court's judgment, and we will reverse the court's judgment.



BACKGROUND

In 1992, Dos Republicas applied to the Commission for a permit to allow it to engage in coal mining on a 2700-acre tract in Eagle Pass, Texas, and the Commission approved the permit in 1994. However, Dos Republicas did not request that the permit be issued at that time. For years, Dos Republicas attempted to enter into an agreement to sell its coal to the Comision Federal de Electricidad ("CFE"), a state-owned electricity provider in Mexico that operates two coal-fired plants near Eagle Pass. In 1999, CFE became concerned about the financial security of the mining company that had been its coal supplier. As a result, it alerted Dos Republicas that, in early 2000, it would be issuing a request for proposals asking companies to submit bids offering to supply CFE with coal and asked Dos Republicas to issue a bid. To ensure that it would have a supply when necessary, Dos Republicas asked the Commission to issue the permit it had previously approved, and the Commission issued the permit in April 2000.

Due to a number of political changes and pressure from various interested parties, CFE never issued its request for proposals. Employees from mines in Mexico complained that importing coal from Texas might eliminate their jobs. In addition, during this time, the governing political party in Mexico changed, and the leaders of CFE were replaced.

Dos Republicas continued its efforts to enter into an agreement with CFE, and, in 2001, CFE again indicated that it would issue a request for proposals. However, as had happened previously, no request was ever issued. Instead, CFE entered into a long-term supply contract with a Mexican mining company, Coahuila Industrial Minera ("Coahuila").

Prior to and after CFE entered into a contract with Coahuila, Dos Republicas unsuccessfully attempted to find other market options for selling its coal. Even though Dos Republicas asked the Commission to issue it a mining permit, it never began mining coal at the Eagle Pass mine and, eventually, filed an application with the Commission seeking to terminate its permit. Although Dos Republicas asked that its permit be terminated, the natural resources code also contains an early termination provision mandating that a mining permit will expire within three years of its issuance if the permit holder has not begun "surface coal mining" operations by that date. Tex. Nat. Res. Code Ann. § 134.072(a); (1)

see also id. § 134.004(20) (West 2001) (definition of "surface coal mining operations"). Dos Republicas filed its application to terminate its permit shortly before the three-year termination date.

Just before the three-year termination deadline passed, Coahuila contacted Dos Republicas and indicated that it was interested in purchasing the Eagle Pass mining operation. Consequently, Dos Republicas filed a request to withdraw its application to terminate the permit and also filed a request to extend its permit beyond the three-year deadline. The natural resources code allows the Commission to grant "reasonable extensions" if it is shown that the extensions are necessary because of:



(1) litigation that precludes the beginning of operations or threatens substantial economic loss to the permit holder; or



(2) conditions beyond the control and without the fault or negligence of the permit holder.



Id. § 134.072(b). (2)

The Commission referred the matter to a hearings examiner. Coppock, a landowner near the Eagle Pass property, opposed the extension. (3) She claimed that, because the three-year deadline had passed by the time of the hearing, the Commission had no authority to grant an extension. Alternatively, she argued that the Commission should deny the extension because the conditions allowing for an extension found in section 134.072 were not satisfied. Specifically, she asserted that the absence of a market in which Dos Republicas could sell its coal could not justify an extension.

The hearing examiner concluded that the Commission had jurisdiction to consider the request for an extension because the request for an extension was filed prior to the three-year deadline. Further, she concluded that the Commission should grant the extension because Dos Republicas's failure to begin mining was due to the absence of a market for the coal and that the market condition was "beyond the control and without the fault or negligence" of Dos Republicas. The Commission adopted the examiner's proposal for decision and granted the extension.

The appellees appealed the Commission's order to the district court. See Tex. Gov't Code Ann. § 2001.171 (West 2000) (person who has exhausted all administrative remedies and is aggrieved by final agency decision is entitled to judicial review). In its judgment, the district court concluded that the Commission had jurisdiction over the extension request because the Commission has authority over a request as long as it is filed within three years of the permit's issuance.

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Railroad Commission of Texas and Dos Republicas Resources Co., Inc. v. Theodosia Coppock, Juanita Alvarado, Guadalupe Davila, and Kickapoo Traditional Tribe of Texas, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/railroad-commission-of-texas-and-dos-republicas-resources-co-inc-v-texapp-2007.